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Amazon Just Lined Up A $17.5 Billion Loan To Fund Its AI Push

Published Jun 10, 2026
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Summary:
  • Amazon secured a $17.5 billion loan led by Citigroup and more than a dozen other banks, disclosed in a regulatory filing on June 10.
  • Amazon can draw on the loan through the end of September and has three years to repay each amount it borrows.
  • The borrowing comes as big tech companies take on debt to pay for the costly buildout of AI infrastructure.

Amazon is one of the richest companies on the planet.

It just borrowed $17.5 billion anyway.

A Credit Line, Not A One-Time Loan

Amazon lined up a $17.5 billion loan led by Citigroup. It told the public in an official filing on June 10.

More than a dozen other banks pitched in. The group includes JPMorgan, Bank of America, HSBC, and Wells Fargo.

Citigroup led the deal. The other banks split the rest.

The setup is worth knowing. It is a delayed draw loan, which works like a credit card with a high limit.

Amazon can pull money from it through the end of September. Each time it borrows, it gets three years to pay that piece back.

That setup has a nice perk. Amazon borrows only what it needs, when it needs it.

It also pays interest on that piece, not the full $17.5 billion. The rate sits a bit above SOFR, a common rate banks use as a starting point.

The exact cost runs between 0.625 and 0.875 of a point higher, based on Amazon's credit rating. In plain terms, stronger finances mean cheaper borrowing.

Following the money shows you where a whole sector is headed. Market Briefs tracks moves like this in five minutes a day. A free investing masterclass is bundled in.

Why A Cash-Rich Giant Needs A Loan

Amazon does not lack money. So why borrow?

The short answer is AI. Building the data centers and chips that power AI costs a staggering amount.

The bill for AI keeps climbing. New chips, bigger data centers, and more power all add up.

That money pays for the buildings, the chips, and the power to run them. People call all of that AI infrastructure.

Why borrow instead of paying cash? Spending its own money would tie up funds that are busy earning elsewhere.

A loan spreads the cost out over time. It also leaves Amazon's own cash on hand free for everything else.

That flexibility matters at this scale. Cash kept free can still earn returns elsewhere.

Amazon recently raised money in foreign bond markets, too. Tapping lenders abroad opens up new pools of cash.

Amazon is not alone here. Across Big Tech, firms are taking on loans and selling bonds to pay for the AI race.

For now, the loan gives Amazon room to spend big. And it can do that without draining its own cash.

What To Watch

The pattern is bigger than one loan. When the most valuable companies borrow this much to chase AI, the spending race is heating up, not cooling down.

Watch how much more debt the big players take on. The size of these loans shows how sure they are about AI demand.

The filing did not break down where each dollar goes. But the timing points right at AI.

Amazon has the cash to pay for AI. It is choosing to borrow for it instead.

Want to know which firms are really winning the AI spending race? Get Market Briefs with 350,000+ investors. A 45-minute investing course comes as a free bonus.

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