Blackstone filed Friday for a $1.75 billion US initial public offering of its data center vehicle, seeking to capitalize on surging demand for AI compute infrastructure while offloading matured real estate exposure. The REIT, assembled around the $10 billion QTS Realty acquisition completed in 2021, represents one of the largest property offerings in eighteen months.
The filing arrives as data center vacancy rates in Northern Virginia—the world's densest compute cluster—dropped to 1.2 percent in Q4 2024, down from 3.8 percent a year prior. Blackstone has expanded the QTS portfolio from 7 million square feet at acquisition to approximately 9.4 million square feet today, adding hyperscale capacity in Phoenix, Atlanta, and Dallas-Fort Worth. The REIT currently operates 42 facilities across thirteen markets, with contracted annual revenue approaching $1.1 billion as of December. Occupancy stands at 89 percent, weighted toward colocation and hybrid deployments rather than single-tenant wholesale.
The offering tests whether public markets will pay private equity premiums for power-constrained assets. Blackstone acquired QTS at roughly 18 times EBITDA when data center cap rates averaged 5.8 percent; comparable public REITs now trade at 14-16 times forward funds from operations. Digital Realty and Equinix have gained 22 percent and 18 percent respectively over the past twelve months, but both carry investment-grade balance sheets and contractual power commitments Blackstone's vehicle lacks at scale. The gap matters because new hyperscale builds require 24-36 months and utility capacity that three major markets—Northern Virginia, Phoenix, Silicon Valley—can no longer guarantee without substation upgrades. Blackstone is effectively monetizing existing infrastructure before the next development cycle's cost curve steepens.
Allocators should track two variables: pricing relative to Digital Realty's 5.1 percent implied cap rate, and whether the REIT discloses forward power commitments by facility. If Blackstone prices below a 5.5 percent yield, it signals the firm believes scarcity value offsets operational risk. The IPO roadshow begins mid-month with pricing expected before March 15. Separately, watch for secondary filings from Blackstone's remaining 68 percent stake—the firm typically holds core real estate for six to eight years post-IPO before full exit, but AI infrastructure appetite may compress that window.
The filing names Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan as lead underwriters. Blackstone has not yet disclosed price range or share count, but the $1.75 billion target implies a valuation near $8-9 billion at standard 18-22 percent float. The firm's private perpetual capital vehicle, BREIT, holds an adjacent $4.2 billion data center book that remains off the table.