NEW YORK, May 14, 2026, 07:02 (EDT)
Alphabet is reaching into the global bond market, lining up its debut yen bond as the Google parent seeks fresh funding outside the U.S. to ramp up artificial intelligence efforts. “A company with big borrowing plans and solid credit can raise cash not just domestically but globally,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth. According to Reuters, the yen offering could land in the several hundred billion yen range. Reuters
The timing is key: the AI game has moved from flashy demos to serious funding. Alphabet now pegs its 2026 capital expenditures — that covers big-ticket items like servers and data centers — between $180 billion and $190 billion. For 2027, the company expects capex to climb well above that 2026 range.
Investors seem more comfortable with higher spending now that Cloud performance is shifting. Google Cloud pulled in $20 billion last quarter, up 63%, as CEO Sundar Pichai highlighted enterprise AI as the main engine behind that surge. Amazon Web Services posted 28% growth, while Microsoft’s Azure and related cloud products advanced 40% for the period. Google also jumped into direct sales of its custom AI chips—TPUs—which compete with Nvidia’s GPUs for AI workloads.
The size of Alphabet’s latest fundraising effort is starting to stand out. Bloomberg says the company’s total haul could approach $60 billion once its yen offering closes, adding to prior deals in dollars, sterling, Swiss francs, euros, and Canadian dollars. “Borrowers of that size have to tap every single source of liquidity,” said Nanda Kamat, global head of project finance at Royal Bank of Canada. SWI swissinfo.ch
Alphabet Class A shares traded recently at $402.62, giving the company a market cap near $4.88 trillion. Nvidia remains out in front with roughly $5.53 trillion in value. Right now, it’s less about Google’s AI messaging—investors want to see if the company can actually convert its investments in debt, chips, and data-center resources into steady revenue streams.
Credit markets are starting to echo the AI boom. According to Reuters, big cloud names like Alphabet and Meta—so-called hyperscalers—have already sold about $110 billion in bonds in 2026, making up 15.5% of this year’s total investment-grade debt sales, a sharp rise from just 3% a year ago. “They’re punching way above their weight,” said Nathaniel Rosenbaum, J.P. Morgan’s U.S. high-grade credit strategy chief. Reuters
But there’s a snag. EU regulators aren’t letting up on Google, still pursuing the company under the Digital Markets Act—a law targeting big tech’s clout online—with proposals that could allow competing AI tools to link up with Android apps for things like emailing, food orders, or photo sharing. This week, Apple threw its weight behind Google’s pushback, citing “profound risks” to privacy and security. The DMA, for its part, threatens violations with fines reaching as much as 10% of global annual turnover. Reuters
Regulatory risk is front and center here. Alphabet’s AI ambitions depend on Android, Search, Cloud, app distribution, and its Gemini ecosystem—the very pieces regulators are eyeing for more access. Even if a stricter EU settlement doesn’t block the bond sales, compliance costs could climb and the business units backing those sales might face pressure.
Right now, Alphabet delivers what both debt and equity investors tend to chase: scale, plenty of cash, and a more defined growth trajectory in Cloud. The tougher issue? Whether that trust holds up if AI costs ramp back up.