Today: 23 May 2026
Apollo’s $3.4B xAI chip lease puts Nvidia demand, Broadcom’s Google TPU push back in focus

Apollo’s $3.4B xAI chip lease puts Nvidia demand, Broadcom’s Google TPU push back in focus

NEW YORK, Feb 9, 2026, 10:59 (EST)

  • Apollo is close to finalizing a $3.4 billion loan deal, according to a report, that’s linked to leasing Nvidia AI chips for Elon Musk’s xAI.
  • Alphabet is considering a U.S. bond sale in the neighborhood of $15 billion, as Big Tech ramps up borrowing to bankroll AI infrastructure.
  • Investors are watching to see if custom chips, including Google’s TPUs, and suppliers like Broadcom, can start to erode Nvidia’s dominance.

Apollo Global Management is nearing a $3.4 billion loan agreement for an investment vehicle that plans to acquire Nvidia chips and lease them to Elon Musk’s xAI, according to The Information on Monday. Valor Equity Partners is arranging the deal, which could be wrapped up this week, the report said. Apollo would not comment. SpaceX, Nvidia, and xAI didn’t respond to requests for comment.

This latest financing move highlights how the AI boom is quickly becoming a capital-markets narrative, not solely a tale of technology. Companies are bundling, leasing, or even refinancing money for compute—whatever it takes to secure chips up front without burning through cash immediately.

Alphabet is targeting roughly $15 billion through a U.S. high-grade bond sale, according to Bloomberg News, moving to fund AI infrastructure as major cloud players ramp up debt. Hyperscalers, essentially the top-tier cloud companies, are on track to invest over $630 billion into AI this year, Reuters noted, despite returns trailing the flood of capital.

Alphabet jolted markets last week with a bold projection: capital spending could surge to as much as $185 billion in 2026, a dramatic leap from this year’s $91.45 billion, as the tech giant throws even more at servers, data centers, and networking equipment. “We are seeing our AI investments and infrastructure drive revenue and growth across the board,” CEO Sundar Pichai said to analysts, following a 48% spike in Google Cloud revenue to $17.7 billion for the December quarter. Reuters

Some investors aren’t betting on Nvidia alone. On Feb. 7, The Motley Fool’s Keithen Drury flagged Broadcom as another name gaining traction, thanks to its push into custom AI chips known as ASICs—these chips are purpose-built for specific tasks. As cloud players shift away from Nvidia’s general-purpose GPUs, ASICs are getting attention. Drury highlighted Google’s TPU (Tensor Processing Unit) as a standout example in AI inference—the process of running models after training.

Broadcom keeps pushing its image as the behind-the-scenes supplier for the custom-chip boom. Back in September, the company revealed it had landed a $10 billion AI chip deal with a new client—didn’t disclose who, but analysts immediately pegged OpenAI as the likely buyer, considering both the size and timing. Broadcom, for its part, stayed quiet on the name. Reuters later pointed out that those same analysts see Google-parent Alphabet and Meta as current Broadcom customers, as major tech firms look to lessen their reliance on Nvidia.

Nvidia remains the go-to for most big AI training projects, the chip every company mentions when budgets come out. But looking further ahead, the landscape gets complicated—custom chips, niche hardware, a growing list of suppliers all scrambling to tie down their own hyperscaler clients.

Still, the surge in spending is rattling some investors. Amazon’s plan for $200 billion in capital outlays this year has reignited concerns that cloud leaders are drifting away from the asset-light model and piling into capital-heavy territory. According to AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould, funds have been rotating out of shares “where positive surprises may be hard to achieve.” Reuters

Still, chip stocks keep drawing buyers when prices slip. Nvidia surged 7.8% Friday, pulling AMD and Broadcom up as well, with investors doubling down on expectations that AI-driven spending will continue fueling chip demand. “There’s enough evidence that there’s real demand for AI products,” said Ross Mayfield, investment strategy analyst at Baird. Reuters

At this point, money keeps flowing in — from loans, leases, bond sales, and not just what gets reported on earnings calls. The bigger question: can all that capital actually drive lasting cloud expansion and top-line gains, or does it just leave shareholders holding a costly stack of servers?

Stock Market Today

  • Top Stifel Analyst Raises Marvell (MRVL) Stock Price Target Ahead of Q1 Earnings
    May 22, 2026, 8:46 PM EDT. Marvell Technology (MRVL) is set to report its fiscal Q1 earnings on May 27. The stock has surged 131% year-to-date, reflecting strong demand for its semiconductor products. A leading analyst at Stifel has increased Marvell's price target, citing robust growth prospects and solid market position. Investors are closely watching the earnings announcement for signs of continued momentum in the chipmaker's business amid a volatile tech sector.

Latest articles

Dow Hits Record Close; All Eyes Turn to Holiday-Week Trading

Dow Hits Record Close; All Eyes Turn to Holiday-Week Trading

23 May 2026
The Dow closed at a record 50,579.70 on Friday, while the S&P 500 notched its eighth straight weekly gain. After-hours trading saw SPY, QQQ, DIA, and IWM all move lower. U.S. markets will be closed Monday for Memorial Day. Investors await Thursday’s inflation data.
IREN Stock Pauses as Nvidia Rally Cools Before Holiday

IREN Stock Pauses as Nvidia Rally Cools Before Holiday

23 May 2026
IREN shares fell 2.1% to $56.83 Friday, ending a two-day rally but closing the week up 7.4%. The stock’s moves follow a $3.4 billion AI cloud deal with Nvidia and a $3 billion convertible note offering. March-quarter revenue dropped to $144.8 million, with a net loss of $247.8 million. U.S. markets close Monday for Memorial Day; trading resumes Tuesday.
AXT stock reaches record; investors weigh risk to rally

AXT stock reaches record; investors weigh risk to rally

23 May 2026
AXT shares jumped 16.37% to $140.83 on Friday, hitting a 52-week high and trading above all recent analyst targets. The surge followed strong demand for AI-linked optical networking hardware and a sharp rise in indium phosphide orders. First-quarter revenue climbed to $26.9 million, with gross margin turning positive. Management forecast Q2 profitability and a backlog over $100 million.
Plug Power stock back in play as Feb. 17 share-vote redo nears
Previous Story

Plug Power stock back in play as Feb. 17 share-vote redo nears

Exxon Mobil stock hits a fresh 52-week high as oil firms — what to watch next
Next Story

Exxon Mobil stock hits a fresh 52-week high as oil firms — what to watch next

Go toTop