Big Tech has been writing big checks for AI. Alphabet just wrote one of the biggest yet.
Google's parent is raising $80 billion in fresh equity. That's not a typo - and it's not the kind of move you usually see from a company sitting on more than $100 billion in cash.
A Rare Move From A Cash-Rich Company
Alphabet doesn't need the money - the company throws off tens of billions in free cash flow each year and ended last quarter with more cash than most countries' entire GDP.
So when a company like that decides to issue new stock - which shrinks each existing shareholder's piece of the pie - investors pay attention, because equity raises are usually a tool for businesses that can't borrow cheaply or don't have cash on hand.
Alphabet has both. That means this raise is about something else: scale.
We break down what moves like this actually mean for your portfolio in Market Briefs - five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you join.
Why Alphabet Needs The Cash
Building AI is wildly expensive, with training a single frontier model requiring tens of thousands of high-end chips, miles of cabling, warehouses of cooling equipment, and enormous amounts of power to run it all.
Alphabet has been spending hard to keep up with Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon, with CapEx - the money companies put into long-term assets like data centers and equipment - climbing sharply over the past two years.
Even $100 billion in cash only goes so far when you're trying to build the backbone for the next decade of computing, which is why the $80 billion raise gives Alphabet a war chest big enough to keep pace without draining the balance sheet.
What This Means For Shareholders
More shares outstanding means each existing share owns a slightly smaller piece of the company. That's called dilution.
The trade-off: if the spending pays off, the bigger pie is worth more than the smaller slice. That's the bet Alphabet is asking shareholders to make.
It's the same bet every Big Tech CEO is asking investors to make right now. The difference is the size of the check.
What To Watch
Three things matter from here. How quickly Alphabet deploys the cash, whether AI revenue starts showing up in the income statement, and how Wall Street prices the dilution in the meantime.
The market has been forgiving on AI spending so far. $80 billion is a lot to forgive.
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