Nscale secures $900M for data-center expansion backed by Nvidia

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A company that started life mining Bitcoin is now sitting on nearly $4 billion in total financing to build AI data centers. Nscale, the UK-based AI infrastructure hyperscaler, has locked in a $900 million revolving credit facility to fund its expanding global footprint of GPU-packed facilities across Europe, North America, and Asia.

The deal, announced on July 7, adds to what has been a remarkably aggressive fundraising streak for a company that only formally came into existence in 2024. Nscale has gone from crypto mining side project to $14.6 billion valuation in roughly two years.

From Bitcoin rigs to AI factories

Nscale spun out of Arkon Energy, a firm that specialized in Bitcoin mining using renewable and stranded power sources. The founders took their core competencies — high-density computing and cheap green electricity — and repositioned them for the AI infrastructure boom.

The $900 million revolving credit facility is the latest piece in a financing puzzle that has grown rapidly. Nscale pulled in a record-setting $1.1 billion Series B round in early 2025. Then came the $2 billion Series C in March 2026, which pegged the company’s valuation at $14.6 billion and brought in heavyweight backers including Nvidia, Aker ASA, and Dell.

Earlier reports from 2025 indicated Nscale was targeting roughly $900 million as part of a larger $2.7 billion financing package. That broader structure reportedly includes a $1.4 billion GPU-backed term loan and a $790 million facility specifically earmarked for the company’s Norwegian operations.

A GPU-backed term loan is exactly what it sounds like: the physical graphics processing units themselves serve as collateral.

The renewable energy angle

Nscale’s Norwegian operations run AI data centers powered entirely by renewable energy, drawing on the same hydroelectric and wind resources that once made Norway an attractive destination for Bitcoin miners.

Nscale does not manage or issue any cryptocurrency or tokens, positioning itself instead as a traditional AI cloud and GPU provider.

What this means for the market

Nvidia’s involvement as both a backer and presumably a major supplier to Nscale creates an interesting dynamic. The chipmaker has been strategically investing in companies that expand demand for its products, essentially building out its own ecosystem of customers.

The $14.6 billion valuation sets a benchmark for how markets are pricing AI infrastructure companies, putting Nscale in the same conversation as some publicly traded data center operators despite being a relatively young private company.

One risk worth watching is concentration. Nscale’s financing structure, particularly the GPU-backed term loan, ties the company’s debt directly to the value of Nvidia hardware. If GPU prices were to decline significantly due to increased supply or a shift in AI demand, the collateral backing that debt could erode.

The revolving credit facility signals something important about how traditional finance views the AI infrastructure space. Banks are now comfortable extending hundreds of millions in flexible credit to companies building GPU farms — a level of institutional comfort that was notably absent during the crypto mining era, when many operators struggled to secure conventional financing.

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