Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG), owner of all things Google and boasting a $4.33 trillion market cap along with a one-year 111.1% share rate return, is digging deep into its pockets for its massive AI infrastructure efforts. The Mountain View, Calif., technology powerhouse is looking to spend an eye-popping $80 billion on its AI operational needs, a figure that exceeds the annual economic output of countries like Latvia, Cambodia, and Iceland (1).
Experts say the Google parent company’s latest funding push underscores just how fiercely Silicon Valley is competing to dominate the next generation of AI-powered products and services, and how much cash they’re willing to lay out for the cause.
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In a June 2 statement, Alphabet updated and adjusted the pricing of its previously announced registered public offerings of Class A Common Stock, Class C Capital Stock and depositary shares representing interests in mandatory convertible preferred stock. “The gross proceeds of these offerings, together with potential gross proceeds of Alphabet’s previously announced $40 billion at-the-market offering program for the sale of Class A Common Stock and Class C Capital Stock over time, and concurrent $10 billion private placement, represent a total equity raise of $84.75 billion,” the company noted. “The equity capital raise was upsized from the previously announced total equity raise of $80 billion.”
A ’who’s who’ of Wall Street headline firms are running the $84 billion Alphabet book, including Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and Morgan Stanley.
With investors watching Google cut one of the biggest financing deals in business history, they’re also learning what happens when some of the world’s largest corporations commit tens of billions of dollars to a technology that is still in its early stages.
“The financing deal shows that both AI technology and AI adoption are still in their infancy, so it will take a lot more cash than the market expected to drive this technology forward,” Galina Fendikevich. the founder of Fendikevich & Company, a consulting and executive AI intelligence firm, told Moneywise. “Alphabet is not going to sit on the sidelines; they’ve historically been drivers of innovation, so the fact that they are still rushing to play catch-up signals their appetite to be strong competitors.”
A ‘growth support’ move by Google
At first glance, Google’s massive AI investment signals internal confidence that artificial intelligence will transform the technology landscape, from internet search and cloud computing to healthcare, finance, and workplace productivity. Yet the $84 billion financing move also raises a big question for consumers and investors alike: Will these enormous bets ultimately generate the profits that justify their cost, or are technology companies entering an expensive arms race where the winners remain far from certain?
“Strong future AI demand is at least 5-10 years away,” Fendikevich noted. “Workforce training, change management, complex integrations all slow the speed of adoption.”
Consequently, companies need major cash infusions to outlast this incredibly slow adoption and buying cycle. “They can’t predict when it will finally break, so I wouldn’t say it’s necessarily a signal of confidence in future AI demand.”
Even more critically, the US energy and infrastructure system is severely lacking to support any strong growth in AI demand. “Most of the cash will most likely go to building energy power plants and data centers,” Fendikevich added. “Then Alphabet will have the ability to build stronger models which will rely on this infrastructure. Either way, they have a reputation, and they are not going to back down from the competition from OpenAI and Anthropic.
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A structural shift for Alphabet and for Silicon Valley
Other AI analysts say that the demand for artificial intelligence comes at a time when the technology is increasingly demanding of digital firepower, and that Google is acting accordingly.
“Most of the headlines around AI infrastructure are still about GPUs, but the smart infrastructure people are watching a quieter, more structural shift,” Roger Cummings, CEO of PEAK:AIO, an AI enterprise scaling, security and governance company, told Moneywise. “As AI moves beyond chatbots and toward more agentic systems, the balance of the data center is starting to change.”
It’s doing so quickly, which helps make the case for Google steering more cash into technology development. In a new research note, Dilip Ramachandran (2), senior director of segment marketing, cloud AI business unit at Arm, projects that CPU core demand per gigawatt will quadruple in the agent era, and the chatbot-era ratio of one CPU to four or eight GPUs is collapsing toward one-to-one. “You can see that in the market with Intel and AMD both raising CPU prices last quarter,” Cummings noted.
What gets missed in the headlines and Wall Street noise is that as work spreads across more CPUs and GPUs, every tier is waiting on the same thing: the data feeding it. “Rebalance the compute all you want; if the other layers, particularly storage, can’t feed both systems fast enough, you’ve just created a more expensive version of the same bottleneck,” Cummings said.
What the move means for investors
While Wall Street market mavens gawk at the massive numbers, Main Street investors may wonder if there’s something in the GOOG deal for them. They may not like the answer, at least in the short term.
“Investors can’t expect a return in the mid-term, as AI IS solely a long-term investment, at least 5-10 years,” Fendikevich noted. “Since Alphabet will most likely invest heavily in infrastructure, which is a good backup asset in case the whole LLM thing doesn’t work out for them and those industries will benefit the most, it’s a sound investment no matter where the chips fall down the road.
On the upside, the financing deal could signal yet another shift in the workplace, with demand for AI specialists accelerating every passing year.
“This AI ‘arms race’ just might be the answer to Trump’s call for re-shoring industrials and manufacturing,” Fendikevich said. “The next issue now, though, is that there won’t be enough blue-collar workers to fulfill the demand in materials manufacturing, energy production, and data center construction. Young people want to go into white-collar work or become ‘influencers.’”
Even that otherwise promising scenario has more questions than answers. “So how is Alphabet or the government going to convince them to pick up a hammer instead?” Fendikevich asked.
Shades of the Internet Age
Business gurus say we’re witnessing an AI investment boom similar to past technology buildouts, such as the internet boom of the 1990s and the cloud-computing expansion of the 2010s. The question now: What lessons should investors learn from those periods?
“Yes, and this is crucial: the AI revolution is similar to both of these phenomena but with a much sharper capital burn,” Mark Vena, CEO and principal analyst at SmartTech Research, told Moneywise.
Like the 1990s internet boom, Vena said some spending will look brilliant in hindsight, and some will look reckless, while the 2010s cloud era showed that infrastructure bets can create huge recurring revenue streams. “The lesson for investors is simple: the infrastructure boom creates winners, but not every company writing giant checks earns giant returns,” he noted.
Fendikevich agrees, noting that investors should proceed with caution.
“Yes, this is exactly the same,” she said. “Investors need to keep a cool head and not get swayed by Silicon Valley founders’ grandiose claims of workforce decimation and AGI. They say those things to get investment, and frankly it’s good PR to get AI into the mainstream.”
Yet if investors have learned anything from other technology buildouts, it’s that things are much more complicated than they seem, so AI progress will take time.
“AI is not a rocket ship,” she added. It takes coordination across multiple sectors, including government, energy, manufacturing, software engineering, and enterprises, to get AI off the ground. Rome wasn’t built in a day, and neither will AI.”
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Worldometers (1); Arm (2)
This article originally appeared on Moneywise.com under the title: Experts say Google’s $84 billion AI gamble could leave investors waiting a decade for a payoff
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