GOOG stock drops after-hours as Alphabet’s $185 billion spending plan rattles investors

GOOG stock drops after-hours as Alphabet’s $185 billion spending plan rattles investors

New York, Feb 4, 2026, 16:30 EST — After-hours

  • Alphabet’s Class C shares (GOOG) dipped in after-hours trading following the company’s announcement of significantly increased capital expenditures for 2026.
  • Alphabet, Google’s parent company, topped expectations on both fourth-quarter revenue and profit, driven by Google Cloud’s 48% surge in revenue.
  • Investors want specifics on the speed of spending increases — and if AI demand will offset the costs.

Alphabet’s Class C shares (GOOG) fell $7.28, or 2.1%, to $333.42 in after-hours trading Wednesday, following the company’s announcement of a sharp rise in capital spending projected for 2026. During the session, the stock swung between a low of $309.72 and a high of $345.74. (Reuters)

The scale of the new spending target is significant as investors now view Big Tech’s AI expansion less as an automatic growth engine and more like a stress test for cash returns. Capital expenditures, or capex, refer to funds companies allocate to long-term assets—such as data centers, servers, and chips—and these costs can tighten free cash flow well before any impact emerges in profits.

The timing couldn’t be more awkward. Tech stocks slipped during the regular session amid doubts over lofty valuations linked to the AI boom. “The size of the infrastructure buildout is unprecedented,” noted Jed Ellerbroek, portfolio manager at Argent Capital in St. Louis. (Reuters)

Alphabet posted fourth-quarter revenue of $113.8 billion, marking an 18% increase, with earnings per share hitting $2.82. Google Cloud’s revenue surged 48% to $17.7 billion. CEO Sundar Pichai said the company anticipates 2026 capex between $175 billion and $185 billion. The company also announced a quarterly cash dividend of $0.21 per share and revealed a $2.1 billion employee compensation charge, mostly related to Waymo. (SEC)

The headline figures look strong, yet the real debate centers on the pace of spending. Higher capex might fuel quicker expansion in cloud infrastructure and AI offerings, but it also drives up depreciation and raises the bar for returns.

Alphabet’s spending plans place it squarely in the thick of a race that’s ramping up data-center builds and custom chip development, alongside Amazon’s AWS, Microsoft’s Azure, and others. Investors are losing tolerance for the “spend now, explain later” approach.

Pressure is mounting beyond earnings. The U.S. government, along with most states, has moved to appeal a 2024 ruling that declared Google a monopoly in online search. (Reuters)

Investors face a tough spot: Google is funneling more capital into defending its search business and developing AI, even as regulators push for shifts that could alter how the company markets and profits from its products.

If demand for AI slows or clients hold back on spending, Alphabet faces a straightforward risk — a bigger fixed-cost structure paired with weaker pricing power than investors currently expect. The potential upside hinges on sustained cloud growth and AI capabilities generating fresh revenue, beyond just driving more traffic.

The next catalyst arrives with the earnings call at 4:30 p.m. ET. Investors will zero in on how rapidly the 2026 capex ramps up, its impact on margins, and if cloud capacity can scale without draining cash.

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