Key points
- Nebius (NBIS) closed its first-ever secured debt facility, about $775 million, without issuing any new shares.
- The stock is up more than 5% today, defying a Nasdaq that's down more than 1%.
- Other neocloud stocks are only up slightly today. CoreWeave (CRWV) is up about 1%, nowhere near Nebius's move.
- The loan is backed by deployed GPU infrastructure and cash flows from an investment-grade customer contract, and covers over 100% of the capex for that specific buildout.
- It follows a rough five-day stretch, down about 22%, after a $1 billion customer deal and a new partnership model both failed to calm investors worried about cash burn.
Nebius (NBIS) spent the past week trying to convince investors it could fund its AI buildout without running out of cash. A $1 billion customer contract didn't do it. A new capital-light partnership model didn't do it either. Today a $775 million loan did. The stock is up more than 5% in Friday trading, a rare green day for Nebius and a rare one for the market generally, with the Nasdaq down more than 1% at the same time. Other neoclouds aren't seeing anything close to that. CoreWeave (CRWV), the other major neocloud stock investors watch alongside Nebius, is up only about 1% today, a modest move that tracks with stocks generally ticking up a little after the open. That gap is a good sign today's jump is about Nebius's own balance sheet, not a broader recovery in AI infrastructure stocks.
What's actually in the $775 million
Nebius announced Friday that it closed its first senior secured debt facility, worth about $775 million. It matures October 31, 2030, and is priced at the Secured Overnight Financing Rate plus 2.5 percentage points. Unlike the convertible notes Nebius has issued before, this loan is backed by real assets: deployed GPU infrastructure and the contracted cash flows from an investment-grade customer agreement. Nebius says the facility covers more than 100% of the capital spending needed for that specific GPU deployment.
The lender list is long and the names are recognizable. MUFG structured the deal and acted as sole bookrunner. Bank of America and Morgan Stanley were among the lead arrangers, with several other major banks in the syndicate and Goldman Sachs also participating. Getting that many major banks to underwrite secured debt against your infrastructure is not automatic. It means the lenders did their own due diligence on Nebius's data centers and customer contracts and were satisfied enough to put their own money behind it.
The money itself is meant to fund the same thing Nebius has been spending on all year: building out its full-stack AI cloud platform and adding capacity for both AI-native and enterprise customers. Nebius has separately disclosed more than $40 billion in additional contracted revenue on the books from investment-grade customers, a group that includes Microsoft and Meta.
Why the first two announcements didn't help
This is the third major Nebius announcement in less than a week, and the first one the stock actually liked. We covered the first two here. On July 14, Nebius signed a real contract, more than $1 billion in AI computing capacity sold to the startup Reflection AI through 2029. The stock fell anyway. On July 15, it unveiled a new partnership channel that lets outside investors finance and build data centers that join Nebius's own capacity pool, an asset-light way to grow without footing the entire capital bill alone. The stock rose briefly, then gave it back.
The problem both times was the math, not the news itself. Nebius raised its own 2026 capital spending guidance to $20 billion to $25 billion, and investors weren't asking whether Nebius could land customers. They were asking how it pays for the data centers before those customer contracts turn into cash. A new deal or a new partnership structure answers that question in theory. A signed, funded, $775 million loan from a syndicate of major banks answers it in a way the market can actually price. Nebius fell nearly 14% on Thursday alone, part of a broader selloff that hit chip stocks the same day, and was down about 22% over five sessions before today's news.
The company's own case
Nebius Chief Operating Officer Ophir Nave described the deal as one piece of a broader execution push, from securing GPU capacity to strengthening the product itself:
"We are executing across all the areas that matter for growth: securing capacity, raising capital, strengthening our product offering."
That framing matters here specifically because capital access has become the thing separating credible AI infrastructure companies from shaky ones. A lender syndicate this large agreeing to secured terms, instead of demanding equity or a convertible structure that dilutes shareholders, is itself a signal about how the banks view Nebius's underlying business, not just its stock chart.
What Wall Street already thought, before today
Analyst sentiment hadn't actually turned negative during the slide. Seventeen analysts covering NBIS carry a consensus Buy rating, with an average price target around $213.89, well above even today's bounce. Bank of America has a Buy rating and a $280 target. BNP Paribas and DA Davidson are both Neutral, at $255 and $250 respectively. None of those targets moved because of the selloff, which suggests analysts were treating the drop as a financing worry rather than a verdict on the underlying business. That's the same read the market seems to be adopting today.
None of this erases the underlying question. Nebius is still spending tens of billions of dollars to build data centers ahead of the revenue that's supposed to justify them, and today's loan still has to be repaid starting in 2030 regardless of how the AI compute market looks by then. One well-received financing deal doesn't retire that risk, it just proves Nebius can access capital on reasonable terms for now. That was the exact thing investors said they were worried about a week ago, so it is a real answer, just not the last one this stock will need.
This is general market commentary and not investment advice. Always do your own research and consider speaking with a licensed financial professional before making any investment decision.
