Today: 17 June 2026
Nvidia stock dips as $25 billion bond sale spikes AI debt market
17 June 2026
2 mins read

Nvidia stock dips as $25 billion bond sale spikes AI debt market

NEW YORK, June 17, 2026, 05:01 (EDT)

  • Nvidia shares finished at $207.41 on Tuesday, off 2.37%. The stock moved between $207.29 and $211.49 in the session. U.S. exchanges are open Wednesday. The Nasdaq calendar shows Juneteenth—Friday, June 19—as the next 2026 holiday closure.
  • The company sold $25 billion of U.S. bonds in seven parts, lifting the deal from $20 billion after orders hit around $85 billion.
  • The decline followed a larger tech selloff. The Nasdaq dropped 1.15%, the S&P 500 was off 0.57%, and the Philadelphia semiconductor index dropped 5.7%.

Nvidia shares are weaker into Wednesday’s U.S. session, after the chipmaker’s first corporate bond sale in five years shifted attention from chip demand to how it will pay for the next round of AI spending.

Nvidia shares slid 2.37% Tuesday, ending at $207.41 and giving the chipmaker a market cap near $5.06 trillion. The move unwound some of Monday’s gains. The price reflects Tuesday’s Nasdaq close, not a holiday session.

Nvidia is still the go-to name for the AI trade, but the story is shifting. The market is starting to eye balance sheets, not just order books. The company’s $25 billion debt sale showed buyers are there. At the same time, it sent a message to equity holders: the AI supply chain is leaning harder on capital.

Nvidia started out looking to raise $20 billion, Reuters said, but then raised the size of the deal. The notes are divided into seven tranches, with maturities stretching to 2056. These are investment-grade bonds, meaning credit agencies see them as lower risk. Nvidia hasn’t sold in that market since 2021.

The SEC filing said the notes are unsecured, won’t be listed on any exchange, and proceeds go toward general corporate use like repaying or refinancing old notes. The prospectus also flagged that debt payments might impact cash flow, and that a ratings move could move the price of the notes.

The deal drops into a market seeing a wave of AI-tied borrowing. Reuters said last week that Morgan Stanley sees worldwide AI debt sales hitting close to $570 billion by 2026, with hyperscalers boosting investments in chips, energy and data center sites as they ramp up spending.

Nvidia shares weren’t the only chips under pressure. Broadcom lost 4.37% Tuesday, while Advanced Micro Devices sank 7.30%. Investors moved out of several chip stocks instead of focusing on a single name.

Equinix had more operating news Tuesday. The company said it’s expanding work with Cisco and Nvidia to roll out “Secure AI Factories,” which are data-center setups meant for AI with networking and security included. “Enterprise AI starts with its physical foundation,” said Gordon Mackintosh, senior vice president for global partner sales and ecosystems at Equinix. Equinix, Inc.

Market tone played a role. Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott, told Reuters investors were “digesting some of those gains” after the sharp rally on Monday as they waited for the Federal Reserve’s policy update on Wednesday. Tech lagged on Tuesday, with the S&P 500 tech sector down 2.3%. Reuters

The downside isn’t limited to just a rate swing in a single session. If the AI ramp-up turns out to need more outside cash, or if the Fed’s signals keep borrowing costs up, Nvidia’s bond deal could look less like a show of balance-sheet power and more like evidence that funding pressure is rising across the group. Nvidia’s own prospectus notes refinancing risk and warns that taking on debt could tighten its financial options.

Wednesday starts with buyers on watch to see if they come back before the open, after the chip index dropped lower. Creditors reacted well to the bond deal. But equity holders want to know how much AI growth is already priced in.

Stock Market Today

  • Canadian Markets Mixed as Oil Prices Dip Ahead of Fed Chair Warsh’s First Meeting
    June 17, 2026, 7:04 AM EDT. Global stocks showed muted movement with sinking crude oil prices easing inflation concerns and pushing bond yields down before Kevin Warsh's debut as U.S. Federal Reserve chair. In Canada, TSX futures traded lower while Andrew Peller Ltd. agreed to be acquired by Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd. Oil prices hovered near a three-month low amid a U.S.-Iran peace deal and supply concerns for 2025. The Canadian dollar weakened against the U.S. dollar, trading near 71.4 US cents, down 1.83% month-over-month. The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield fell to 4.438%. Market watchers await key U.S. retail sales data and Warsh's Fed briefing for clues on future monetary policy.

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