skip to main content

Tech leaders boost AI spending, but Alphabet's cash flow wins investor favour

Google's parent company Alphabet's shares rose over 5% as investors cheered its ability to fund its capital spending plans from its cash flow
Google's parent company Alphabet's shares rose over 5% as investors cheered its ability to fund its capital spending plans from its cash flow

Three of the biggest US technology companies flagged plans yesterday to accelerate capital spending over the next year, but investors were most accepting of Google-parent Alphabet's ability to fund its plans from its cash flow.

Alphabet, Microsoft and Facebook-owner Meta all announced plans for higher annual capital expenditures as they pour money into chips and data centers.

Shares of all three have risen substantially this year on expectations that they will be winners in the AI race, but investors only cheered Alphabet's report as they calculated the costs to each firm of the investments.

Shares of Meta sank more than 11% today, while Microsoft fell more than 2%, as investors remain concerned about the timeline for returns on such heavy investments.

Alphabet's shares, however, rose over 5%.

A key reason for the gain, analysts say, is the search giant's ability to balance its soaring expenses with strong cash flow.

"I would think that comes into play - to have capital spending be a lower percentage of revenue and cash flow. That maybe gives investors more comfort. All the players are ramping up spending pretty dramatically, and there's been a lot of concern about pressure on free cash flow," said Dave Heger, senior equity analyst at Edward Jones.

Alphabet's capital expenditure of $23.95 billion in the September quarter was 49% of its cash generated from operations.

The percentage for Meta, however, is 64.6%, with Microsoft even higher at 77.5%.

"Ongoing investments in data centers and AI infrastructure is a theme we've seen across Big Tech this earnings season. But unlike some of its peers, Alphabet is more than covering that spend with cash flow, and it's firing on all cylinders," said Josh Gilbert, market analyst at eToro.