Where Is Capital Flowing in the Global AI Data Center Buildout?
February’s global data center deals reveal how capital depth, power availability, and infrastructure platforms are determining where the next wave of AI compute capacity will scale.
Welcome to Global Data Center Hub. Join investors, operators, and innovators reading to stay ahead of the latest trends in the data center sector in developed and emerging markets globally.
Key Signals of the Month
February’s deal log highlights a structural shift in the AI infrastructure cycle: capital is increasingly concentrating around operating platforms rather than early-stage development.
Among the hundreds of announcements, project proposals, and policy updates tracked during the month, only a small number represented transactions with committed capital or completed infrastructure expansion, progressing mainly where developers already control power, land, and delivery capability.
Another signal was the growing use of large-scale financing structures tailored to AI infrastructure. Several transactions relied on major credit facilities, institutional loans, and capital markets instruments to support compute deployment. These structures allow operators to scale capacity rapidly while aligning financing drawdowns with hyperscale demand cycles.
Together, these trends suggest that the next phase of AI infrastructure will favor operators and regions capable of aligning capital, infrastructure platforms, and development execution. Markets where financing capacity, power availability, and construction pipelines converge are emerging as the next AI infrastructure corridors.
February’s top deals reflect how this alignment is beginning to reshape the global geography of compute capacity. Regions combining institutional capital, established operators, and scalable infrastructure platforms are positioning themselves to host the next generation of AI data center expansion.
Top 5 Global Data Center Deals
This month’s deal log highlights five transactions reshaping the global AI infrastructure landscape across North America, Europe, APAC, Latin America, and the Middle East & Africa. Together, they show how capital access, platform ownership, and infrastructure execution are determining where the next generation of AI capacity will be deployed.
Ares / Vantage Data Centers — $2.4B Debt Facility (North America)
Ares Management arranged a $2.4 billion debt facility for Vantage Data Centers to refinance existing debt and support expansion across its North American data center campuses. The financing highlights continued lender appetite for established operators capable of delivering large volumes of power-secured capacity.
Rather than funding speculative developments, lenders are increasingly supporting platforms that already control operational campuses and have visibility into hyperscale demand. This dynamic is concentrating capital around operators able to convert financing into deployed megawatts quickly.
The transaction underscores a broader shift in North America’s AI infrastructure market. Growth is increasingly driven by the expansion of established platforms rather than new entrants, as power access and permitting constraints make greenfield development more complex.
Echelon Data Centres — €1.7B Loan Financing (Europe)
Echelon Data Centres secured €1.7 billion in financing from Morgan Stanley to support the next phase of its European data center expansion. The financing provides capital to accelerate the development of large-scale facilities across several European markets.
Europe’s AI infrastructure growth is increasingly shaped by power availability and grid constraints. Projects that secure long-term financing and credible power access are becoming critical for expanding capacity across the region.
The Echelon financing illustrates how European infrastructure developers are assembling large capital pools to support multi-site development pipelines rather than relying on smaller project-by-project funding.
ST Telemedia Global Data Centres — S$13.8B Platform Acquisition (APAC)
A KKR-led consortium with Singtel Group agreed to fully acquire ST Telemedia Global Data Centres at a S$13.8 billion enterprise value, making it one of the largest data center platform transactions in the Asia-Pacific region.
STT GDC operates data centers across multiple global markets and has developed one of the largest hyperscale-focused platforms in Asia. The acquisition reflects sustained institutional interest in owning large digital infrastructure platforms rather than individual facilities.
The scale of the transaction highlights Asia-Pacific’s growing importance in the global AI infrastructure landscape. Investors are increasingly targeting operators capable of expanding across multiple high-growth markets as demand for compute capacity accelerates.
Terranova — First Data Center Campus in Mexico (Latin America)
Terranova launched its first hyperscale-ready data center campus in Querétaro, Mexico, adding new capacity to one of Latin America’s most established digital infrastructure corridors.
The campus begins with approximately 8MW of capacity and is designed to scale as demand from hyperscale and enterprise customers grows. Querétaro has emerged as a key regional hub due to its connectivity, power infrastructure, and proximity to major North American markets.
The project is part of a broader platform strategy backed by Actis, which plans to deploy approximately $1.5 billion in data center investments across Latin America. The launch signals growing investor confidence that the region can support scalable digital infrastructure platforms.

