Amazon needs a mountain of cash for AI. It just went to Canada to get some of it.
A Record Trip North
Amazon is selling C$14 billion of bonds in Canadian dollars. That works out to roughly $10 billion.
A bond is just a loan from investors. The company pays it back later, with interest.
This is the biggest investment-grade bond sale ever done in Canadian dollars.
Investment-grade is a simple idea. It means lenders see the borrower as very likely to pay them back.
Setting a record for a whole country's market is rare for one company. That is what makes the size stand out.
Lenders tend to line up for a name like Amazon. So it can borrow a lot at once without scaring buyers off.
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Why Canada
The AI boom is not cheap. Amazon and its big-tech peers plan to spend hundreds of billions on data centers, chips, and gear.
Amazon and its peers are called hyperscalers. They run the huge clouds that power AI for everyone else.
That is a lot to ask of the U.S. bond market alone. It is a bit like maxing out one credit card and reaching for another.
Borrowing in Canadian dollars taps a fresh pool of lenders. It lets Amazon raise cash without leaning only on its home market.
Even a cash-rich firm borrows for projects this big. A bond spreads the cost over many years instead of all at once.
The trip north fits a bigger plan. Amazon has set aside about $200 billion for AI build-out in 2026.
That number helps explain the problem. One bond market, even a big one, cannot cover the whole bill.
Amazon is not alone in this hunt. Microsoft, Google, and Meta are spending at the same scale, and all of them need funding.
Spreading the borrowing across countries has another perk. Amazon can lock in different lenders before rivals crowd the same desks.
What To Watch
The size is the real story here. When one company sets a record for a country's bond market, the AI tab has clearly grown huge.
The deal even topped the C$8.5 billion that Google parent Alphabet raised in Canadian dollars a month earlier. That is another sign of how fast these AI bills are piling up.
On the same day, it stood behind a separate data-center deal. Lenders backed that deal partly because Amazon's name was on it. That deal was for a Texas data center leased to Amazon for years.
The next question is simple. Will rivals follow Amazon into overseas debt markets?
So far, the cash keeps flowing toward anything tied to AI.
For investors, the deal is a window into the cost of AI. The money has to come from somewhere, and now it is coming from Canada too.
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