Meta draws massive $96B orders – Investor trust or bubble alert?
Meta Platforms Inc. attracted peak demand of about $96 billion for its latest U.S. bond sale, signaling strong investor appetite for the tech giant’s debt amid AI spending plans. The company aims to raise between $20 billion and $25 billion through investment-grade bonds, following reports from Bloomberg News citing sources familiar with the matter.
This planned issuance comes after Meta’s record $30 billion bond offering in October 2025, which drew $125 billion in orders, the highest ever for a corporate bond sale. That deal topped CVS Health’s 2018 $120 billion record and funded general corporate purposes, including AI investments.
Investors placed orders exceeding five times the targeted amount, reflecting confidence in Meta’s Aa3/AA- rating and cash flows despite heavy capital expenditures. Proceeds will support data center expansions and AI initiatives, as Big Tech shifts from cash-only funding.
The sale features multiple tranches, similar to prior deals with maturities from 5 to 40 years. Spreads were tight: 50bp over Treasuries for 5-year, up to 110bp for 40-year in 2025. Demand persists as funds chase yields before potential rate cuts.
Meta’s move aligns with peers like Amazon’s $126 billion demand in March 2026. U.S. corporate bond issuance surges, with high-grade deals refinancing debt. Treasury auctions provide context: recent 4-month bill drew $69 billion at 2.78 bid/cover.
No pricing details released yet; final size and terms expected soon. Shares traded mixed amid tech sector volatility.
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