Rumble, the company best known as a YouTube alternative for creators who feel stifled by Big Tech moderation policies, is about to make a very different kind of bet. By mid-June, the company expects to close its acquisition of Northern Data AG, a deal that would transform it from a video platform with a side cloud business into a GPU-heavy infrastructure player gunning for the likes of AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud.
The all-stock transaction is valued at approximately $767 million. In return, Rumble gets around 22,400 Nvidia H100/H200 GPUs and substantial data center capacity, the kind of hardware that makes AI workloads actually possible at scale.
What Rumble is actually buying
Rumble CEO Christopher Pavlovski has framed the acquisition as the company’s entry into what he calls the “cloud and agentic AI era.” During Q1 2026 earnings commentary, he indicated that cloud services are projected to become Rumble’s largest revenue generator, overtaking the video platform that put the company on the map.
Tether’s $150 million commitment anchors the strategy
Tether, the stablecoin issuer and one of Rumble’s major shareholders, has pledged up to $150 million over two years for GPU services following the acquisition’s close. The purpose: supporting Tether’s decentralized AI initiatives.
The competitive landscape is not exactly forgiving
Rumble’s existing Rumble Cloud offerings feature flat-rate pricing and no data transfer fees. If you’ve ever gotten a surprise egress bill from AWS, you know why that matters. Data transfer fees are one of the most hated aspects of traditional cloud pricing, and they’re a major reason customers feel locked into their existing provider.
What this means for investors
Rumble’s stock trades on NASDAQ under the ticker RUM, and this acquisition fundamentally changes the investment thesis. Anyone who bought Rumble as a bet on an alternative video platform is now holding shares in what management clearly wants to become a cloud-first company.
The Tether relationship is both an asset and a risk. A $150 million commitment is meaningful, but heavy reliance on a single customer, especially one as polarizing in financial circles as Tether, introduces concentration risk.
The $767 million price tag for Northern Data also warrants scrutiny. That’s a hefty sum for a company that’s essentially acquiring hardware and data center leases. GPU fleets depreciate, which means Rumble will need to continuously reinvest to keep its infrastructure competitive.
For now, mid-June is the date to circle. That’s when we’ll know whether the Northern Data deal actually closes and Rumble’s cloud ambitions move from PowerPoint to production.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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