Blackstone bets $5 billion on Google's secret AI chip to rival Nvidia

Blackstone bets $5 billion on Google's secret AI chip to rival Nvidia
Devesh Kumar
May 19, 2026, 06:18 A.M.

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Blackstone (BX) — AI infrastructure equity

Buy BX. The $5B equity bet plus potential ~$25B with leverage is a direct, scaled play on AI data-center buildout (power, land, fiber) and on a “third-party TPU cloud” that could expand compute demand beyond Google Cloud. BX’s edge is financing + development at scale, and this deal is positioned as a “generational opportunity,” not a small pilot.

Key Risk: Google’s TPU cloud fails to attract enough outside customers, so the venture underperforms and BX’s capital deployment doesn’t earn back its cost of capital.

Google (GOOGL) — TPU platform credibility

Buy GOOGL. The investment creates a credible path to make TPUs a real alternative to Nvidia’s default GPUs by widening access to Google’s AI hardware/software stack. If customers can rent TPU capacity like a neocloud, Google Cloud can differentiate on cost/performance and reduce dependence on Nvidia supply chains.

Key Risk: TPUs don’t match Nvidia on price/performance or reliability at scale, so customers keep choosing Nvidia-based clouds and Google’s platform adoption stalls.

  • Blackstone is investing $5 billion in a new Google TPU cloud venture.
  • The project aims to bring 500 MW of AI compute capacity online by 2027.
  • Google is expanding outside access to its custom AI chips, known as TPUs.

Blackstone is backing Google’s artificial intelligence ambitions with a major investment in a new data center venture built around Google’s in-house AI chips.

The alternative-asset giant is committing an initial US$5 billion (approx. $7 billion) in equity to a new US-based AI cloud venture with Google, with plans to bring 500 megawatts of data center capacity online by 2027.

Including leverage, the investment could eventually reach about US$25 billion (approx. $34.9 billion), a Bloomberg report said.

The bet seems enormous as AI compute demand explodes, Google wants its Tensor Processing Units, or TPUs, to become a real alternative to Nvidia’s dominant GPUs.

Google’s Nvidia challenge

The new company is designed around Google’s TPUs, the custom chips it built for artificial intelligence workloads.

That makes the venture more focused than a conventional hyperscale data center project.

It is not simply about adding server capacity, but also about creating a third-party platform where customers can rent access to Google’s AI hardware, software and infrastructure as a service.

That puts the deal closer to the “neocloud” model made popular by companies such as CoreWeave, which built its business around providing AI developers with access to Nvidia-powered compute.

The difference lies in the chips: CoreWeave built its business around Nvidia’s ecosystem, while Google and Blackstone are now trying to create a similar marketplace centered on Google’s TPUs.

For Blackstone, the appeal is obvious as AI infrastructure has become one of the largest capital-deployment opportunities in the world.

Data centers require large amounts of land, power, cooling, fiber connectivity and financing, making infrastructure-focused investors such as Blackstone natural participants in the sector.

Blackstone President Jon Gray framed the deal as a “generational opportunity” to invest in AI infrastructure, saying the new company can help meet unprecedented demand for compute.

Google’s chip bet gets a new route to market

Google’s TPUs are not new, as the company has spent more than a decade developing and using them internally to train and run AI models.

They help power Google’s own products, including Gemini, and are built specifically for AI training and inference rather than general-purpose computing.

What is new is the distribution model.

Historically, Google’s TPUs have been closely tied to Google Cloud. This venture gives them a wider route to customers, backed by Blackstone’s capital and data center development capabilities.

In simple words, Google is trying to make its AI chips easier for outside companies to access without forcing every customer relationship to fit neatly inside the traditional Google Cloud box.

The leadership choice also sends a signal as the venture will be run by Benjamin Treynor Sloss, a longtime Google executive with deep experience in infrastructure and operations.

For Google Cloud, the prize is strategic as Nvidia has become the default supplier for much of the AI boom.

But cloud providers increasingly want more control over the hardware stack, both to reduce costs and to differentiate their platforms.