New York, May 16, 2026, 13:03 EDT
- BXDC finished Friday at $20.10, above the $20 IPO price. Shares opened Thursday below the offer price.
- Blackstone’s REIT collected $1.75 billion to back stable data centers, an area seeing more action on cloud and AI demand.
- The main problem is the company hasn’t yet acquired any data-center assets. Early investors are left depending on Blackstone to make it happen.
Blackstone Digital Infrastructure Trust Inc. spent its first short week on the market holding just above its IPO price. The Blackstone-backed data center REIT saw steadier trading Friday as its debut on the New York Stock Exchange drew little noise.
The stock finished Friday at $20.10, a gain of 1.46%. Thursday’s close was $19.81, below the $20 offer, MarketScreener data show. The NYSE was shut on Saturday, so next week will bring more trading for the new listing.
BXDC started trading after selling 87.5 million shares for $20 apiece, raising $1.75 billion. Blackstone said BXDC will trade on the NYSE. The trust is being watched as a pure play on artificial intelligence infrastructure demand.
Blackstone plans to use most of the funds to acquire new data centers that generate rental revenue. The company operates as a real estate investment trust, or REIT, which means it typically avoids federal corporate taxes by distributing taxable profits to investors.
BXDC opened and traded at $20 on Thursday, matching its IPO price, according to Reuters. Investors are weighing Blackstone’s data-center track record against the fact that the REIT still has no assets. “The window is wide open right now,” Lukas Muehlbauer, a research associate at IPOX, told Reuters. He said interest in these kinds of IPOs can change quickly. Reuters
BXDC could be a template for other sponsors if trading goes well, he said. The focus this week is on whether the stock will hold above $20 after its initial pop, and on whether Blackstone can show it is putting cash into real assets.
The trust has evaluated about $25 billion in near-term deals in major data-center hubs such as Northern Virginia, Ohio, Phoenix, Maryland, and Austin, according to its prospectus. “Hyperscale” tenants means large tech or cloud players that lease big blocks of data-center space, typically with long-term agreements. SEC
BXDC is pitching itself alongside established data-center landlords like Digital Realty Trust and Equinix, but according to its filing, BXDC hasn’t picked up any data-center assets yet. The company describes itself as a “blind pool,” so investors won’t know which properties will be bought ahead of time. SEC
Blackstone is important here. Reuters reported Blackstone has over $150 billion in global data-center assets, including QTS and AirTrunk. QTS leased 14 times more megawatts since Blackstone’s 2021 acquisition.
BXDC edged up Friday, its second trading day, putting shares back above issue price. That was in contrast to larger players. Digital Realty finished at $188.51, down $4.32, while Equinix ended lower at $1,059.44, off $20.46, market data showed.
BXDC comes to market with no operating history, no data center assets in hand, and no agreements lined up, according to the prospectus. The risks are clear. If property values climb, financing costs rise, or AI leasing slows, the shares could trade more like a SPAC than a real infrastructure name.
Investors head into next week watching how the stock handles the $20 level and looking for signs of steady trading after the IPO. They’re also tracking what Blackstone and the underwriters do with the 30-day extra share option. Blackstone said gross proceeds could reach $2.0 billion if the option is fully exercised.