Google parent Alphabet is preparing the largest equity fundraising in corporate history, seeking to raise up to $80 billion as it accelerates spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure. The move underscores the enormous capital requirements of the global AI race and raises fresh questions about whether the sector can generate returns that justify such unprecedented investment.
The fundraising plan includes a $10 billion share purchase by Berkshire Hathaway, the investment conglomerate previously led by Warren Buffett, alongside a broader stock offering to institutional investors.
Investors reacted cautiously to the announcement. Alphabet shares fell more than 4 percent in early US trading, making the company one of the biggest decliners on the Nasdaq index.
Analysts said the scale of the fundraising highlighted both the opportunities and risks associated with AI. While demand for AI services continues to surge, technology companies are being forced to spend vast sums on data centres, computing power and specialised chips before meaningful profits materialise.
According to market analysts, Alphabet's planned fundraising would exceed the combined proceeds of the world's three biggest initial public offerings.
Those landmark listings included:
Saudi Aramco's 2019 IPO, which raised $25.6 billion
Alibaba's 2014 New York listing, which raised $21.8 billion
SoftBank's 2018 Tokyo debut, which raised $21.3 billion
The proposed $80 billion offering is therefore unprecedented for an already listed company.
Alphabet said demand for its AI products and services from businesses and consumers is growing faster than its existing infrastructure can support.
The company stated that expanding its AI computing capacity is essential to meet customer requirements and capture future growth opportunities.
The technology giant has emerged as one of the leading competitors in generative AI through its Gemini platform, which has steadily gained market share in the AI chatbot market.
The fundraising reflects the escalating costs of the AI arms race among major technology companies.
Alphabet has already indicated that its capital expenditure could reach between $180 billion and $190 billion this year, with spending expected to rise further in 2027.
Industry observers say the era when large technology firms generated substantial cash flows while maintaining relatively low capital expenditure is rapidly coming to an end.
Alphabet's fundraising comes as several AI-focused companies prepare to access public markets.
AI developer Anthropic has confidentially filed for a US stock market listing after a rapid rise in valuation. Meanwhile, OpenAI and Elon Musk's AI venture xAI, part of SpaceX, are also expected to pursue public listings as competition for AI dominance intensifies.
For investors, Alphabet's record fundraising serves as another reminder that the next phase of AI growth will require enormous amounts of capital, even for the world's most profitable technology companies.