KKR announced a $10 billion strategic partnership with Nvidia and the Kuwait Investment Authority to build and operate AI-optimized data center facilities across North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific. The vehicle combines KKR's real assets platform, Nvidia's GPU deployment expertise, and Kuwait's patient capital structure. Initial close occurred in Q2 2025 with $3.2 billion committed. The partnership targets assets requiring 50+ megawatts of power capacity and liquid cooling systems designed for high-density compute workloads.
The structure is a joint venture, not a blind-pool fund. KKR holds operational control and general partner economics. Nvidia contributes technical specification, supply chain coordination, and preferred access to H200 and Blackwell chip allocations for anchor tenants. Kuwait Investment Authority committed $4 billion as cornerstone limited partner with co-investment rights on individual assets above $500 million. The vehicle has a 15-year term with two one-year extensions. Management fees run at 1.2 percent on committed capital during deployment, stepping down to 0.9 percent on invested capital thereafter.
This marks the second sovereign wealth fund partnership KKR has structured around data center hard assets in six months. The firm closed a $7 billion vehicle with an undisclosed Middle Eastern sovereign in November 2024, focused on retrofitting legacy telecom facilities for AI workloads. The Kuwait deal extends that thesis into greenfield development and signals that Gulf capital is moving past energy transition infrastructure into compute sovereignty. Nvidia's participation is notable. The company does not typically take equity stakes in customer facilities, preferring supply agreements and technical advisory roles. Its inclusion here suggests GPU supply constraints remain binding enough that Nvidia sees value in locking deployment pipelines through ownership rather than contract alone.
The vehicle's target IRR sits between 12 and 14 percent net, according to three separate allocators who reviewed the private placement memorandum. That return profile reflects long-duration contracts with hyperscale tenants, not merchant power exposure. KKR's base case assumes 85 percent of capacity pre-leased to investment-grade counterparties on 10-year minimum terms before construction commences. Lease rates in the model run at $220 to $280 per kilowatt per month depending on geography and cooling specifications. Operating margins exceed 60 percent after stabilization, but construction timelines stretch 24 to 30 months given transformer lead times and utility interconnection queues in key markets.
Allocators should monitor three developments. First, whether KKR closes the vehicle at its $10 billion hard cap or upsizes given current fundraising velocity. The firm is in discussions with two additional sovereign LPs and one Canadian pension plan for commitments above $1 billion each. Second, watch for site announcements in Texas, Northern Virginia, and Singapore, where KKR has exclusive site control agreements in place. Third, track Nvidia's willingness to replicate this structure with other private equity sponsors. If this becomes a template, GPU supply will increasingly flow through equity-aligned channels rather than open allocation, pressuring non-partnered data center developers.
The partnership closes as merchant data center valuations compress under rising construction costs and lengthening interconnection timelines. KKR is sidestepping those risks by locking cornerstone sovereign capital, pre-leasing capacity, and embedding the chip supplier as an equity partner. That structure does not eliminate execution risk, but it transfers timing risk to parties with decade-plus hold horizons and no quarterly redemption pressure.