By Aditya Soni and Toby Sterling
March 16 (Reuters) – Amsterdam-based AI infrastructure firm Nebius Group said on Monday it has agreed with โMeta Platforms to provide the social media giant with $12 billion worth โof AI computing capacity across multiple locations by 2027.
Under the agreement, Meta will also buy โan additional $15 billion worth of capacity planned by Nebius over the coming five years if it is not sold to other customers, giving the contract a total value of up to $27 billion, Nebius said.
Last week, Nvidia said it would โinvest $2 billion to buy an โ 8.3% stake in Nebius, which uses Nvidia chips in its data centers.
Nasdaq-listed Nebius shares, which closed at $112.50 on Friday, โ have risen 35% so far this year, giving it a market capitalization of $28.6 billion.
DATACENTER RACE
The deal is the latest example of U.S. tech giants’ efforts to supplement their own โAI data-centre โbuild-outs by locking in scarce GPU โand power capacity from “neocloud” providers โlike Nebius.
Unlike large cloud firms that serve a broad range of industries, AI specialists like Nebius and U.S. competitor CoreWeave mostly focus on tech customers, but aim to become major cloud service providers in their own right.
Nebius CEO Arkady Volozh said the latest Meta deal would help “accelerate the build-out and โgrowth of our core AI cloud business.”
Nebius โsigned an initial $3 billion deal with Meta in โNovember and a $17.4 billion deal โwith Microsoft in September.
In February, the fast-growing Nebius reported โa fourth quarter net loss of $250 million โon revenue of $228 million, โand said it expected revenue to hit an annualized run rate of between $7 billion and $9 billion by the end of this year, โfrom $1.25 billion at the โend of 2025.
The company said on Monday that 2026 guidance remains โunchanged.
(Reporting by Aditya Soni in Bengaluru, Toby Sterling in Amsterdam; Editing โby Bernadette Baum and Tomasz Janowski)

