Blackstone wants to let everyday investors buy into the AI data center boom - and it is going public to do it.
The $1.3 trillion asset manager filed for an IPO of a new real estate investment trust called Blackstone Digital Infrastructure Trust, or BXDC, aiming to raise about $2 billion to buy newly built data centers already leased to big tech companies.
How It Works
BXDC will target properties valued between $250 million and $1.5 billion, all leased to investment-grade tenants - the major cloud and AI companies that need massive computing facilities to train and run their models. Expected yields sit between 5.75% and 7% a year, with rent set to rise 2% to 3% annually through built-in lease escalators.
Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, and Morgan Stanley are underwriting the deal, with shares set to trade on the New York Stock Exchange. The underwriter lineup alone signals how big Blackstone expects this offering to be.
As a REIT - a real estate investment trust - BXDC is required to pay out at least 90% of its taxable income as dividends. That structure gives investors a steady income stream backed by long-term leases with some of the largest and most creditworthy tech companies in the world.
Unlike office or retail REITs, data center tenants rarely leave mid-lease because the cost of moving servers and reconfiguring networks is prohibitively high, which makes the income stream more predictable.
The data center sector has been one of the best-performing segments of commercial real estate over the past five years, with vacancy rates near historic lows and new construction struggling to keep up with demand.
Why Blackstone Is Doing This
This hits two of Blackstone's biggest goals at once - becoming the world's largest investor in AI infrastructure while reaching beyond pensions and endowments to individual investors who buy REITs in their brokerage accounts.
Blackstone already owns more than $70 billion in data center assets through its private funds, making it one of the largest players in the space. BXDC lets the firm monetize its existing deal pipeline while raising fresh capital from public markets to buy even more facilities.
A publicly traded data center REIT gives both institutional and individual investors a way into a sector that has mostly been locked behind private equity minimums of $1 million or more. For context, existing publicly traded data center REITs like Equinix and Digital Realty have delivered strong double- and triple-digit returns over the past decade, outperforming the broader market by a wide margin.
The timing is deliberate. Global data center capacity is expected to grow more than 30% over the next three years as cloud and AI workloads surge, creating a wave of newly built facilities that need long-term owners with deep pockets.
What to Watch
Data center demand is at an all-time high, but so are construction costs and borrowing rates. If AI spending keeps growing, BXDC could be a strong income play for investors looking for yield tied to the tech sector.
If the AI buildout slows or interest rates stay elevated, Blackstone will be holding pricey buildings with long leases and limited room to adjust pricing.
