Upon completion, Blackstone will hold a majority stake in Neysa, reflecting not just financial backing but strategic confidence in the company’s leadership and vision.
In a defining moment for India’s burgeoning technology landscape, global private equity powerhouse Blackstone has pledged up to $1.2 billion in capital to support the rapid scaling of Neysa, a Mumbai-headquartered AI infrastructure specialist. This commitment comes at a time when India is progressively positioning itself as a sovereign hub for artificial intelligence compute capabilities, signalling a new chapter in the nation’s efforts to build foundational digital infrastructure that can compete on the world stage.
The investment, disclosed in definitive agreements this month, comprises approximately $600 million in primary equity from Blackstone and co-investors such as Teachers’ Venture Growth, TVS Capital, 360 ONE Assets and Nexus Venture Partners, with an additional $600 million in debt financing that Neysa plans to secure on the back of the equity round. Upon completion, Blackstone will hold a majority stake in Neysa, reflecting not just financial backing but strategic confidence in the company’s leadership and vision.
For Neysa, which was founded only in 2023, this represents a significant escalation in its operational scale and market ambition. The company specialises in delivering GPU-centric cloud infrastructure designed to handle the intense computational workloads required for training, fine-tuning and deploying advanced AI systems. Unlike traditional hyperscale cloud providers, Neysa emphasises tailored compute environments that address the specific needs of regulated enterprises, research institutions and government agencies a proposition that resonates strongly with India’s data sovereignty and latency requirements.
Under the terms of the funding, Neysa has set its sights on deploying over 20,000 graphics processing units (GPUs) across India, a substantial increase from the few thousand units currently in operation. This expansion is not merely about scale; it’s about establishing reliable, high-performance compute capacity domestically, thereby reducing dependency on foreign cloud providers and enabling sensitive workloads to remain within Indian borders.
Speaking on behalf of Blackstone, Amit Dixit, Head of Asia Private Equity, described the transaction as emblematic of the firm’s long-standing commitment to supporting infrastructure that underpins technological transformation. According to Dixit, backing the essential “picks and shovels” of AI – software, hardware and data centre capacity – is critical if emerging markets like India are to foster innovation and sustain competitive advantage.
Blackstone’s engagement with AI infrastructure is not confined to India. Globally, the firm has invested in significant data centre platforms and specialised compute providers, spanning North America, Asia Pacific and beyond. This breadth of experience brings not only capital but deep operational insights that Neysa can leverage as it seeks to accelerate growth and broaden its customer base.
From Neysa’s perspective, the infusion of capital arrives against a backdrop of accelerating demand for AI-driven services. Enterprises across financial services, technology, healthcare and public services are increasingly integrating artificial intelligence into core operational and strategic workflows. This trend places a premium on access to high-quality compute resources that can be scaled efficiently and securely. Neysa’s proposition – anchored in GPU-first infrastructure – positions it at the confluence of this demand curve.
India’s broader policy framework further strengthens the business case for domestic compute expansion. Recent measures, including a long-term tax holiday for cloud service providers operating in India, are designed to attract investment into local data-centre and AI ecosystems. These incentives, coupled with robust demand from both public and private sectors, have elevated investor confidence and driven significant capital flows into technology infrastructure.
Neysa’s co-founder and Chief Executive Officer has emphasised that the company’s growth trajectory is aligned with national objectives such as the IndiaAI Mission, which aims to cultivate self-sufficiency in digital capabilities and foster broad-based innovation. By delivering production-grade infrastructure at scale, Neysa seeks not only to support immediate commercial workloads but also to enable research excellence and deep learning experimentation within India. There the











