Shares of Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) moved modestly higher Tuesday as the technology and e-commerce giant prepared a massive bond sale that could raise as much as $42 billion. The planned debt offering comes as the company dramatically expands spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure, data centers, and advanced computing systems.
Amazon.com, Inc., AMZN
According to reports, Amazon is considering issuing between $37 billion and $42 billion in bonds across multiple maturities and currencies. If completed at the upper end, the transaction would rank among the largest corporate debt offerings ever executed.
Investor demand appears to be exceptionally strong. Early indications suggest orders for the U.S. portion alone reached roughly $126 billion, significantly surpassing the amount Amazon intends to sell. The heavy demand highlights investors’ continued willingness to fund large technology companies as they scale up spending on AI capabilities.
Amazon’s proposed offering includes multiple bond maturities in the U.S. market, reportedly spanning up to 11 different tranches. The dollar-denominated portion alone may reach approximately $37 billion, far above the company’s initial expectation of raising between $25 billion and $30 billion.
The company is also exploring an additional euro-denominated sale that could total around €10 billion, broadening the funding pool beyond U.S. markets.
The planned financing comes only months after Amazon raised about $15 billion in its first U.S. bond offering since 2021. The latest move reflects the growing capital requirements tied to building advanced AI infrastructure.
Amazon’s fundraising push aligns with a sharp increase in capital expenditures. The company recently projected that spending could reach roughly $200 billion in 2026, up significantly from about $131 billion expected for 2025.
Much of that investment will support artificial intelligence initiatives, including specialized chips, robotics, and massive data center networks that power cloud services. The spending also extends to other long-term technologies such as low-Earth-orbit satellite systems.
The rapid expansion of AI workloads has intensified competition among hyperscale cloud providers, forcing companies to build ever-larger computing infrastructure. For Amazon, which operates the cloud platform Amazon Web Services (AWS), the investments are viewed as essential to maintaining its leadership in the sector.
AWS has already shown strong growth momentum. The cloud unit reported fourth-quarter revenue of $35.6 billion, representing a 24% increase year over year and its fastest growth rate in more than three years.
Amazon is not alone in turning to debt markets to finance massive technology investments. Other large cloud providers have also been raising significant capital to expand their AI capabilities.
Earlier this year, Alphabet issued around $20 billion in bonds as it continued building out its AI and cloud infrastructure. Meanwhile, Oracle Corporation has indicated it may raise between $45 billion and $50 billion through a combination of debt and equity by 2026 to expand its cloud footprint.
Analysts expect the surge in AI spending to significantly increase corporate borrowing across the technology sector. Some forecasts suggest total U.S. tech bond issuance could reach roughly $360 billion this year as companies race to secure computing capacity.
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