Musk’s xAI Raises Yield and Extends Deadline on $5B Debt Sale Amid Weak Investor Demand
Elon Musk’s AI venture, xAI, has extended the deadline and increased the yield on a $5 billion debt offering due to a lackluster response from investors, according to a source familiar with the matter. The commitment deadline was moved from Tuesday to Friday to allow more time for investor participation.
To make the offer more appealing, xAI raised the yield on $3 billion in bonds and a $1 billion term loan from 12% to 12.5%. Additionally, the yield on a second term loan was increased from 700 to 725 basis points above the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR), with that loan now priced at 96 cents on the dollar.
The move reflects investor concerns over xAI’s unrated status and limited financial transparency, which increases perceived risk. As of Thursday, the average yield on high-yield bonds was 7.6%, according to the ICE BofA High Yield Index—significantly lower than what xAI is offering, signaling its need to compensate for higher investor uncertainty.
If demand remains modest, borrowers like xAI must offer better terms to attract buyers. One portfolio manager who chose not to participate noted that healthy deals are typically oversubscribed multiple times, and the increased yield suggests investor hesitancy.
Morgan Stanley, the lead on the transaction, did not commit to underwriting or backstopping the deal—unlike during Musk’s acquisition of Twitter—making this a “best efforts” transaction. If the offering closes Friday, securities are expected to be distributed to investors by Monday.
Earlier this month, the xAI deal entered the spotlight amid a public exchange between Musk and former U.S. President Donald Trump on social media. Despite Musk’s profile and past financial dealings, this offering has yet to capture strong enthusiasm from the high-yield or leveraged loan markets.
Neither xAI nor Morgan Stanley responded to requests for comment.











