NTT Inc. plans $10B bond sale, largest by Asian firm this year

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NTT Inc. is preparing to raise roughly $10 billion through a multi-currency debt offering, a move that would mark the largest bond sale by an Asian corporation so far this year. The proceeds are earmarked for the company’s aggressive push into AI-ready data center infrastructure.

A repeat performance from a record-setter

In July 2025, NTT Finance Corporation, the company’s financing subsidiary, pulled off a $17.7 billion dual-currency bond package. That deal included $11.25 billion in dollar-denominated notes alone, making it the largest bond sale by an Asian corporation at the time. The July 2025 mega-deal was designed to refinance bridge loans that had been used to privatize NTT’s data center operations.

Reports indicate the company is planning an approximately $8 billion to $10 billion dual-currency bond sale, with some references pointing to activity as early as May 2026. The company also maintains a $10 billion Euro Medium Term Note program, which it has already tapped for tranches in USD, EUR, and GBP with maturities stretching from 2028 to 2038.

Where the money is going

The driving force behind all this borrowing is NTT Global Data Centers, which has committed over $10 billion in capital development through 2027. The goal is to expand AI-ready capacity across North America, Europe, and Asia. The company has been actively pursuing land acquisitions and capacity expansions on three continents.

What this means for investors

When a single company raises $17.7 billion in one deal and then comes back for another $10 billion within a year, that creates meaningful pressure on the corporate bond market. More supply means issuers need to offer competitive yields to attract buyers, which can shift pricing dynamics across the entire investment-grade universe.

NTT’s entire financing strategy is rooted in traditional debt markets with no indications of blockchain involvement or tokenized bond issuance. The AI boom is being financed primarily through conventional capital markets, not venture capital or token sales.

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