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Romania’s political crisis could affect external financing sources, S&P says

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Romania’s political crisis could affect external financing sources, S&P says

By Gergely Szakacs

(Reuters) -Romania’s political crisis and possible delays in a policy response to economic imbalances following the collapse of the coalition government this week could undermine some external financing sources, S&P Global said.

Romania’s central bank stepped in to prop up the leu on Thursday amid a surge in borrowing costs after hard-right presidential candidate George Simion’s victory in a first-round vote deepened a political crisis in central Europe’s second-largest economy.

The eurosceptic Simion decisively swept the first round of the ballot on Sunday, triggering the resignation of leftist Prime Minister Marcel Ciolacu and the collapse of the pro-Western coalition government.

S&P Global said the key risk for Romania, which runs the European Union’s highest budget deficit, exceeding 9% of output, was how it will finance its large twin deficits moving into 2026 amid a prolonged political impasse and weakening growth.

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“The government’s access to the Eurobond market has weakened, leading to pressure on the exchange rate and the domestic bond market,” it said. “In addition, ineffective policymaking could make EU funds, especially from the Recovery and Resilience Facility, less forthcoming.”

Romania’s economy grew just 0.8% last year, the slowest pace since the COVID-19 pandemic, with growth slowing each year since 2021. On Thursday a large employers’ group said the political crisis raised the risk of pushing the country into recession.

The leu, which crashed out of the tight ranges it had held onto for much of the past three years on Tuesday, trimmed its losses for the week below 3% on Thursday, but was still trading past the key 5 mark per euro.

The 10-year bond yield rose by some 100 basis points from the start of this week to its highest level since November 2022.

Poll shows hard-right contender Simion winning the May 18 run-off, but, regardless of the ballot’s outcome, policymaking in Romania would become more fragmented, less stable, and less effective over the next few months, S&P Global said.

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“(This) could lead to weaker growth, fiscal, and external outcomes than our already pessimistic assumptions,” it said.

S&P Global said its post-election scenarios included an unstable minority government, which could attempt to move ahead with fiscal consolidation measures.

A decision to call early parliamentary elections would further delay budget cuts and pressure refinancing efforts, while a third scenario saw the formation of a unity government with sufficient backing for fiscal stabilisation.

(Reporting by Gergely Szakacs; Editing by Jacqueline Wong and Leslie Adler)

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Blackstone backs Neysa in up to $1.2B financing as India pushes to build domestic AI infrastructure | TechCrunch

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Blackstone backs Neysa in up to .2B financing as India pushes to build domestic AI infrastructure | TechCrunch

Neysa, an Indian AI infrastructure startup, has secured backing from U.S. private equity firm Blackstone as it scales domestic compute capacity amid India’s push to build homegrown AI capabilities.

Blackstone and co-investors, including Teachers’ Venture Growth, TVS Capital, 360 ONE Assets, and Nexus Venture Partners, have agreed to invest up to $600 million of primary equity in Neysa, giving Blackstone a majority stake, Blackstone and Neysa told TechCrunch. The Mumbai-headquartered startup also plans to raise an additional $600 million in debt financing as it expands GPU capacity, a sharp increase from the $50 million it had raised previously.

The deal comes as demand for AI computing surges globally, creating supply constraints for specialized chips and data center capacity needed to train and run large models. Newer AI-focused infrastructure providers — often referred to as “neo-clouds” — have emerged to bridge that gap by offering dedicated GPU capacity and faster deployment than traditional hyperscalers, particularly for enterprises and AI labs with specific regulatory, latency, or customisation requirements.

Neysa operates in this emerging segment, positioning itself as a provider of customized, GPU-first infrastructure for enterprises, government agencies, and AI developers in India, where demand for local compute is still at an early but rapidly expanding stage.

“A lot of customers want hand-holding, and a lot of them want round-the-clock support with a 15-minute response and a couple of our resolutions. And so those are the kinds of things that we provide that some of the hyperscalers don’t,” said Neysa co-founder and CEO Sharad Sanghi.

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Nesya co-founder and CEO Sharad SanghiImage Credits:Neysa

Ganesh Mani, a senior managing director at Blackstone Private Equity, said his firm estimates that India currently has fewer than 60,000 GPUs deployed — and it expects the figure to scale up nearly 30 times to more than two million in the coming years.

That expansion is being driven by a combination of government demand, enterprises in regulated sectors such as financial services and healthcare that need to keep data local, and AI developers building models within India, Mani told TechCrunch. Global AI labs, many of which count India among their largest user bases, are also increasingly looking to deploy computing capacity closer to users to reduce latency and meet data requirements.

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The investment also builds on Blackstone’s broader push into data center and AI infrastructure globally. The firm has previously backed large-scale data centre platforms such as QTS and AirTrunk, as well as specialized AI infrastructure providers including CoreWeave in the U.S. and Firmus in Australia.

Neysa develops and operates GPU-based AI infrastructure that enables enterprises, researchers, and public sector clients to train, fine-tune, and deploy AI models locally. The startup currently has about 1,200 GPUs live and plans to sharply scale that capacity, targeting deployments of more than 20,000 GPUs over time as customer demand accelerates.

“We are seeing a demand that we are going to more than triple our capacity next year,” Sanghi said. “Some of the conversations we are having are at a fairly advanced stage; if they go through, then we could see it sooner rather than later. We could see in the next nine months.”

Sanghi told TechCrunch that the bulk of the new capital will be used to deploy large-scale GPU clusters, including compute, networking and storage, while a smaller portion will go toward research and development and building out Neysa’s software platforms for orchestration, observability, and security.

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Neysa aims to more than triple its revenue next year as demand for AI workloads accelerates, with ambitions to expand beyond India over time, Sanghi said. Founded in 2023, the startup employs 110 people across offices in Mumbai, Bengaluru, and Chennai.

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