Alphabet, Wall Street
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Alphabet Inc. said demand for artificial intelligence products boosted quarterly sales, and now requires an extreme increase in capital spending — heightening pressure on the company to justify the cost of keeping up in the AI race.
The company increased that figure on Wednesday to $85 billion, saying it was raising it due to “strong and growing demand for our Cloud products and services.” The company expects to further increase capital expenditures in 2026, Alphabet finance chief Anat Ashkenazi said on an earnings call.
Alphabet was targeted with an EU antitrust complaint from six human and digital rights groups on Thursday which urged EU regulators to investigate whether the tech giant complies with legislation requiring it to make it easier for users to uninstall software apps.
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Most leaders in the tech industry owe their wealth to founding equity stakes in their platforms, which Google’s Sundar Pichai does not have.
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Alphabet shares rose more than 3% in early trading on Thursday as the Google parent's earnings underscored a key message to investors: AI spending is climbing, but so are the returns.
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We’ll continue investing in the people, talent and compute needed to make sure that we are set up for the opportunity ahead,” said CEO Sundar Pichai.
Though Google Cloud is dominating headlines for its surprising outperformance, Alphabet’s core ad business remains robust. Google Search brought in revenue of $54.19 billion for the quarter, growing 12% year over year, while YouTube Ads revenue jumped 13% to $9.8.