Key Takeaways:
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- Stack Infrastructure is seeking ~A$3B ($2.1B) of five-year debt to fund a new 250MW Melbourne data center project.
- A global bank group underwrote the facility and is syndicating it, signaling strong lender appetite for AI-infrastructure credit.
- Moody’s expects AI infrastructure investment (notably data centers) to exceed $3T over five years, much of it financed with debt.
- Australia is becoming a top AI/data-center destination, but the capex scale is fueling concerns about long-term return sustainability.
What Happened?
Blue Owl-owned Stack Infrastructure is raising around A$3 billion via a five-year loan to finance development of a 250-megawatt data center project in Melbourne, according to people familiar with the matter. The facility has been underwritten by a syndicate including major global banks and is being distributed to the broader banking market. The deal follows a wave of large-scale financing for Australian data centers, including a recent $10 billion loan led by Blackstone to support an Nvidia-backed operator’s rollout.
Why It Matters?
This transaction is a clear datapoint in the “AI infrastructure equals debt” cycle: demand for compute and cloud capacity is pushing hyperscale builds, and lenders are increasingly willing to fund them at scale. For investors, it reinforces two parallel themes: (1) the buildout is broadening geographically—Australia is emerging as a major hub—and (2) leverage is rising across the data-center ecosystem. That combination can amplify returns if utilization and pricing hold, but it also increases downside risk if supply outpaces demand, power constraints bite, or customer concentration limits pricing power. The market’s growing concern is not whether capex will happen, but whether the cash burn translates into durable, risk-adjusted returns.
What’s Next?
Watch for final pricing and terms on the syndicated loan (spreads, covenants, and any green/ESG features), as these will indicate how aggressively banks are competing for AI-infrastructure exposure. Track the pace of new capacity announcements in Australia relative to power availability, grid upgrades, and hyperscaler pre-lease commitments, which will determine utilization and stability of cash flows. More mega-financings are likely, but investor focus should increasingly shift from “build” headlines to evidence of contracted demand, margin durability, and disciplined leverage.













