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Big Tech Stocks Swing as Meta, Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon Report AI Spending Plans
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BBC Technology29.04.2026Business2 dk okuma

Big Tech Stocks Swing as Meta, Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon Report AI Spending Plans

Investors question $500B+ collective AI investment as some stocks fall and others rise on Q1 earnings day

En resumen

  • Meta, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Amazon reported Q1 2026 earnings on Wednesday, revealing combined AI spending plans exceeding $500B.
  • Meta shares fell 5%+ after raising capex guidance to $145B, while Alphabet jumped nearly 6% on strong Cloud growth.
  • Microsoft and Amazon also declined as investors questioned AI returns, with Microsoft's free cash flow dropping nearly $6B year-over-year.

Resumen generado por IA

Por qué importa

The four largest US tech companies reported quarterly earnings on the same day for the first time, revealing the scale of their AI investments. Combined AI spending plans exceed $500bn for 2026, with investors increasingly questioning whether these massive expenditures will generate adequate returns.

Tamaño de fuente

The share prices of the biggest tech firms in the US swung up and down as investors considered their immense spending on artificial intelligence (AI). Facebook's owner Meta, Google's owner Alphabet, Microsoft, and Amazon all reported their business results for the first three months of this year at the same time on Wednesday. The companies collectively plan to spend more than half a trillion dollars on AI this year, with Meta and Amazon making mass job cuts to offset these costs. Meta's shares slumped over 5% in after hours trading, while Microsoft and Amazon were down 2% and 1.6% respectively. Meanwhile, Alphabet share price jumped almost 6%. Investors in these firms have become increasingly concerned about whether the money being spent will generate returns. Mark Zuckerberg, Meta's co-founder and chief executive, said in prepared remarks that the company "had a milestone quarter" with users of its apps and a release of a new AI model, but that seemed to be overshadowed by another increase on costs. Its share price slumped after it said it would be spending even more on AI projects and infrastructure than it anticipated. The firm said its planned capital expenditure, the metric companies use to detail their spending on projects that have not yet turned into business growth, will increase to as much as $145bn (£108bn), up from a previous maximum of $135bn. Alphabet's positive performance and specifics around tangible business results from its AI spending saw the stock jump in after hours trading. The company said its profits rose by 30% and noted that its Google Cloud business grew by 63%, an increase it attributed specifically to an increase in AI usage by companies that buy cloud services. Sundar Pichai, Google's chief executive, said in prepared remarks: "Our AI investments and full stack approach are lighting up every part of the business." Microsoft's stock fell by nearly 2% after the company reported its quarterly results. Although the company beat its revenue expectations with an increase of 16% to $83b, and profits rose 23% to $38 billion its spending on AI has hit its free cash flow. That metric, essentially how much money a company has in its bank account, is important for investors. Microsoft's cash flow for the quarter came in at $15.8bn, down almost $6bn from a year ago. Satya Nadella, Microsoft's chief executive, said the company's AI business is growing. He said the annual run rate of its AI business hit $37bn. Such a metric, however, is a projection of future sales based on a multiple of current sales. The company did not specify the base level sales figure the run-rate was calculated on. The company's stock is down nearly 11% so far this year, as questions around its spending on AI and its partnership with OpenAI, in which it has invested more than $10bn, have continued. Amazon's shares fell after it revealed it would make less money next quarter than initially thought, but the results themselves were in line with analyst expectations. The company notched a 15% year-over-year increase in profits, and that its increasingly important cloud business grew 28%, the biggest jump it has seen in more than four years. Andy Jassy, Amazon's chief executive, also boasted of Amazon's expanding business of manufacturing its own AI chips. He said the current annual run rate for Amazon's chips is now $20 billion.

Preguntas abiertas

  • Will AI spending generate sufficient returns for Meta and Microsoft?
  • How long will free cash flow degradation continue at Microsoft?
  • Can Amazon's custom AI chips achieve meaningful market share against NVIDIA?

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This article was originally published by BBC Technology.

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