New York, July 12, 2026, 14:48 EDT
Alphabet got a new $445 price target from KeyBanc heading into the last full trading week before its Q2 results. That’s 24.6% above where shares closed on Friday at $357.18. The stock slipped 0.8% for the week, even as the Nasdaq rose 1.7%. Results are due July 22 and stand as the next major event for the stock.
Capex, the cash Alphabet puts into servers, data centers and other infrastructure, doesn’t get much attention compared to other metrics. Alphabet spent $35.7 billion in Q1. Barron’s said Sunday its Q2 capex could hit $44.9 billion. Management had guided to $180 billion-$190 billion in capex for the year. That leaves $99.4 billion to $109.4 billion for the second half, or $49.7 billion to $54.7 billion each quarter—11% to 22% above Q2. “We are seeing unprecedented internal and external demand for AI compute resources,” CFO Anat Ashkenazi said in April. Alphabet Investor Relations
Alphabet’s cash outflows are already showing up. In the first quarter, capex used up 78% of its $45.8 billion operating cash flow, with $10.1 billion in free cash left after those investments. If the company sticks to the middle of its annual capex guidance, 2026 capex would land $10.6 billion over the trailing 12 months’ operating cash flow as of March. That doesn’t mean free cash flow will go negative—cash generation could increase. But the hurdle for conversion has moved much higher.
| Spending checkpoint | Capex, $ billion | Cash or pace signal |
|---|---|---|
| Q2 2025 actual | 22.4 | Free cash flow hit $5.3 billion |
| Q1 2026 actual | 35.7 | Capex ran at 78% of operating cash flow |
| Q2 2026 estimate | 44.9 | 26% more than Q1; about 2x vs a year ago |
| H2 needed for guidance | 99.4–109.4 total | Quarterly average needed: 49.7–54.7 |
Wall Street price targets show the divide. The 36-analyst average is $411.14, up 15.1% from Friday’s close. But the last three analysts have an average target of $425.33. The $310 to $515 range captures how split analyst views are over the infrastructure program.
| Published forecast | Target | Move from $357.18 |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest | $310.00 | -13.2% |
| 36-analyst average | $411.14 | +15.1% |
| Last three, average | $425.33 | +19.1% |
| KeyBanc, July 10 | $445.00 | +24.6% |
| Highest | $515.00 | +44.2% |
Peer stocks traded mixed. Meta Platforms NASDAQ:META jumped 14.8% last week, marking its strongest week since at least February 2024, after multiple AI product updates. Reuters said Meta is set to start producing its Iris AI chip from September and aims for 14 gigawatts of computing capacity in 2027. The move shows investors are still willing to back major infrastructure spending if there’s a clearer line from new hardware and products to revenue or cost cuts.
Alphabet’s bull case is mostly about Cloud right now. Google Cloud brought in $20.0 billion in first-quarter revenue, up 63%, and operating income jumped to $6.6 billion. Backlog hit $462 billion—just over half of that is set to turn into revenue in the next two years. CEO Sundar Pichai said on the call that enterprise AI is now Cloud’s main growth driver for the first time.
Macroeconomic data could drive trading before Alphabet’s results. Consumers get June inflation numbers Tuesday, July 14 at 8:30 a.m. EDT, with producer prices Wednesday, and retail sales Thursday. If inflation comes in hot, that could lift rate bets and hit growth stocks, which trade on future profits. “A lot of factors coming to a head all at once,” Glenmede strategist Michael Reynolds said. Bureau of Labor Statistics
There’s a risk that spending could keep running ahead of use. Alphabet is on the hook for $75.6 billion in future data center lease payments for centers that aren’t online yet, plus $232.7 billion in long-term supply, energy and content contracts. If Cloud growth loses steam, higher power and depreciation expenses could hit margins. If capex jumps again on July 22, that would pressure the 15%-25% upside in mainstream analyst targets.
The working case now has two key steps: market volatility in the next week, then a company move tied to earnings. If Cloud backlog turns into sales and free cash picks up after Q2, a $411–$445 range in 12 months is within reach. But if capex stays high in the back half and op cash doesn’t keep up, the stock may stick to a range or drop closer to the low published targets.