Data center operator DataBank nets $250M equity investment

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The data center market is booming, driven by AI demand. Just last week, OpenAI said that it plans to team up with backers including SoftBank to spend at least $100 billion on data center infrastructure in the U.S. Microsoft aims to put around $80 billion toward AI infrastructure this year, and rival tech giants have also upped their footprints.

Firms like DataBank, which provide high-performance compute-ready data centers for enterprise clients, are the big winners in the race for more compute. Case in point: DataBank on Thursday announced that it raised $250 million in an investment from private equity firm TJC and an additional $600 million in a secondary share offer.

Raul K. Martynek, DataBank’s CEO, said in a press release that the new capital “signals both confidence in our strategy and our proven ability to execute and scale.”

DataBank, founded in 2005, was acquired in 2016 by a group of blue-chip investors led by DigitalBridge, an asset manager, and merged with several other data center operators. The company has expanded through acquisitions over the years, in 2018 acquiring Indianapolis-based data center provider Lightbound and in 2020 purchasing zColo’s U.S. and U.K. data center assets.

DataBank claims to manage over 65 data centers across more than 27 markets. In the past year and a half alone, the firm has raised $5 billion.

“We could not be more excited to partner with Raul, DataBank, and the other world-class digital infrastructure investors supporting DataBank’s robust growth plans,” Eion Hu, a partner at TJC, said in a statement. “Data centers are the cornerstone of the digital transformation and artificial intelligence, and we believe DataBank is uniquely positioned to capitalize on the sustained demand for reliable, scalable, and energy-efficient infrastructure in an increasingly data-driven world.”

In a sector adjacent to DataBank, there’s a booming market for “neocloud” startups like Crusoe and others building low-cost, on-demand clouds primarily for AI workloads.

CoreWeave, the GPU infrastructure provider with several Big Tech partnerships, is valued at $19 billion. Lambda Labs last April secured a special-purpose financing vehicle up to $500 million. The nonprofit Voltage Park in October 2023 announced it is investing $500 million in GPU-backed data centers. And Together AI, a cloud GPU host that also conducts generative AI research, last March landed $106 million in a Salesforce-led round.

Per a McKinsey report, capital spending on procurement and installation of mechanical and electrical systems for data centers could eclipse $250 billion in the next five years. That’s in spite of growing calls to examine the environmental externalities of data centers, including their high water usage.

Kyle Wiggers is a senior reporter at TechCrunch with a special interest in artificial intelligence. His writing has appeared in VentureBeat and Digital Trends, as well as a range of gadget blogs including Android Police, Android Authority, Droid-Life, and XDA-Developers. He lives in Brooklyn with his partner, a piano educator, and dabbles in piano himself. occasionally — if mostly unsuccessfully.

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