Brookfield Asset Management Inc. (BAM) just threw down the gauntlet in the race to build the physical backbone of artificial intelligence. The firm announced Thursday it's launching a fund that could deploy up to $100 billion in AI infrastructure, and it's bringing some heavyweight partners to the table.
The new Brookfield Artificial Intelligence Infrastructure Fund (BAIIF) has NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA) and the Kuwait Investment Authority as founding investors. The immediate goal is raising $10 billion in equity commitments, but here's where the math gets interesting: that initial capital will be combined with additional co-investor money and financing to reach the eye-popping $100 billion deployment target.
Building the AI Backbone
This isn't Brookfield wading into unfamiliar territory. The firm already manages over $100 billion in digital infrastructure and clean power assets, so this move reads more like a natural evolution than a wild pivot. "AI is creating one of the largest infrastructure buildouts in history," said Sikander Rashid, Head of AI Infrastructure at Brookfield. That's not hyperbole when you're talking about hundred-billion-dollar commitments.
The fund will spread its investments across four main areas. First up are AI factories built on NVIDIA's DSX reference design. Then there's behind-the-meter power solutions specifically for data centers, followed by compute infrastructure tailored for enterprises and governments. Finally, the fund will pursue strategic capital partnerships throughout the AI value chain.
Already Closing Deals
BAIIF has momentum out of the gate, having already locked in roughly $5 billion in commitments from institutional and industry partners. That's halfway to the initial equity target before the official announcement even dropped.
Brookfield is also putting specifics behind the strategy. The firm signed a framework agreement with Bloom Energy Corporation (BE) to install up to 1 GW of behind-the-meter power capacity for AI data centers. For context, that's enough power to run a major metropolitan area.
The firm also highlighted ongoing partnerships in France and Sweden that could total up to $30 billion in combined infrastructure commitments. These aren't vague aspirations; they're concrete projects already in motion.
Price Action: BAM shares were trading higher by 0.63% to $50.19 at last check on Thursday.