Inside the $27 Billion Hyperion Deal: How Blue Owl Capital Financed Meta’s Largest Data Center

Few private debt transactions in 2025 attracted as much attention as Hyperion — the $27 billion data center campus being developed in Richland Parish, Louisiana. Meta Platforms and funds managed by Blue Owl Capital announced the joint venture on October 21, 2025.
Size alone doesn’t explain why the deal stood out. Hyperion’s ownership structure split the risk and the capital obligations in a way that gave both sides distinct advantages, and the arrangement became one of the most discussed financing models in private infrastructure circles that year. For stock price context, finance.yahoo.com/quote/OWL/ reflects market reaction to infrastructure investments.
Deal structure: who owns what
Under the joint venture agreement, funds managed by Blue Owl Capital own an 80% interest in the project, while Meta keeps the remaining 20%. Blue Owl contributed approximately $7 billion in cash. Meta received a one-time distribution of roughly $3 billion from the joint venture. A portion of the capital Blue Owl raised was funded through debt issued to PIMCO and select other bond investors via a private securities offering.
Meta handles construction management and property management for the campus. Blue Owl provides the capital. That division of labor keeps Blue Owl’s exposure tied to real estate fundamentals — long-term leases, creditworthy tenants, physical structures — rather than to the hardware or software cycles of the companies occupying the buildings. You can learn more about Blue Owl’s infrastructure leadership on linkedin.com/company/blue-owl-capital
Doug Ostrover and Marc Lipschultz, Co-CEOs of Blue Owl Capital, said: “We’re proud that our funds are partnering with Meta on the development of the Hyperion data center campus — an ambitious project that reflects the scale and speed required to power the next generation of AI infrastructure.”
Why Hyperion won North America Deal of the Year
Infrastructure Investor’s Deal of the Year category rewards transactions of particular importance during the 12-month judging period. Editors weigh both size and industry impact when making their selection. The Blue Owl Capital awards page documents all the recognition this deal received.
Hyperion checked both boxes. At $27 billion, it was one of the largest single-site data center financings disclosed in recent memory. Construction of the facility — built on a site roughly the size of 1,700 football fields — is expected to finish by 2030. Entergy, the local utility, told analysts that the new data center could consume about twice as much electricity as the city of New Orleans on a peak day. Coverage of this milestone is available at prnewswire.com
Hyperion was not Blue Owl Capital’s only digital infrastructure milestone during the judging window. The firm also completed the IPI Partners acquisition in January 2025 and took a majority position in Dallas-based Gigabit Fiber in September 2025. Combined with the Hyperion financing, those three transactions helped Blue Owl collect four Infrastructure Investor awards — more than any competing firm in the digital infrastructure categories. Detailed financial metrics on these deals appear in the Q4 2025 financial results announcement
What makes this set of achievements remarkable is the pace at which they accumulated. Between January and October 2025, Blue Owl executed the IPI acquisition, the Gigabit Fiber investment, and the Hyperion deal-closing — a sequence reflected in the latest earnings call discussion where management detailed the execution discipline required to move capital at that scale.









