Power has become the new superstition in AI. Touch it and every conversation gets loud, crowded, and oddly vague. This week, in a moment that cut through the broader tech news noise, The Information featured Raul K. Martynek, Chief Executive Officer of DataBank, questioning the prevailing narrative. His line landed because it was measured, not theatrical. Power, he said, is a constraint, not the constraint. In an industry addicted to absolutism, that distinction matters.

DataBank speaks from the floor, not the whiteboard. Headquartered in Dallas and founded in 2005, the company now operates more than 65 data centers across 25 plus North American markets with 877 megawatts of capacity. Under Raul K. Martynek’s leadership since 2017, DataBank has quietly built the kind of infrastructure footprint that does not theorize about bottlenecks, a posture increasingly visible across serious tech news coverage of AI infrastructure. It meets them in zoning meetings, supply chains, and capital markets, then decides which ones actually slow momentum.

The power panic sounds convincing until you look at where friction really shows up. Transmission takes years. Talent takes longer. Execution either shows up or it does not. DataBank has leaned into secondary markets like Culpeper, Lenexa, Red Oak, and Lithia Springs, not as consolation prizes, but as strategic releases. Less congestion. Faster timelines. Same demand. That geography is not an accident. It is a hedge against waiting, and a detail often missed in surface level tech news debates.

Capital tends to sniff out reality faster than headlines. DataBank has raised more than $3.23 billion through investment grade securitizations, expanded a credit facility to $1.6 billion with twenty lenders, and brought in $2 billion of equity from AustralianSuper. Thirty eight institutional investors oversubscribed the latest ABS deal. Money does not chase myths for long. It follows operators who can actually deliver power, space, and certainty at the same time, a signal tech news readers tend to recognize only after the fact.

Kevin Ooley, President and Chief Financial Officer, framed it plainly when the $1.1 billion securitization closed. The financing accelerates build timelines and meets demand that is already contracted. That line tells you everything. Customers are not waiting for a perfect grid. They are committing now, because execution beats debate when AI workloads move from experiment to revenue.

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