June 9 (Reuters) – Apollo and Blackstone are financing a $35 billion expansion of AI computing capacity for Anthropic using Broadcom’s custom chips āand networking solutions as part of a tie-up between the āasset managers and the chipmaker.
The initial commitment will expand the Claude Code creator’s AI computing ācapacity by one gigawatt, the companies said on Tuesday. One gigawatt is enough to power about 750,000 homes.
The capacity is expected to be deployed at Fluidstack-operated sites beginning mid-2026, with the cloud computing company providing the physical ādata-center infrastructure that will ā run Anthropic’s AI systems.
Overall, the partnership plans to enable more than 20 GW in computing capacity for leading AI ā labs, including OpenAI, through 2028.
Private-equity firms have emerged as a crucial source of funding for AI companies strained by a shortage of costly and supply-constrained āAI infrastructure āneeded to meet rising demand.
Meta in āOctober struck a $27 billion financing ādeal with Blue Owl Capital to fund its biggest data-center project.
Tuesday’s deal also bodes well for Broadcom’s push to grow its AI business, which has drawn demand from tech companies looking to reduce their reliance on Nvidia with in-house chips.
The partnership aims to scale the deployment of custom āAI chips and computing systems while cutting āthe cost and power needed to train āAI models, Broadcom said.
Apollo is āleading the initial investment tranche for the platform, alongside āBlackstone’s Credit & Insurance business.
In April, Broadcom āsigned a long-term agreement āwith Alphabet’s Google to develop and supply future generations of custom AI chips for the company’s AI racks through 2031.
It also āsigned a deal to āgive Anthropic access to about 3.5 GW of AI computing capacity ādrawing on Google’s processors, starting next year.
(Reporting by Anhata Rooprai āin Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar)
