What happened
Amazon Went to the Bond Market — in a Big Way
On March 10, 2026, Amazon launched an 11-part US dollar bond offering and priced it at approximately $37 billion — making it the fourth-largest US corporate bond deal ever recorded, and notably the largest not linked to a merger or acquisition.[2]
The deal was part of a broader funding plan spanning both dollars and euros. When the anticipated euro tranches are added, total proceeds are expected to reach $50 billion or more.[3][5][6]
Deal structure
Eleven Tranches, from 2 Years to 50 Years
Amazon issued bonds across eleven separate maturities, ranging from short-dated 2-year notes all the way out to a remarkable 50-year bond maturing in 2076.[5][9][2] This "multi-tranche" structure lets different types of investors — from short-term money managers to long-horizon pension funds — each find a bond that suits their needs.
| Tranche | Maturity | Spread over Treasuries | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 years | Short-dated | Lowest risk, lower yield |
| 2–10 | Mid-range (3–30 yrs) | Varied | Institutional core demand |
| 11 | 50 years (2076) | ~130 bps | Headline tranche |
The 50-year note initially carried talk of about 155 basis points over Treasury rates, but priced at roughly 130 basis points — a tightening of ~25 bps, reflecting enormous investor appetite.[9][2] The willingness of buyers to lock in 50-year exposure speaks to deep confidence in Amazon's long-term financial strength.
The demand picture
$126 Billion in Orders for a $37 Billion Deal
The US portion alone attracted approximately $126 billion in orders — more than three times the amount of bonds available.[10][2] In bond market parlance, this is called an oversubscribed book. The excess demand gave Amazon two powerful advantages: the ability to upsize the deal (from $25–30B to $37B) and the ability to tighten the spread (pay less interest) because investors were willing to accept less yield to get their hands on the bonds.[10][2][5]
Why it matters
What This Deal Signals for the Broader Market
Funding the AI Build-Out
Proceeds are aimed at AI and cloud infrastructure. Hyperscalers like Amazon face hundreds of billions in upcoming capital expenditures and bond markets are helping foot the bill.[7][3][2][5]
A New Market Benchmark
This deal follows Alphabet's ~$32B and Oracle's $25B offerings, cementing that mega-cap tech can clear enormous volumes at tight spreads even amid equity volatility.[7][5][10]
Credit ≠ Equity
The $126B order book came even as Amazon's stock faced turbulence — showing that bond investors and equity investors are reading the same company very differently right now.[10]
Investor perspectives
What This Means, Depending on Who You Are
For Amazon: The deal locks in long-term funding at historically attractive spreads for an AA-rated issuer. It extends the company's debt maturity profile and pre-funds a multi-year AI buildout without relying solely on equity issuance or internal cash flows.[5][7]
For bond investors: The deal offers incremental yield above Treasuries and the broader AA corporate bond universe, with significant scale and liquidity across the curve — precisely what large institutions (pension funds, insurance companies) need when deploying capital at size.[6][2][10]
For the broader market: It sets a new bar for size and execution quality in investment-grade tech bonds. Top-tier issuers with a compelling story — AI infrastructure spending in this case — can still clear enormous volumes at tight levels when credit quality is unimpeachable.[4][2][10]
📖 Quick Glossary for Casual Investors
- Bond
- A loan from investors to a company. The company promises to pay interest (the "coupon") and return the principal at a set date (maturity).
- Basis Point (bps)
- One hundredth of a percentage point. So 130 bps = 1.30%. Used to measure interest rate differences precisely.
- Spread
- The extra yield a corporate bond pays over a "risk-free" US Treasury of the same maturity. A lower spread = the market sees the issuer as safer.
- Tranche
- A slice of a bond offering with its own maturity date and terms. Multi-tranche deals serve many investor types at once.
- Oversubscribed
- When investor demand (orders) exceeds the amount of bonds available. More demand = issuer gets better terms.
- Investment Grade
- A credit rating (BBB– or above) indicating a company is considered low-risk. Amazon is rated AA, well into investment-grade territory.