Global Finance News
02 Jun 2026, 12:06
Alphabet Plans Massive $80 Billion Equity Raise to Accelerate AI Infrastructure Expansion
Alphabet announced plans to raise approximately $80 billion through a combination of public stock offerings, preferred securities, and an at-the-market share sale program as the company ramps up investments in artificial intelligence infrastructure to meet surging demand.
The financing package includes $30 billion of underwritten offerings, a new $40 billion at-the-market stock sale program, and a $10 billion private placement investment from Berkshire Hathaway. Berkshire will purchase $5 billion of Alphabet Class A shares and $5 billion of Class C shares, expanding a position it has been building since late 2025.
The announcement underscores the scale of the AI investment race. Alphabet said customer demand for its AI products and services is exceeding available capacity, prompting the company to aggressively expand its compute infrastructure. Management previously guided for $180 billion to $190 billion in capital expenditures during 2026 and expects spending to rise significantly again in 2027.
The company enters this expansion phase with strong business momentum. First-quarter 2026 revenue climbed 22% year-over-year to $110 billion, while Google Cloud revenue surged 63%. Cloud backlog nearly doubled sequentially to more than $460 billion, highlighting robust enterprise demand for AI-related services. Alphabet also reported 350 million paid subscriptions across its ecosystem and said its AI models now process 19 billion tokens per minute, six times higher than a year ago.
Alphabet emphasized that the equity raise is part of a balanced funding strategy that also includes strong cash generation and debt financing. Over the past 12 months, the company generated $174 billion in operating cash flow and has raised more than $85 billion in debt across global markets.
The announcement highlights how major technology companies continue to commit unprecedented amounts of capital to AI infrastructure, with Alphabet positioning itself to capture growing demand across search, cloud computing, subscriptions, and developer platforms.
Alphabet announced plans to raise approximately $80 billion through a combination of public stock offerings, preferred securities, and an at-the-market share sale program as the company ramps up investments in artificial intelligence infrastructure to meet surging demand.
The financing package includes $30 billion of underwritten offerings, a new $40 billion at-the-market stock sale program, and a $10 billion private placement investment from Berkshire Hathaway. Berkshire will purchase $5 billion of Alphabet Class A shares and $5 billion of Class C shares, expanding a position it has been building since late 2025.
The announcement underscores the scale of the AI investment race. Alphabet said customer demand for its AI products and services is exceeding available capacity, prompting the company to aggressively expand its compute infrastructure. Management previously guided for $180 billion to $190 billion in capital expenditures during 2026 and expects spending to rise significantly again in 2027.
The company enters this expansion phase with strong business momentum. First-quarter 2026 revenue climbed 22% year-over-year to $110 billion, while Google Cloud revenue surged 63%. Cloud backlog nearly doubled sequentially to more than $460 billion, highlighting robust enterprise demand for AI-related services. Alphabet also reported 350 million paid subscriptions across its ecosystem and said its AI models now process 19 billion tokens per minute, six times higher than a year ago.
Alphabet emphasized that the equity raise is part of a balanced funding strategy that also includes strong cash generation and debt financing. Over the past 12 months, the company generated $174 billion in operating cash flow and has raised more than $85 billion in debt across global markets.
The announcement highlights how major technology companies continue to commit unprecedented amounts of capital to AI infrastructure, with Alphabet positioning itself to capture growing demand across search, cloud computing, subscriptions, and developer platforms.