Nvidia is sitting on a huge pile of cash. It is also one of the most profitable firms on earth.
So why is it borrowing at least $20 billion?
What Nvidia Is Doing
Nvidia is selling at least $20 billion in bonds. A bond is just an IOU.
Investors lend the firm money. The firm pays them interest until the loan is paid back.
Bonds are how big firms raise large sums at once. They are common, but Nvidia rarely uses them.
This is its first bond sale since 2021. Back then it raised $5 billion.
So this round is about four times bigger. For a firm that rarely borrows, that is a big swing.
These are called high-grade bonds. That means raters see Nvidia as very safe.
Safe borrowers pay less interest. That is why the timing matters so much.
The new debt comes in seven parts. The payback dates run from 2 to 30 years out.
Spreading the dates that way lowers the risk. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley are running the sale.
Big banks only line up like this for borrowers they trust. We unpack what moves like this mean for your money in Market Briefs, delivered every morning, plus a free investing masterclass when you join.
Why Borrow When You Are Already Rich?
It sounds backwards, but the logic is simple. Think of a homeowner with savings who still takes a mortgage.
Borrowing can cost less than draining your own bank account. The same idea works for a giant like Nvidia.
Nvidia says the money is for general needs. That includes paying off and refinancing older debt.
Borrowing also leaves its huge cash pile free. That cash can go to new chips, research and big AI deals.
The timing helps, too. Investors are hungry for bonds from strong tech names right now.
So Nvidia can lock in good terms. Early talk had the longest bond pay about 0.9 of a point more than U.S. Treasury bonds.
That is a small premium for a 30-year loan. It shows how much trust the market puts in the firm.
Nvidia is not alone here, either. A wave of firms are borrowing to help fund the AI spending boom.
Building AI is wildly expensive. Data centers and chips cost billions to buy and run.
Even cash-rich firms tap the bond market to spread that cost. It lets them grow fast without burning their savings.
Worth Noting
Investors liked the news and nudged the stock higher. Nvidia's value has soared on the AI boom.
It now ranks among the most valuable firms in the world. The move also follows recent deals with LG and Doosan that widen its AI reach.
A bond sale this size is also a signal. It says the firm sees years of heavy spending ahead.
For now, Nvidia is betting it is cheaper to borrow than to spend its own cash.
Want the market explained without the jargon? Sign up for Market Briefs and you also get a free 45-minute course on finding investments.
