Blackstone filed for a $1.75 billion initial public offering of a data-center REIT, targeting institutional and retail capital that wants exposure to AI infrastructure without construction timelines or lease-up risk. The vehicle acquires already-built, already-leased facilities — the kind hyperscalers and sovereign compute buyers are locking in for seven to fifteen years. Blackstone did not disclose pricing or share count in the S-1, but the structure is clear: this is yield product dressed in AI tailwinds, not a development play.
The filing arrives as data-center lease rates in Northern Virginia and Phoenix are running 18% to 22% above twelve-month averages, and as Blackstone's private real estate funds hold roughly $8 billion in data-center assets across North America and Europe. The REIT will compete for the same buyer — pension allocators, insurance balance sheets, ETF inflows — that drove Digital Realty and Equinix to trade at forward FFO multiples near 22x in recent quarters. Blackstone is not building; it is packaging cash flows already underwritten in private vehicles and re-selling them at public-market clearing prices. The arbitrage is the spread between private acquisition cap rates, now near 5.8% for stabilized hyperscale facilities, and public equity costs that imply 4.2% to 4.6% going-in yields after fees and promote.
What matters is timing. Public REIT capital is cheaper than it was eighteen months ago, when ten-year Treasury yields were climbing and data-center development loans were pricing at SOFR plus 325 basis points. Now, with forward curves implying Fed cuts through mid-2025 and insurance allocators hunting for duration-matched income, Blackstone can term out acquisition financing at rates that make the REIT structure accretive to its private funds. The offering also lets Blackstone harvest gains on properties bought in 2021 and 2022, when AI demand was a thesis, not a signed lease. If the IPO clears at the target raise, Blackstone will have monetized roughly $2.3 billion in basis across six to eight facilities, assuming standard REIT leverage of 35% to 40% loan-to-value.
Operators should watch two things: whether Blackstone seeds the REIT with properties currently held in BREIT, its flagship private vehicle, and whether the initial portfolio includes any exposure to secondary markets like Dallas or Atlanta, where supply is catching up to hyperscaler demand. The S-1 will detail tenant concentration; if more than 60% of NOI comes from two tenants, the pricing will tighten. The roadshow is expected in late Q2, and the listing will likely follow within 45 to 60 days of the amended filing. If the deal prices above the midpoint, expect a follow-on offering within six months — Blackstone rarely leaves capital on the table when momentum is live.
The filing is also a signal about where Blackstone sees the next twelve months of AI infrastructure spend: not in new construction, where permitting and power hookups are bottlenecks, but in the acquisition of operating assets that others built and leased. That is where the capital efficiency sits, and where public-market buyers will pay for certainty. The $1.75 billion raise is not the end; it is the first tranche of a vehicle that could absorb $10 billion in acquisitions if the Fed cuts twice this year and Treasury curves steepen.