Nvidia's $25B bond deal sends investors a clear signal
Key takeaways
- On June 15, the company returned, and the response from investors made the five-year absence feel like a long time coming.
- The deal was priced across seven tranches with maturities ranging from two to thirty years.
- The question investors are likely asking first is why a company with Nvidia's financial position needs to borrow at all.
Nvidia's $25B bond deal sends investors a clear signal Hillary Remy Wed, June 17, 2026 at 12:33 AM GMT+7 5 min read NVDA The last time Nvidia (NVDA) went to the investment-grade bond market was 2021, when the company generated about $27 billion in annual revenue and AI had not yet become the defining story of the technology sector.
On June 15, the company returned, and the response from investors made the five-year absence feel like a long time coming. Revenue in fiscal 2026 has since grown to $216 billion, according to CNBC.
Nvidia raised $25 billion in high-grade bonds, its largest debt offering on record, in a deal that began targeting $20 billion before being increased after demand reached approximately $85 billion, more than three times the size of the offering, according to Bloomberg.