Breaking
INTLPrison Clash in Sri Lanka Leaves at Least 25 Dead, Over 100 InjuredINTLUkraine-Russia war latest: Zelensky demands ‘strong decisions’ at Nato summit after ballistic missiles strike KyivTRAnkara'da Ulaşıma Kısıtlama: NATO Zirvesi Nedeniyle Metro Durakları EtkilenecekITAustralia e Fiji stringono un'alleanza militare per la sicurezza nel PacificoJP西日本豪雨から8年、犠牲者追悼 避難の重要性訴える声もCNFIFA暂缓巴洛贡禁赛令,特朗普表示感谢,比利时震惊INTLHamas to Hand Over Gaza Power to New Technical AdministrationINTLTrump Lobbies FIFA to Overturn Balogun Red Card SuspensionRURussia Sees Potential for Joint Vessel Development with IndonesiaDETrump heizt Streit mit Meloni vor Nato-Gipfel anINTLPrison Clash in Sri Lanka Leaves at Least 25 Dead, Over 100 InjuredINTLUkraine-Russia war latest: Zelensky demands ‘strong decisions’ at Nato summit after ballistic missiles strike KyivTRAnkara'da Ulaşıma Kısıtlama: NATO Zirvesi Nedeniyle Metro Durakları EtkilenecekITAustralia e Fiji stringono un'alleanza militare per la sicurezza nel PacificoJP西日本豪雨から8年、犠牲者追悼 避難の重要性訴える声もCNFIFA暂缓巴洛贡禁赛令,特朗普表示感谢,比利时震惊INTLHamas to Hand Over Gaza Power to New Technical AdministrationINTLTrump Lobbies FIFA to Overturn Balogun Red Card SuspensionRURussia Sees Potential for Joint Vessel Development with IndonesiaDETrump heizt Streit mit Meloni vor Nato-Gipfel an
Newsgather
BackAlphabet Seeks $80 Billion to Fund AI Infrastructure and Compute Power
Alphabet Seeks $80 Billion to Fund AI Infrastructure and Compute Power
Developing
Engadget6/2/2026Business1 min read

Alphabet Seeks $80 Billion to Fund AI Infrastructure and Compute Power

Quick Look

  • Alphabet is seeking $80 billion in stock sales to invest in AI compute infrastructure and meet customer demand.
  • Berkshire Hathaway is buying $10 billion of the stock.
  • This move follows significant capital spending by other AI companies like Anthropic and OpenAI.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Companies are spending heavily on AI infrastructure, including data centers and compute power, as part of an arms race for AI dominance. Anthropic recently raised $65 billion, and OpenAI has made significant spending commitments.

Font size

One of the biggest factors in the arms race for AI dominance is just how much capital companies are spending on the likes of data centers and compute power.

Anthropic, which just filed to go public, last week said it had raised $65 billion in its latest funding round.

OpenAI has made over a trillion dollars in spending commitments.

And now Alphabet — Google's parent and one of the world's three most valuable companies (according to the whims of the stock market) — is looking for more money to fuel its AI ambitions.

Alphabet said in a press release that it's selling $80 billion of stock "to fund investments in its world-class AI compute infrastructure to meet its unprecedented customer demand."

Holding company Berkshire Hathaway, which already had a stake that was worth around $20 billion, is buying $10 billion of that stock.

"Alphabet intends to use the net proceeds from the concurrent underwritten public offerings and the concurrent private placement for general corporate purposes, including capital expenditures to scale AI infrastructure and global compute," the company said.

During its most recent earnings call, Alphabet said it expected its capital expenditures for this year to be between $180-$190 billion.

It suggested that figure is likely to "significantly increase" in 2027.

The company generated $110 billion in the first three months of 2026, a 22 percent increase from the same period in 2025.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Alphabet's capital expenditures will significantly increase in 2027.

    Very likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • What specific AI projects will the $80 billion funding support?
  • What is the exact breakdown of capital expenditures for AI infrastructure?
  • What are the long-term implications of this investment on Alphabet's overall financial performance?
  • How will this investment impact the competitive landscape of AI development?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Engadget.

Related Stories

More on this topicAI