Ares Management Corp is intensifying its stake in artificial intelligence infrastructure by committing $2.4 billion in debt financing to Vantage Data Centers, Reuters reports. The alternative asset manager has already allocated $1.6 billion, with roughly $330 million funded to date, part of which may support projects connected to Oracle Corp’s collaboration with OpenAI.
The capital infusion targets the development, construction, and operation of Vantage’s North American data center portfolio, while also refinancing existing debt. Vantage currently operates 17 campuses, primarily focused on cloud and AI workloads, with long-term leases signed with major cloud service providers.
This move highlights a broader trend: private credit firms, alongside traditional banks, are stepping up to fund the exponential investment required to scale AI-enabled data centers. Ares has indicated plans to raise over $8 billion in equity in the near term, signaling sustained confidence in AI and cloud demand growth.
Strategic Importance of Large-Scale Financing
Vantage Data Centers operates under the umbrella of DigitalBridge Group Inc., which SoftBank Group Corp agreed to acquire in a cash deal valued at roughly $3 billion last year. DigitalBridge’s holdings include operators such as Aims Group, AtlasEdge, DataBank, Switch, and Yondr Group, underscoring the magnitude of capital flowing into next-generation digital infrastructure as AI investment accelerates.
Analysts note that such large-scale financing arrangements reflect the industry’s recognition that AI workloads are not only compute-intensive but also demand resilient, strategically positioned facilities. As AI adoption expands, private capital is increasingly central to scaling infrastructure that can support hyperscale cloud deployments, advanced AI models, and high-bandwidth data exchange.
With AI adoption reshaping enterprise technology and cloud strategies, Ares’s $2.4 billion commitment represents both a strategic bet and a necessary response to the capital intensity of modern data centers. The firm’s ongoing funding and equity ambitions indicate that private credit will play an essential role in sustaining the AI infrastructure ecosystem over the next decade.
