Alphabet (GOOGL) Stock Dips as Google Parent Taps €3 Billion Bond Market for AI Infrastructure

Table of Contents On Tuesday, Alphabet re-entered bond markets with a substantial euro-denominated offering worth at least €3 billion ($3.5 billion) structured across six separate tranches. Shares of GOOGL declined 0.93% during trading. Alphabet Inc., GOOGL The new issuance follows closely on the heels of February’s record-breaking fundraising effort, when the search engine giant secured nearly $32 billion across multiple currency markets. That historic transaction included a standalone $20 billion US dollar component — the largest American dollar bond sale in Alphabet’s history. February’s offering generated extraordinary demand, with peak orders reaching $103 billion, far exceeding the initial $15 billion goal. Notably, that deal featured a century bond — a 100-year maturity note that marked the first such instrument from a technology company since Motorola’s issuance during the late-1990s dot-com boom. Tuesday’s European market transaction features its longest-dated security with a 2063 maturity. Early pricing guidance positioned this tranche around 205 basis points above midswap benchmarks. The capital raised will support general corporate needs, potentially including refinancing of outstanding obligations. In recent announcements, Alphabet disclosed plans for capital spending reaching as high as $190 billion throughout the current year, with the majority allocated toward data center development. The company isn’t operating in isolation. Together with Meta, Microsoft, and Amazon, the collective AI infrastructure spending for 2025 could approach $725 billion — representing a significant increase from previous forecasts. Meta completed its own $25 billion bond transaction on April 30, though market conditions proved more challenging. Nearly every tranche in that offering priced at elevated risk premiums compared to Meta’s October issuance, while peak demand fell short, suggesting growing investor hesitation. The artificial intelligence sector has already generated approximately $300 billion in debt issuance, with market participants observing emerging signs of investor exhaustion. Recent large-scale technology infrastructure deals have required enhanced yields to successfully attract capital. Ian Horn, a portfolio manager at Muzinich & Co, observed that these technology corporations are expanding their presence in fixed-income markets, mirroring their equity market dominance. “There are concerns about how the bond issuance will be absorbed,” Horn commented, while emphasizing that investors are receiving appropriate compensation for the risk. He highlighted that it represents “a nice opportunity to add spread without really having to go to riskier names.” Alphabet’s European bond offering, coordinated by Barclays, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, and HSBC, was scheduled to complete pricing later Tuesday.