The Anthropic Apollo Blackstone TPU deal is a $35 billion private-credit package that leases Google Tensor Processing Units to Anthropic via a special-purpose vehicle — the largest AI compute financing deal ever assembled. The debt is backed by Broadcom residual-value guarantees, with Google providing payment assurances across five U.S. data centers.
The Anthropic Apollo Blackstone TPU Deal, Explained
Bloomberg first reported the deal on May 28, 2026, and Axios confirmed its close around June 10. Apollo leads the syndicate, with Blackstone co-arranging alongside. Rather than Anthropic purchasing chips outright, the financing flows through an SPV that acquires Google TPUs and leases them back to Anthropic — keeping the capital expenditure off Anthropic’s balance sheet while still giving the company dedicated compute at scale.
The $35 billion is divided into three tranches, according to reporting by Axios and CryptoBriefing. Roughly $6 billion in A1 notes carry investment-grade private ratings, placed with banks at a spread of approximately 1 percentage point over Treasuries. A larger $24 billion A2 tranche priced at a 5.75% coupon. A $4.5 billion B tranche — without Broadcom’s backstop — priced at 8.5%, reflecting the higher risk tier.
- $35B — total deal size (largest private credit AI deal ever)
- $6B — A1 tranche (investment-grade, ~1% over Treasuries)
- $24B — A2 tranche (5.75% coupon)
- $4.5B — B tranche (8.5% coupon, no Broadcom backstop)
- 5 — U.S. data centers: New York, Texas, Louisiana, Indiana
- $965B — Anthropic post-money valuation after June Series H
Why This Deal Structure Is Unprecedented
AI compute financing has historically meant either corporate balance-sheet spending or direct hyperscaler agreements. The Apollo/Blackstone SPV model is different: it treats Google TPUs as a financeable asset class — something you can collateralize, tranche, and sell to institutional debt investors. Broadcom’s residual-value guarantees on the senior tranches are the key innovation. By vouching that the chips will retain a minimum resale value, Broadcom makes the debt safe enough for investment-grade buyers, enabling spreads near Treasuries rather than high-yield territory.
Google’s role adds a second layer of de-risking. According to CryptoBriefing, Google is providing payment guarantees on the capacity leased at all five facilities — meaning if Anthropic can’t pay its lease, Google covers it. That effectively turns the A1 tranche into something close to a Google-backed obligation. It’s a structure that lets Anthropic access compute at a scale no equity round alone could fund.
The Anthropic IPO Backdrop
The timing is not coincidental. Anthropic filed its IPO S-1 with the SEC on June 1, 2026 — just days before this deal closed. The $35 billion compute facility gives public-market investors a clear read on Anthropic’s capital strategy: the company is not trying to buy its way to chip ownership; it is engineering compute access as structured debt, freeing equity capital for model research and talent. Anthropic’s $65 billion Series H round at a $965 billion valuation closed in early June. The compute deal and the equity raise together put Anthropic’s total June 2026 capital mobilization above $100 billion.
Read our weekly AI news roundup for June 6 for more context. This facility is also separate from a SpaceX compute arrangement Anthropic announced in early June. The Apollo/Blackstone deal is specifically for Google TPUs, deployed across five named U.S. data centers — a distinct and larger commitment.
What We Don’t Know Yet
Several details remain unconfirmed. The exact TPU generation has not been disclosed by any party. The lease duration is unreported. Total TPU unit count and deployment timelines have not been officially confirmed. Treat any figures on those points from other outlets as speculation until Anthropic or Apollo make an official statement.
This deal is a watershed for AI infrastructure finance — not because of Anthropic specifically, but because it proves that AI compute can be treated as an asset class. The Broadcom backstop and Google payment guarantees mean private-credit investors can buy “AI chips” at near-investment-grade spreads. Expect this model to be replicated immediately: every frontier lab without a hyperscaler parent will be exploring SPV chip financing by Q3 2026. The winner here isn’t just Anthropic — it’s Apollo and Blackstone, who just invented a new market. The loser is every competitor still burning equity on GPU ownership.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Anthropic Apollo Blackstone TPU deal?
Apollo Global Management and Blackstone finalized a $35 billion private-credit package in June 2026 to lease Google TPUs to Anthropic. The deal is structured through a special-purpose vehicle, with Broadcom providing residual-value guarantees and Google providing payment guarantees at five U.S. data centers.
Why did Anthropic use debt instead of equity for compute?
Structuring compute access as leased debt keeps capital expenditure off Anthropic’s balance sheet and frees equity capital for research and hiring. With Anthropic heading into an IPO, debt-financed infrastructure also looks better to public-market investors than burning through equity on depreciating hardware.
What is Broadcom’s role in the Anthropic chip financing deal?
Broadcom provided residual-value guarantees on the A1 and A2 senior tranches of the deal. This means Broadcom backstops the chips’ minimum resale value, reducing credit risk enough for the senior debt to price near investment-grade spreads — critical to attracting institutional investors at scale.
What is Google’s role in the $35B Anthropic TPU deal?
Google provides payment guarantees on the TPU capacity leased at all five data center locations. If Anthropic cannot meet its lease payments, Google covers them — effectively making the senior debt a near-Google-backed obligation and substantially de-risking the arrangement for lenders.
How does the $35B TPU deal relate to Anthropic’s IPO?
Anthropic filed its IPO S-1 with the SEC on June 1, 2026. The $35 billion compute facility, closed days later, signals to prospective public investors that Anthropic has secured multi-year compute access without deploying equity capital on chip ownership — a strong infrastructure narrative for a company approaching a public offering.

