GOOGL Drops Premarket: $80B Equity Raise For AI Buildout Sparks Dilution Fears

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Google said it is seeing “strong demand for its AI solutions and services from enterprises and consumers, at levels that are exceeding the company’s available supply.”
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It announced that Berkshire Hathaway will buy $10 billion in stock.
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The news sent Broadcom shares, which recently signed an agreement to develop Google’s AI data center chips, rallying 7% in the premarket session.
Alphabet shares fell 2% in early premarket trading on Tuesday after the search and AI giant announced plans to raise $80 billion through share issuance this year to fund data center expansion, stoking investor concerns about dilution.
As part of the move, Alphabet said Monday that it reached an agreement to sell $10 billion of stock to Berkshire Hathaway. Of the $70 billion remaining, $30 billion will be underwritten public offerings, and $40 billion will be sold into the market, likely later this year.
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“The company is experiencing strong demand for its AI solutions and services from enterprises and consumers, at levels that are exceeding the company’s available supply,” Alphabet said in a statement. “By scaling its investments, the company seeks to expand its foundational infrastructure to support the significant growth opportunity ahead.”
The news sent Broadcom shares, which recently signed an agreement to develop Google’s AI data center chips, rallying 7% in the premarket session.
AI Capex Boom
Together, Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta and Amazon have committed to spending more than $700 billion in capital expenditures this year. Alphabet has been at the forefront of AI development. GOOGL shares have more than doubled in the past year, outperforming all the company’s megacap peers, as investors applaud its AI investments and the returns Google is seeing through its Gemini upgrades.
Retail View On GOOGL
However, the latest equity-raise plan has sparked some concerns. On Stocktwits, the retail sentiment for GOOGL remained ‘bearish,’ unchanged over the past week.
“The drop makes sense short-term — dilution is dilution,” said a trader.
“But the $40B ATM program rolls out gradually through Q3/Q4, so it’s not a one-day hit. Berkshire buying at $351-$348 sets a pretty clear institutional floor. If it pulls back toward that range, that’s where the smart money literally told you they’d buy. That’s the level to watch.”
Another wrote: “GOOGL glad I reduced my position at 400+. Will add it back at 300 if I get to see it again. If not, no worries. It was reallocated well, and it’s not like I didn’t close my position completely.”




