Boost Run secures new data center capacity deals and next-generation GPU supply agreements

Boost Run has announced a series of commercial agreements intended to bolster its data center infrastructure for artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC) workloads. The company, which reports rapid growth in the AI cloud infrastructure sector, claims these new partnerships will expand access to advanced hardware, increase available data center capacity, and provide new financing options to support anticipated customer demand and rapid capacity ramps.

Key agreements include a two-year, $127 million contract with Fluidstack for inference and training clusters serving Fluidstack’s customer portfolio, new supply orders for next-generation graphics processing units (GPUs) with Dell Technologies and an existing GPU provider, and an expanded partnership with a data center operator to increase Boost Run’s geographic and operational footprint. Financing relationships with Dell and Data Sales aim to provide capital-efficient structures aligned with hardware expansion and customer revenue growth cycles.

Boost Run specifies that these hardware agreements ensure supply of current-generation GPUs, supporting customer needs for advanced AI models and enabling more predictable planning for capacity expansion and onboarding. Expanded data center relationships add multi-site redundancy and phased activation capabilities, potentially improving reliability and allowing infrastructure deployment to closely match contracted client demand.

Andrew Karos, CEO of Boost Run, said, “By aligning power availability, hardware supply, and customer requirements, our goal is to create a standardized process that closely matches deployment with contracted demand, reducing both execution and capital risk.” He also highlighted that, “while we had previously communicated an expectation that we would deploy $100 million of capacity in the first quarter of 2026, we now anticipate that we will deploy at least $250 million of the latest generation of GPUs in that timeframe, while adding additional access to meaningful incremental power and infrastructure.”

Karos further noted, “Our Soc 2 Type 2, HIPAA, and ISO27001 industry certifications mesh with Fluidstack’s needs.” He emphasized that Boost Run is focused on low-latency, always-on, automated, and secure compute for inference solutions.

The agreements primarily serve the data center industry, especially AI-driven workloads requiring instant scaling, high-density GPU clusters, and colocation services. Additional markets mentioned include enterprise and government sectors via API and reseller integrations.

Source: Boost Run

Get Data Center Engineering News In Your Inbox:

Popular Posts:

Elvis-Leka,-New-Product-Development-Engineer-—-Parker,-Sporlan-Division
From air to two-phase liquid: how rack cooling options compare on density and risk
Why your data center needs 135% cooling capacity- Munters
Why your data center needs 135% cooling capacity
Near-Packaged-Optics--Rethinking-the-AI-Data-Center-Interconnect
Near-packaged optics: rethinking the AI data center interconnect
OlympusMAX-Product-Image
SPX launches Marley OlympusMAX fluid cooler with dry/adiabatic modules
bedra copper alloys target AI data center cooling plates and busbars
bedra's latest copper alloys target AI data center cooling plates and busbars

Share Your Data Center Engineering News

Do you have a new product announcement, webinar, whitepaper, or article topic? 

Get Data Center Engineering News In Your Inbox: