
Capital as a Service: The Hyperscaler Shift
This is not just another project financing. It points to a model in which hyperscalers can externalize a significant portion of the capital required for AI campuses while retaining operational control. Under the Hyperion structure, Meta provides construction and property management, while Blue Owl supplies capital at scale alongside infrastructure expertise.
Reuters described the transaction as Meta’s largest private capital deal to date, with the campus projected to exceed 2 gigawatts of capacity. For Blue Owl, it marks a shift in role: from backing developers serving hyperscalers to working directly with a hyperscaler to structure ownership more efficiently at scale.
Hyperion also helps explain why this model is gaining traction. Hyperscalers are now deploying capital at a pace that makes flexibility a strategic priority. Structures like the Meta–Blue Owl JV allow them to continue expanding infrastructure without fully absorbing the balance-sheet impact of each new campus.
Analyst commentary cited by Reuters suggested the arrangement could help Meta mitigate risk and avoid concentrating too much capital in land, buildings, and long-lived infrastructure, preserving capacity for additional facilities and ongoing AI investment.
That is the service Blue Owl is effectively providing. Not just capital, but balance-sheet flexibility at a time when AI infrastructure demand is stretching even the largest technology companies. With major tech firms projected to spend hundreds of billions annually on AI infrastructure, that capability is becoming central to how the next generation of campuses gets built.
The Capital Baseline Resets
In early 2026, hyperscalers effectively reset the capital baseline for the sector. Alphabet projected $175 billion to $185 billion in annual capex, citing continued constraints across servers, data centers, and networking. Amazon pointed to roughly $200 billion, up from $131 billion the prior year, while noting persistent demand pressure in AWS. Meta raised its own guidance to between $115 billion and $135 billion, driven by AI infrastructure costs and associated operating expenses.
Taken together, the signal is clear: AI infrastructure is no longer an incremental expansion cycle. It is an industrial buildout measured in hundreds of billions of dollars annually. Reuters placed total planned 2026 spending by major technology firms at roughly $600 billion, underscoring the scale of the shift.
Expanding the Capital Stack: Sovereign Scale
Against that backdrop, Blue Owl has been widening the sources of capital feeding its platform. In September 2025, the firm announced a partnership with the Qatar Investment Authority to establish a digital infrastructure vehicle aimed at accelerating compute capacity for hyperscale customers. The platform launched with more than $3 billion in initial assets and was structured for long-term expansion.
As of mid-2025, Blue Owl said its digital infrastructure strategy had raised $39 billion and invested across more than 100 facilities in nearly 30 markets. The QIA partnership adds a different kind of capital to that base—sovereign wealth with long-duration horizons and tolerance for infrastructure-scale risk.
That matters because AI data centers increasingly require both. These are capital-intensive assets with extended development timelines and uncertain demand curves. By pairing sovereign capital with its existing funds and permanent capital strategies, Blue Owl is building a deeper reserve to support multi-phase hyperscale deployments.
Multiple Paths to the Same Outcome
Blue Owl is not relying on a single model to deploy that capital. With Crusoe, it is aligned with a developer integrating energy and compute at startup speed. With Meta, it is participating directly in hyperscaler-led campus ownership. With STACK Infrastructure, it is paired with an experienced global operator capable of executing across multiple markets.
This diversification creates optionality. Rather than committing to a single build paradigm, Blue Owl is positioning itself across several: hyperscaler joint ventures, developer-led campuses, and globally scaled development programs. Each reflects a different path to the same outcome, delivering capacity at the scale and speed AI demand now requires.
There is also a consistent pattern in where the firm chooses to operate. Blue Owl is concentrating on the most constrained parts of the market: hyperscale customer concentration, capital intensity, power procurement, and deployment timelines. Those are higher-risk positions than stabilized wholesale assets. But they are also where the strategic value is shifting in the current cycle.
Execution at Scale: The STACK Layer
The firm’s relationship with STACK Infrastructure adds an execution layer to that strategy. In March 2025, STACK secured $6 billion in green financing across campuses in Stafford, Portland, and Toronto, bringing total debt capital raised for its global portfolio to roughly $20 billion. Later that year, STACK and Blue Owl advanced plans for a next-generation AI campus in Doña Ana County, New Mexico, described as exceeding 1 gigawatt and incorporating on-site power and closed-loop cooling.
Together, these efforts point to a coordinated approach: capital at scale, multiple deployment pathways, and operating partners capable of executing large, complex builds. That combination is increasingly what it takes to remain relevant in the AI infrastructure cycle.
Where the Model Gets Tested
In early April, that broader capital backdrop showed signs of strain. Bloomberg reported that Blue Owl limited redemptions from two of its private credit funds after facing unusually large withdrawal requests, including roughly 22% of shares in one vehicle and more than 40% in another.
The move follows similar actions by peers across the private credit sector, as investors grow more cautious amid concerns about credit quality and exposure to technology and software companies, some of which are now being reshaped by the same AI wave driving data center demand.
That selectivity is also showing up at the project level. Late in 2025, reports indicated that Blue Owl declined to back Oracle’s planned $10 billion data center campus in Michigan, amid lender concerns about debt levels and evolving market conditions. While details remain limited, the decision suggests that even the largest AI infrastructure projects are not immune to stricter underwriting as capital providers reassess risk.
This is not a digital infrastructure event in itself. But it is a reminder that the capital supporting AI buildouts does not exist in isolation. It flows through broader markets that can tighten quickly, particularly in segments tied to private wealth and income-oriented investors.
For a firm like Blue Owl, now operating across institutional funds, sovereign partnerships, hyperscaler joint ventures, and private wealth channels, that linkage matters. Access to capital is not just about scale. It is about stability, duration, and investor confidence across multiple funding sources.
Against that backdrop, Blue Owl’s trajectory over the past year is clear. The firm has moved from participant to platform: integrating IPI, scaling its flagship fund, expanding its role in Abilene alongside Crusoe, forming a sovereign-backed partnership with QIA, opening additional channels through private-wealth vehicles such as ODIT, and entering a direct hyperscaler joint venture with Meta at Hyperion.
The model is built to match the scale of AI infrastructure demand. The question now is whether the model can hold under the same market pressures shaping the capital behind it. In the AI buildout, access to capital matters, but the ability to deploy it at speed may be what ultimately separates the leaders from the rest.





















