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Meta to finalize nearly $30 billion financing deal for Louisiana AI data center

Meta Platforms is nearing completion of an almost $30 billion financing deal for its massive Hyperion data center project in Louisiana, in what would mark the largest private capital transaction in history, according to a Bloomberg News report on Thursday.

The financing package, led by Blue Owl Capital and Morgan Stanley, underscores the staggering scale of investment required to power next-generation artificial intelligence infrastructure. Meta and Blue Owl will split ownership of the site in Richland Parish, with Meta retaining a 20% stake, Bloomberg said, citing people familiar with the matter.

The structure involves more than $27 billion in debt and about $2.5 billion in equity through a special purpose vehicle (SPV). Meta itself will not take on the debt directly but will remain developer, operator, and tenant of the project, which is expected to be completed in 2029.

The deal builds on Meta’s recent $1.5 billion investment in a Texas data center and highlights the growing competition among so-called hyperscalers—including Amazon, Microsoft, and Alphabet—to expand capacity for AI computing workloads.

According to Bloomberg, the financing’s final stage was completed on October 16, when PIMCO anchored the bond issuance, structured under Rule 144A, with other investors taking smaller allocations of the debt, which matures in 2049.

Meta, Blue Owl, and Morgan Stanley have not yet commented on the report.

ABB CEO says data center demand for AI power will keep growing for years

Swiss engineering giant ABB remains highly optimistic about the long-term growth of data centers driven by the global artificial intelligence boom, CEO Morten Wierod told Reuters on Thursday.

Wierod said ABB has seen double-digit growth this year in orders for its electrification products, which include switchgear and uninterruptible power systems that ensure servers stay online. “Over the next five years I am very confident about demand from data centers,” he said.

Rejecting suggestions of an AI bubble, Wierod argued that the challenge lies in construction capacity, not in demand. “We are talking about trillions in investment, but there are not enough people and resources to build all this,” he noted.

AI remains in its early stages, he added, meaning continued expansion of data infrastructure as more companies — beyond the tech giants — invest in new facilities. Data centers accounted for about 7% of ABB’s revenue in 2025, up from 6% the previous year.

Earlier this week, ABB announced a partnership with Nvidia to develop new electrification systems for next-generation chips used in high-performance computing centers. “That’s not for 2025 or 2026, it’s a long-term investment,” Wierod said.

He also highlighted growing opportunities in retrofitting and upgrading older data centers to handle the increased power demands of modern AI systems. “That is a big opportunity,” he said.

Core Scientific urges shareholders to approve $9 billion CoreWeave merger

Core Scientific’s board has called on shareholders to vote in favor of its proposed $9 billion all-stock sale to CoreWeave, saying the merger would deliver long-term growth and risk reduction benefits for the crypto miner.

In an investor presentation released Wednesday, the board said it had “unanimously determined” that the deal represented the best outcome for all shareholders. The merger, announced in July, values Core Scientific at $20.40 per share and would combine its energy-intensive mining infrastructure with CoreWeave’s AI-focused data center network.

The deal promises significant cost savings, operational synergies, and improved access to capital, according to the company. CoreWeave, a fast-growing cloud provider powered by Nvidia AI chips, would integrate Core Scientific’s facilities to support large-scale AI model training — an increasingly valuable use case as demand for compute power surges.

However, the proposal faces pushback from Two Seas Capital, Core Scientific’s largest shareholder with a 6.3% stake, which said it plans to vote against the deal, arguing it “materially undervalues” the company and poses “substantial economic risk” to investors.

Core Scientific said the transaction would help it diversify beyond cryptocurrency mining and strengthen its position in the fast-growing AI infrastructure market.