Alphabet Plans to Raise $80 Billion Stock Sale to Scale AI Infrastructure

Table of Contents Alphabet plans to raise $80 billion from stock sales to fund its artificial intelligence buildout, the company announced Monday. The capital raise spans multiple offerings, including a $10 billion private placement with Berkshire Hathaway. Google’s parent company said demand for its AI solutions from enterprises and consumers is already exceeding available supply. The fundraising effort marks one of the largest equity raises in the company’s history. Alphabet plans to raise $80 billion from stock sales through three distinct channels. The first is a $30 billion underwritten public offering split between common stock and convertible preferred shares. The second is a $40 billion at-the-market program for Class A and Class C shares beginning in Q3 2026. The third is a $10 billion private placement with Berkshire Hathaway at fixed per-share prices. The underwritten portion breaks down into $15 billion in depositary shares tied to mandatory convertible preferred stock. The remaining $15 billion covers equal parts of Class A Common Stock and Class C Capital Stock. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley are joint book-running managers for the underwritten offerings. Goldman Sachs is additionally serving as placement agent for the Berkshire private placement. Alphabet said the capital will “fund investments in its world-class AI compute infrastructure to meet its unprecedented customer demand.” The preferred stock carries a liquidation preference of $1,000 per share and will mandatorily convert after approximately three years. Alphabet plans to list the depositary shares on Nasdaq under the symbols “GOOGM” and “GOOGN.” Capped call transactions will also be entered into at pricing to reduce potential dilution. Berkshire’s $10 billion investment is split evenly between Class A shares at $351.81 and Class C shares at $348.20. This adds to a position Berkshire has been building in Alphabet since Q3 2025. Before Monday’s announcement, Berkshire’s Alphabet stake was already valued at around $20 billion. The investment places Alphabet among Berkshire’s top holdings, behind only Apple. Alphabet plans to raise $80 billion from stock sales because AI demand is outpacing what the company can currently supply. The company stated that it is “experiencing strong demand for its AI solutions and services from enterprises and consumers, at levels that are exceeding the company’s available supply.” CEO Sundar Pichai previously stated that compute capacity is what keeps Google’s leadership up at night. Power availability, land access, and supply chain constraints are all cited as pressing bottlenecks. When asked what keeps Google executives up at night during the Q1 earnings call, Pichai pointed directly to infrastructure. “Be it power, land, supply chain constraints, how do you ramp up to meet this extraordinary demand for this moment?” he said. Alphabet revised its 2026 capital expenditure forecast to between $180 billion and $190 billion earlier this year. The company also signaled that 2027 spending will rise even further beyond that range. Over the past 12 months, Alphabet generated $174 billion in operating cash flow. It has also raised over $85 billion in debt across six currencies and markets in the past year. The company added that “by scaling its investments, the company seeks to expand its foundational infrastructure to support the significant growth opportunity ahead.” Total debt now stands at over $100 billion. Google Cloud revenue surged 63% year-over-year in Q1 2026, with backlog nearly doubling to over $460 billion. Overall company revenue reached $110 billion in Q1 2026, up 22% from the prior year. Google also reached 350 million paid subscriptions, its strongest consumer AI quarter on record. Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon are collectively expected to spend over $700 billion on capital expenditures this year.