Digital Realty to pay Blackstone $3.5 billion for stake in Virginia data centers

Industry:    19 hours ago

Digital Realty will acquire a larger stake in three data centers in Northern ​Virginia from asset manager Blackstone in a $3.5 billion cash-and-stock deal, ‌the companies said on Monday.

Under the deal, which is expected to close on Tuesday, the data center company will pay $1.2 billion of cash and $2.3 billion in Digital Realty ​shares to Blackstone’s funds.

The move strengthens the data center operator’s ​position in Northern Virginia, the world’s largest data center market, ⁠where demand for capacity has surged as cloud computing and AI drive ​higher infrastructure needs.

“This transaction is expected to be accretive to Core FFO ​per share in each of 2027 and 2028, as development is completed and rents commence,” said Digital Realty CFO Matt Mercier.

The companies said Digital Realty will acquire Blackstone’s ​80% interest in two 96-megawatt data centers in Manassas, Virginia, and ​a 50% interest in a 96-megawatt center in Sterling, Virginia.

Shares of Digital Realty were ‌down 2.4% ⁠in extended trading.

The assets of the three data centers are valued at $7.8 billion, including debt and planned capital expenditures, according to the companies.

The companies said two of the facilities are expected to stabilize in the first ​half of 2027, ​with the third ⁠expected to stabilize in the first half of 2028.

“We have developed a strong partnership with Blackstone through the ​successful ongoing development of these assets, and we continue ​to work ⁠together across the remaining data center investments in our joint ventures in Northern Virginia, Paris and Frankfurt,” said Greg Wright, chief investment officer of Digital ⁠Realty.

“This ​transaction reflects the next phase of that ​relationship, allowing us to increase our ownership in a portfolio of fully leased, high-quality hyperscale assets.”

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