Quick Take
  • Alphabet (GOOGL) has set an $80 billion equity capital raise to fund AI infrastructure expansion.
  • Berkshire Hathaway has committed $10 billion to the offering as its anchor institutional investor.
  • The stock closed at $372.58 on Monday, down 1.02%.
  • Shares slipped another 1.50% to $367 in after-hours trading as dilution worries offset the institutional vote.

What Happened

Alphabet (GOOGL) has set an $80 billion equity capital raise to fund AI infrastructure expansion. Berkshire Hathaway has committed $10 billion to the offering as its anchor institutional investor.

Investors sent GOOGL shares lower on the news. The stock closed at $372.58 on Monday, down 1.02%. Shares slipped another 1.50% to $367 in after-hours trading as dilution worries offset the institutional vote.

Market Context

Inside the $80 Billion AI Capital Raise

The raise lands as Alphabet ramps up AI capital intensity. Management’s 2026 capex guidance sits at $180 billion to $190 billion, roughly double 2025’s $91.4 billion.

Equity is a notable financing pivot. Issuing stock brings in permanent capital without further loading a balance sheet already absorbing record big tech AI capex. Hyperscalers’ free cash flow has compressed sharply this cycle.

Issuing $80 billion against Alphabet’s $4.5 trillion market cap implies dilution of about 1.8%. BlackRock’s recent capex warning flagged that company-level spending now moves macro markets.

The next test comes from official SEC filings. Whether Monday’s selloff was a one-day dilution reflex remains an open question. A broader repricing of AI capex risk should become clearer soon.

Why It Matters

Google Cloud reported $20 billion in Q1 2026 revenue, a 63% jump, with a $460 billion contract backlog.

Berkshire’s $10 Billion Vote

Details

Berkshire tripled its Alphabet stake to roughly 58 million shares in Q1 2026. The holding was valued near $17 billion. A direct $10 billion subscription would push Berkshire among the largest non-insider holders.

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The commitment marks a shift under new CEO Greg Abel, who succeeded Warren Buffett.

Berkshire’s record cash position reached $397.4 billion at quarter-end.

Dilution Versus Growth

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