Audio By Carbonatix
The titans of the technology sector are ramping up their spending on artificial intelligence, as they rush to reap the benefits of an AI boom that has pushed stocks to record highs.
Earnings reports from Meta, Alphabet and Microsoft on Wednesday reaffirmed the colossal amounts of money these firms are shelling out for everything from data centres to chips, even as questions swirl about returns on the investments.
Meta said its capital expenditures for 2025 will be between $70bn (£53bn) and $72bn, up from an earlier estimate of $66bn to $72bn.
Its spending growth in 2026 is poised to be "notably larger" than this year, the company said. Meta is seeking to compete with companies like OpenAI.
On a call with analysts, Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg defended the firm's investments, saying he saw big opportunities ahead driven by AI, both in terms of new products and for honing its current business selling ads and feeding people content.
"The right thing to do is accelerate this," he said, adding later: "We are sort of perennially operating the family of apps and ads business in a compute-starved state at this point."
Google and YouTube owner Alphabet similarly raised its forecast for this year to $91bn to $93bn, up from an earlier outlook of $85bn in the summer, in the latest sign of its increasingly lofty spending goals,
That estimate is nearly double the capital expenditures that the company reported for 2024.
Microsoft's capital expenditures in the quarter through to 30 September, including on data centres, totalled $34.9bn, the company reported on Wednesday - a larger spending figure than analysts had expected, and up from $24 billion in the previous quarter.
"We continue to increase our investments in AI across both capital and talent to meet the massive opportunity ahead," Satya Nadella, Microsoft's chief executive, said.
Azure, the firm's cloud computing unit, and Microsoft's other AI products have a "real-world impact", Mr Nadella said.
Exuberance among investors about massive AI spending has helped all three tech firms outperform the broader S&P 500 index.
But Wall Street is also focused on whether these firms' investments are starting to yield tangible returns.
The two things holding up the US economy in the last several months have been consumers and AI-related business investments, said Aditya Bhave, senior US economist at Bank of America.
"To the extent that the latter remains strong, it's a bullish signal for GDP growth," he said.
Meta on Wednesday night reported a rise in its quarterly revenue, but its profits fell 83% year-over-year, down to $2.7bn, because of a one-time income tax charge.
Microsoft's quarterly profits rose 12%, to $27.7bn. Alphabet reported a 33% rise in profit, to roughly $35bn.
Latest Stories
-
UG Professor wins international lifetime achievement award for work on neglected tropical diseases
26 minutes -
Prophet John Anokye urges Christians to combine faith with financial wisdom
28 minutes -
Minister Sam George inspects ‘One Million Coders’ centres in Greater Accra
37 minutes -
Legacy Expo 2026 set to mark a decade of impact in Africa’s beauty & wellness industry
53 minutes -
Major shake-up begins to make Ghana.gov simpler for citizens
1 hour -
Ghana Immigration Service trains officers ahead of nationwide e-visa rollout
2 hours -
Trade Ministry prepares for US Chamber of Commerce Trade Mission
2 hours -
We have all seen it – Kwakye Ofosu confirms early race to replace Mahama
2 hours -
One dead, several injured in head-on crash on Wenchi-Subinso road
2 hours -
FABAG backs GSA fight against ‘unjustified’ port charges
2 hours -
Manasseh Azure Awuni: President Mahama, I feel ashamed
3 hours -
GNFS responds to diesel tanker accident at Asuboi, no casualties recorded
3 hours -
Charles Amissah’s family sues 3 hospitals, doctors and AG, seeks GH¢20m compensation
3 hours -
Ghana signs MOU with ‘Google for Education’ to strengthen digital literacy
3 hours -
Ghana’s economic activity strengthens, but business confidence eases to 12.6% – BoG
3 hours