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Australia’s Megaport secures four new AI infrastructure contracts, to raise $594 million

By Thomson Reuters Jun 2, 2026 | 5:17 PM

June 3 (Reuters) – Australia’s Megaport said on Wednesday it has secured four new AI infrastructure contracts with a total contract value of about A$458.9 million ($329.49 million), ​and launched a fully underwritten entitlement offer to ‌raise A$827.3 million ($594 million).

The four contracts, all with U.S.-based technology providers running AI applications, are expected to start in the first half of 2027 and require nearly A$369.5 million in capital expenditure, primarily for ‌high-performance ​Nvidia GPUs, network and storage infrastructure.

Megaport said it ⁠would set up a ⁠globally distributed AI inference cloud, anchored by an on-demand GPU pool backed by A$350 million in investment, which will be offered to enterprise customers through contracted and consumption-based ​pricing models.

“AI inference represents one of the biggest infrastructure opportunities of the next decade,” Megaport CEO Michael Reid ⁠said.

“As AI adoption accelerates, organisations need ⁠seamless access to GPUs, CPUs, storage, and the ​connectivity that powers them.”

The move marks a big step up ​in Megaport’s push into AI infrastructure, with the company ‌betting that demand for GPU-based compute will surge as enterprise AI adoption shifts from model training to latency-sensitive inference workloads.

The firm, which uses Nvidia and AMD chips, said its ⁠network of more than 1,100 data centres in 31 countries puts it in a strong position to deliver AI compute closer to ⁠end users, addressing ‌key bottlenecks including power, connectivity and access ⁠to high-performance GPUs.

The entitlement offer, priced at ​A$14.30 ‌per share, represents a 13.9% discount to ​Megaport’s last closing ⁠price on June 1.

Megaport also tightened its 2026 revenue guidance to A$307 million-A$315 million, reflecting strong momentum in its network business. Its previous expectation was between A$302 million and A$317 million.

($1 = 1.3928 Australian dollars)

(Reporting by Rajasik Mukherjee in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Arun Koyyur)