- Bain Capital’s Bridge Data Centres replaced Megaspeed International with cloud provider Zenlayer at its Malaysian facility, according to a February memo sent to lenders on a recent $2.8 billion loan
- Megaspeed is under a U.S. government probe into its ownership structure and whether it illegally smuggled advanced Nvidia AI chips to China in violation of American export restrictions
- All 68.4 megawatts of capacity previously earmarked for Megaspeed has been transferred to Zenlayer, an L.A.-based AI infrastructure provider — a significant swap at one of the largest data center hubs in Southeast Asia
- BDC is simultaneously seeking $6 billion to fund expansion into Thailand and attempting to double an existing $5 billion loan in Malaysia, making its tenant roster critical to securing future lender confidence
What Happened?
Bain Capital’s Bridge Data Centres quietly notified lenders in February that it had removed Megaspeed International from its Malaysian computing hub, replacing the Singapore-based neocloud with Zenlayer, a Los Angeles-based AI cloud infrastructure provider. The swap covers all 68.4 megawatts of capacity Megaspeed had occupied — its largest facility by far — and was disclosed in a memo to the providers of a recent $2.8 billion loan. BDC gave no reason for the switch. The move follows a U.S. government investigation into Megaspeed’s ownership structure and whether it smuggled advanced Nvidia AI chips to China in violation of American export restrictions. Nvidia had previously conducted spot checks at Megaspeed’s Southeast Asia footprint and pledged additional reviews.
Why It Matters?
The swap signals how Washington’s intensifying crackdown on AI chip exports is creating real consequences for data center operators and their financing arrangements across Asia. BDC is one of the region’s largest data center operators in a market expected to attract $800 billion in investment by 2030, and its ability to raise capital depends on demonstrating stable, creditworthy tenants. A U.S. investigation touching its tenant list is precisely the kind of reputational risk that could complicate future bank lending — particularly as Asian bankers have grown increasingly nervous about scrutiny of loans involving chips and China exposure. By swapping Megaspeed for Zenlayer before any formal action, BDC appears to have moved preemptively to protect its lender relationships.
What’s Next?
Questions remain about what happens to the large quantities of Nvidia-powered AI servers Megaspeed had deployed at BDC’s Malaysian facilities. The U.S. investigation into Megaspeed’s ownership and chip flows is ongoing, and Nvidia has not confirmed whether it has revisited Megaspeed’s operations since last fall. Meanwhile, BDC is pressing ahead with aggressive expansion: it is in talks to raise $6 billion for its entry into Thailand and is seeking to double an existing Malaysian loan to at least $5 billion. How lenders and regulators view its broader tenant roster — and the chip compliance posture of its cloud customers — could have significant implications for those fundraising efforts.
Source: Bloomberg











