New York, June 20, 2026, 16:01 EDT
- Applied Digital last closed at $46.59 on Thursday, up 2.24% on the day and about 9.1% from the prior Friday’s close.
- Nasdaq was closed Friday for Juneteenth, leaving Thursday’s close as the latest regular-session price.
- The company completed a $1.59 billion senior-secured notes sale this week to fund part of its Polaris Forge 1 AI data-center campus.
Applied Digital shares ended a holiday-shortened U.S. trading week higher, with investors still weighing the Dallas company’s rapid buildout of artificial-intelligence data centers against the debt needed to pay for it. The stock closed Thursday at $46.59, up 2.24% on the day, before Nasdaq’s Juneteenth market closure on Friday.
The gain matters now because Applied Digital is trying to prove it can turn signed AI leases into powered campuses, not just announcements. Its shares rose roughly 9.1% over the four-session week, using Thursday’s close against the previous Friday’s $42.70 finish.
The latest company filing showed APLD ComputeCo 3, an Applied Digital subsidiary, completed a private sale of $1.59 billion of 7.000% senior secured notes due 2031. Senior secured notes are debt backed by collateral and paid ahead of unsecured creditors if a borrower runs into trouble. The proceeds are meant to fund construction and related costs for 150 megawatts of critical IT load — usable power capacity for servers — at ELN-04, the fourth building at Polaris Forge 1 in Ellendale, North Dakota.
That funding followed a busy stretch. Applied Digital said earlier in June it had signed a 210-megawatt, 15-year take-or-pay lease at Delta Forge 2 with a U.S.-based investment-grade hyperscaler. Take-or-pay means the customer must pay for contracted capacity whether it uses all of it or not. The company put base-term contracted revenue from that deal at about $5.2 billion, or about $12.7 billion if all renewal options are used.
Chief Executive Wes Cummins framed the company’s pitch as one of repeatable scale, saying Applied Digital had sought to “build a company that scales.” Chief Financial Officer Saidal Mohmand, discussing a separate revolving credit facility, said lender support showed “confidence … in our ability to execute.” Those are ambitious words, but the stock’s week suggests the market is rewarding financing progress as much as lease headlines. Applied Digital Corporation
The broader tape helped. U.S. stocks rallied Thursday, with the Nasdaq Composite up 1.91% to 26,517.93 and the S&P 500 up 1.08%, as chip shares led a rebound before the long weekend. Adjacent AI-infrastructure names also rose in the latest session: CoreWeave gained 2.4%, Nebius added 2.2% and IREN rose 3.3%, according to market data.
The market’s message is fairly plain. Applied Digital is being valued less like a small data-center operator and more like a financing-and-execution vehicle for AI demand, where signed capacity, utility access and the cost of money all matter. The equity story is no longer only about megawatts under contract; it is about whether those megawatts arrive on time and at margins that justify the leverage.
The risk is that the buildout takes longer, costs more, or meets a weaker AI spending cycle. Delta Forge 2 is not expected to begin initial operations until the first quarter of 2028, the customer remains unnamed, and the company’s new notes carry fixed 7% interest while project revenue depends on construction milestones and lease commencements. Applied Digital also said in a filing that actual results could differ from forward-looking statements because of market conditions and other risk factors.
There was one cleaner sign for balance-sheet watchers: a June 17 filing said a condition tied to escrow arrangements for separate 6.75% senior secured notes due 2031 had been satisfied, allowing funds in that escrow account to be released to the issuer and applied under the escrow agreement and indenture. That is plumbing, but in this stock, plumbing counts.
The week ahead will put the AI trade back under a microscope. Micron reports Wednesday, and Reuters said investors are treating the memory-chip maker’s earnings as a test of data-center demand and the durability of AI spending; Andy Pratt of Burney Company said the AI trend still has “a lot of juice.” For Applied Digital, that backdrop may matter nearly as much as company-specific news when Nasdaq reopens Monday. Reuters