New York, Feb 9, 2026, 16:35 EST — After-hours trading.
- Alphabet’s Class C stock edged 0.4% higher in late trading.
- Bloomberg says Google’s parent is eyeing a $15 billion investment-grade bond offering, with demand surging—orders have already cleared $100 billion.
- Investors are sizing up new borrowing as Alphabet lays out much bigger spending plans for 2026.
Alphabet’s non-voting Class C shares (GOOG) edged up 0.4% to $324.40 in late trading Monday, following a Bloomberg News report that the Google parent is aiming to raise roughly $15 billion in a U.S. investment-grade bond offering. GOOG moved in a $317.95-to-$327.72 range on the day, with volume landing near 25.9 million shares. 1
The debt maneuver hits a nerve for big tech. Investors still back the growth narrative, but now they’re pressing for answers—how steep will the AI tab get, and ultimately, who’s left to pay?
Alphabet stands out among “hyperscalers”—the group of large cloud players ramping up their investments in chips, servers, and power infrastructure. How these companies finance that expansion matters; it changes how much cash ends up in buybacks, dividends, or gets plowed back into capital spending.
Stocks broadly pushed upward. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) posted gains of roughly 0.5%. Over in tech, the Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) advanced around 0.8%.
Alphabet jumped out front last week, laying out a big spending plan and reporting quarterly numbers that showed its cloud business is still firing. “We’re seeing our AI investments and infrastructure drive revenue and growth across the board,” CEO Sundar Pichai said in the earnings release. Capital expenditures for 2026 are now projected between $175 billion and $185 billion. Alphabet reported $113.8 billion in revenue for the quarter, and Google Cloud sales surged 48% to $17.7 billion. The board also approved a $0.21 dividend for shareholders of record as of March 9, with payment set for March 16. 2
“Investment-grade” in bond talk refers to higher-rated corporate paper—usually the stuff big institutions go for, using U.S. Treasuries as their benchmark. Alphabet is said to be eyeing a deal with several maturities, splitting the offering into different tranches to reach various pools of buyers simultaneously.
Investors have shown clear interest so far. According to Bloomberg, orders for the bond offering had already surpassed $100 billion, with the 2066 tranche initially pitched at roughly 1.2 percentage points above Treasuries. The deal, which could be split into as many as seven parts, drew plenty of attention. Alphabet hasn’t commented, and Reuters was unable to confirm Bloomberg’s report. 1
Still, there’s risk on the table. Should rates climb or credit spreads stretch out, those big, late-cycle deals quickly get pricier. Suddenly, debt-fueled AI expansions can look like a burden if the revenue bump doesn’t keep up with the outlay — the market won’t wait around.
Now, all eyes turn to the final pricing and size details for Alphabet’s bond offering, plus whether spreads stay in line once the deal launches. Investors are also eyeing March 9, the record date for Alphabet’s upcoming dividend, as they look for clues on how leadership will manage cash returns alongside the company’s $175 billion–$185 billion capex ambitions.