Solstice Offering Exposure to AI Infrastructure Boom with New Tokenized Credit Product

5 June 2026 - 00:14 CEST

Solstice Finance is launching a token tied to AI infrastructure lending, allowing investors to gain exposure to loans financing the hardware used to run artificial intelligence services.

Solstice, an onchain lending and treasury management platform, announced on 4 Jun a partnership with AI companies ApexE3 and Tensorix to launch a yield-bearing token that will give holders exposure to returns generated from financing AI infrastructure.

The companies said Thursday that capital allocated to the token will be used to support lending tied to AI infrastructure, including graphics processing units (GPUs) and other computing resources used to run AI services.

ApexE3 develops AI products for financial institutions, while Tensorix provides AI inference services focused on privacy and data residency requirements.

AI joins tokenization race

The token will offer exposure to a tokenized credit strategy. According to the announcement, capital deposited into the aiUSX token will be deployed into AI infrastructure financing opportunities, with returns generated from those activities passed on to token holders.

The structure promises to offer investors exposure to loans tied to AI infrastructure through a blockchain-based vehicle.

The companies did not disclose the size of the financing programme, expected returns or details about the legal structure underpinning the token.

Financing the AI buildout

Investment in AI infrastructure has surged over the past two years as companies race to secure computing capacity needed for training and running AI models.

Big tech companies including Microsoft, Amazon, Google and Meta have committed tens of billions of dollars apiece to expanding AI capacity, driving demand for the GPUs and computing resources underpinning AI services. Combined, the four companies have committed more than $300bn in 2025 to AI-related capital spending.

The spending boom has created growing demand for financing across the AI supply chain, from data centres and cloud infrastructure providers to companies purchasing GPUs and other computing hardware.