NEW YORK, May 14, 2026, 14:07 EDT
- BXDC started trading at $20, right where Blackstone set the IPO price, following a $1.75 billion raise.
- The trust hasn’t picked up any data center assets yet; it’s operating as a “blind pool.”
- Blackstone is gauging public appetite for AI-tied infrastructure, following a string of big-ticket tech and energy IPOs.
Blackstone Digital Infrastructure Trust saw an uninspired start on the New York Stock Exchange Thursday, with shares kicking off their debut at $20—right where the IPO priced them. The $1.75 billion float involved 87.5 million shares changing hands, all aimed at investors eyeing AI infrastructure.
This debut stands out, offering public-market investors a fresh entry point into the data center surge—no need to hold shares of the tech giants fueling the trend. Blackstone put the expected closing at May 15. Underwriters are holding a 30-day option that, if fully taken, bumps potential gross proceeds up to $2.0 billion.
Data centers—purpose-built spaces packed with servers and network equipment—are now critical as the drive for computing power accelerates among cloud providers and AI developers. Spending by Big Tech on AI infrastructure, including data centers, is on track to top $700 billion by 2026, Reuters has reported.
BXDC is targeting newly constructed, income-generating data centers already leased to hyperscale tenants—think big-name cloud and tech firms with solid credit. According to a filing, the company has scoped out roughly $25 billion in near-term potential deals across markets like Northern Virginia, Ohio, Phoenix, Maryland, and Austin.
“The timing is crucial,” Lukas Muehlbauer, IPOX Research Associate, said in an interview with Reuters. He noted how fast thematic IPO windows swing open and slam shut. A solid debut for BXDC, he added, might set the playbook for other sponsors holding assets in data centers, power, or AI infrastructure. Reuters
But here’s the thing: BXDC hasn’t actually locked down any data center assets yet, according to its prospectus. That means investors are putting their money into a so-called “blind pool,” betting on Blackstone’s ability to find and close deals, not on any existing portfolio. SEC
BXDC’s setup is a marked departure from the likes of Equinix and Digital Realty, the big public data center names that already run sprawling networks. It’s coming to market armed with funding and a management team, but no existing properties. The plan: go after 10-to-20-year leases, lock in annual rent bumps of 2% to 3%, and aim for asset yields in the 5.75% to 7% range or better.
Blackstone’s scale is its calling card here. The firm controls over $150 billion in data center assets worldwide, according to Reuters—names like QTS and AirTrunk are in the mix. Since Blackstone took QTS private in 2021, leased megawatts at QTS have jumped 14 times.
Before the listing settled, prediction markets leaned cautious. On Polymarket, traders pegged the $1.5 billion-to-$1.75 billion market cap bracket as the favorite, giving it a 60% chance. The $1.75 billion-to-$2.0 billion band followed, though much less likely at 16%. Even after its scheduled end date, the market awaited official resolution.
AI infrastructure stocks aren’t exactly a bargain anymore, and BXDC’s challenge now comes down to actually converting its deal pipeline into assets it owns—ideally under terms matching those laid out in its filing. There’s another headache: higher interest rates. BXDC flagged the risk that investors could look for better yields from real estate investment trusts, while financing costs might head up too, according to the company’s listed risk factors.
Flat out of the gate. Public investors took the offering, but the price didn’t budge — not yet, anyway. The real question now: Will Blackstone pick up the acquisition pace and shift BXDC’s story from buzzy AI play to long-term income machine?