Blackstone Digital Infrastructure Trust priced its US initial public offering at $1.75 billion, marking the largest data center REIT debut since 2020 and the first purpose-built vehicle for stabilized AI infrastructure assets. The trust will acquire properties already constructed and under lease, eliminating development timeline risk in a market where hyperscale tenants are paying 18-24 month delivery premiums for immediate capacity.
The vehicle launched at $20.00 per share with 87.5 million shares placed, oversubscribed by institutional allocators who entered binding commitments during the bookbuild. Blackstone structured the trust as a finite-life REIT with a seven-year term and quarterly distributions targeting 6.5-7.0% annual yield, benchmarked against the investment-grade corporate index plus 175 basis points. The sponsor committed $350 million in co-investment equity, a 20% anchor that signals alignment on asset selection and exit timing.
The trust's mandate excludes greenfield development and speculative builds. It will acquire facilities with signed hyperscale leases averaging 8.2 years weighted average lease term, triple-net structures, and tenants rated investment-grade or backed by Blackstone credit underwriting. The initial portfolio of four properties totaling 312 megawatts across Northern Virginia and Phoenix closed concurrent with the IPO, purchased from QTS Realty Trust and Cyxtera at a blended 5.8% stabilized cap rate. Those assets carry 96% occupancy and contractual annual rent escalators of 3.0-3.5%, indexed to CPI with floors.
The IPO timing captures a structural shift in data center capital deployment. Hyperscalers now compete for existing capacity rather than waiting on construction pipelines that stretch 28-36 months from permitting to commissioning. Blackstone's acquisition strategy removes the utility interconnection bottleneck and substation upgrade delays that have stalled $14 billion in announced development projects across five primary US markets. By isolating stabilized yield, the trust offers duration exposure to AI infrastructure without the construction cost overruns or commissioning delays that eroded returns in 2023-2024 development funds.
Allocators should monitor the trust's second acquisition tranche, expected in Q3 2025 with $900 million in committed capital for properties in Dallas and Chicago. The trust's partnership agreement allows leverage up to 40% loan-to-value, likely deployed in 12-18 months once the initial portfolio demonstrates rental collections and tenant renewals. Watch for competing vehicles from Brookfield and KKR, both filing S-11 registrations for similar finite-life structures targeting $1.0-1.5 billion raises in the next 90 days.
The trust will distribute its first quarterly dividend in August 2025, with cash yield a direct function of acquisition pace and leverage deployment—a real-time signal of whether stabilized AI data center cap rates compress further or widen as the IPO window closes.