A digital infrastructure company barely two months past its Nasdaq listing is betting that buying existing power capacity, rather than building from scratch, can crack the bottleneck holding back AI data center expansion.
Z Squared Inc. (Nasdaq: ZSQR) has secured a $50 million committed equity forward purchase agreement with LucentHash / Data Part Capital, a trading name of Translucent Matter Inc., to fund what it calls Phase 1 of its AI infrastructure strategy: 100 megawatts of AI-ready capacity across multiple U.S. sites. The company has already signed a binding letter of intent to acquire Skycore Digital, which owns three active North Carolina sites powered by Duke Energy, providing up to 42 MW of total potential capacity — 18 MW of which is available under existing Duke Energy Letters of Authorization.
"Z Squared is moving into a significant AI infrastructure opportunity from a position of strength, with virtually no debt on the balance sheet," Chief Executive Officer David Halabu said. "We believe this agreement strengthens that position with flexible equity capital that can be matched to acquisitions and site-level conversion milestones without adding leverage."
The financing is structured as a series of independent forward purchases, each initiated by Z Squared on its own timing and priced at 95% of the volume-weighted average price over a five-day window unique to that draw. Shares issued are subject to a nine-month lock-up, and the purchaser is contractually prohibited from short-selling or hedging ZSQR common stock. The company retains full control over whether, when, and how much to draw — capital is accessed in step with execution milestones, not ahead of them.
The strategy targets a well-known pain point in the AI infrastructure market: greenfield data center development can take three to five years due to interconnection queue backlogs and transformer lead times. Z Squared's approach — acquiring energized, grid-connected sites where power is already flowing and converting them for AI colocation — aims to compress that timeline. The company lists on its website three operating principles: lead with power, build for AI workloads, and scale with discipline by deploying conversion capital site by site against signed contracts.
Z Squared listed on the Nasdaq Global Market in April 2026 following a business combination. The stock traded at $10.69 as of June 4, giving the company a market capitalization of roughly $551 million, according to Investing.com data. Shares have gained about 20% over the past week but remain down 25% year-to-date. The company was also included in the preliminary list for the Russell 3000 and Russell 2000 indexes as part of the 2026 reconstitution, with final membership expected after market close on June 26.
The company's current revenue comes from cryptocurrency mining — it operates advanced computing equipment, including for Dogecoin — and it has not yet generated revenue from AI infrastructure services. The Skycore acquisition, if completed, would mark the first step into a market where demand for production inference capacity from NeoCloud operators and other AI customers is growing rapidly but remains unproven as a revenue stream for Z Squared.
For investors, the question is whether Z Squared can execute its acquire-and-convert model faster and more cheaply than hyperscalers and established data center REITs that are also racing to add AI capacity. The company's near-zero debt gives it flexibility, but the equity-forward structure means dilution is tied directly to its stock price — draws at 95% of VWAP during a period when the stock is down 25% year-to-date would issue more shares per dollar raised. Halabu said the company intends to move "quickly, but with discipline" as it evaluates additional acquisition targets on the same criteria applied to Skycore.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.