Apollo Global Management (APO) just wrote a very large check to help Elon Musk's AI ambitions scale up. The asset management giant has led a $3.5 billion financing package for Valor Compute Infrastructure (VCI), a fund managed by Valor Equity Partners, that will help bankroll a $5.4 billion acquisition and lease of data center infrastructure heading straight to xAI.
The hardware haul includes Nvidia Corp's (NVDA) GB200 GPUs, the kind of cutting-edge chips that have become the gold standard for training large language models. The whole thing is structured as a triple-net lease, meaning xAI gets to use the infrastructure while VCI owns the underlying assets. It's designed to keep xAI's model training humming along and support the ongoing development of Grok, the company's AI chatbot that's been making waves since xAI launched in 2023.
Nvidia isn't just supplying the chips here. The company is actually an anchor investor in VCI, joining a lineup of Valor's institutional backers. That's a notable vote of confidence in the infrastructure play itself. xAI has moved remarkably fast since its 2023 debut, and its latest model, Grok 4, has been posting some impressive benchmark numbers that suggest it's becoming a serious contender in the increasingly crowded AI race.
Apollo Partner Christopher Lahoud framed the deal as a "hallmark, downside-protected investment" in AI infrastructure, noting that the firm is positioning itself as a go-to source of flexible, asset-based capital for next-generation technology needs. "We are supporting the growth of this transformative technology by investing in the critical infrastructure that enables it, alongside highly regarded partners like Valor and NVIDIA, who are driving the next wave of innovation," Lahoud said.
Antonio Gracias, Valor's Founder, CEO and CIO, added that "VCI is an extension of our continued service as a firm to xAI. The fund provides investors with the opportunity to invest in critical artificial intelligence compute infrastructure with quarterly cash distributions and upside through ownership of the compute assets."
The broader context here matters. Apollo estimates that global data center infrastructure is going to need several trillion dollars of investment over the next decade, driven by what the firm calls the Global Industrial Renaissance and accelerating demand for compute capacity and AI workloads. Since 2022, Apollo-managed funds and affiliates have already deployed over $40 billion into next-generation infrastructure, spanning compute capacity, digital platforms and renewable energy.
On the legal side, Latham & Watkins LLP advised the Apollo Funds, Proskauer Rose LLP represented VCI, and Sullivan & Cromwell LLP served as counsel to xAI.




