Alphabet, Google’s parent company, announced Monday it is pursuing up to $80 billion in equity financing to fund its artificial intelligence expansion — a sign that even cash-rich technology giants are seeking outside capital to keep pace in the AI race.
How the Financing Breaks Down
The fundraising effort includes three components: a $30 billion underwritten public offering split between convertible preferred stock and common shares; a $40 billion at-the-market stock program set to begin in the third quarter; and a $10 billion private investment from Berkshire Hathaway, which has been steadily building its Alphabet stake since late 2025.
The company said the capital will support what it described as scaling AI infrastructure and expanding computing capacity in response to strong customer demand.
Why a Cash-Flush Giant Is Raising More Money
Alphabet has historically generated substantial free cash flow, making the equity raise notable. The move follows the company’s earlier decision to issue corporate debt, including what was reported as the first 100-year bond issued by a major company in modern history.
CEO Sundar Pichai framed the strategy in direct terms: “The risk of under-investing is dramatically greater than the risk of over-investing.”
Broader AI Spending Surge
Alphabet is not alone. The five largest cloud and technology companies — often called hyperscalers — are projected to collectively spend more than $750 billion on AI-related infrastructure this year alone. Analysts at Morgan Stanley estimate that figure could reach $4 trillion cumulatively by 2030.
The scale of capital commitments reflects a shared calculation across Big Tech: that failing to secure dominant AI positions now carries more long-term risk than the near-term cost of aggressive investment. Alphabet’s latest financing round underscores how that logic is reshaping corporate capital strategy at the highest levels.