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Let’s start with the weird part.
On Monday, Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) — Google’s parent company — announced it’s raising $80 billion by selling stock. That’s the biggest equity raise in the history of tech. As part of the deal, Warren Buffett’s company Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK.A) agreed to buy $10 billion worth of Alphabet shares.
Here’s the catch: Berkshire paid below what the stock was trading at.
And yet, the stock went down.
Existing shareholders sold. New investor comes in at a discount, stock falls. That sounds backwards. But once you understand the math, it actually makes complete sense. Both sides are rational. And the tension between them is the most important thing happening in the stock market right now.
So Why Is Alphabet Raising $80 Billion?
Here’s the simple version.
Google Cloud — Alphabet’s AI business — is on fire. Revenue hit $20 billion in a single quarter, up 63% from last year. They have $462 billion in contracts already signed with customers. CEO Sundar Pichai literally said on the last earnings call: “Cloud revenue would have been higher if we could have met the demand.”
Read that again. They’re turning away business because they don’t have enough computers.
That’s the reason for the raise. Alphabet needs to build more data centers, buy more chips, and expand its AI infrastructure — fast. Its 2026 spending plan is $180 to $190 billion. Next year, it’ll be even higher.
But here’s where it gets interesting.
The Number That Changes Everything
Alphabet made $174 billion in operating cash last year. That sounds like plenty.
Until you realize it’s spending more than that on infrastructure this year.
In just the first three months of 2026, Alphabet spent $35.7 billion building out its AI systems. It made $45.8 billion in operating cash that quarter. After subtracting the spending, it was left with just $10.1 billion in free cash.
That’s the math problem. A $190 billion spending plan versus a $174 billion cash machine means Alphabet is running a deficit on its own infrastructure build. It’s already borrowed over $85 billion in debt over the past year to help fund this. And now it’s selling stock to make up the rest — which is why you’re seeing $80 billion hit the market and why existing shareholders are nervous about having their ownership stake diluted.
This isn’t a panic move. It’s what happens when demand is so overwhelming that even one of the most cash-generative companies in history can’t keep up on its own.
Why Berkshire Got a Discount — and What That Tells You
Greg Abel — the new CEO of Berkshire who took over from Warren Buffett — paid $351.81 per Class A share and $348.20 per Class C share. Monday’s closing price was $372.58. That’s roughly a 5–6% discount.
Why would Alphabet give anyone a discount?
Because when you’re raising $80 billion, you need a credible anchor investor to get other institutions comfortable enough to participate. Berkshire’s $10 billion says: “We’ve looked at this company closely and we think the AI bet is real.” That’s worth giving up a discount for.
Abel has been buying Alphabet aggressively. In Q1 alone, Berkshire tripled its stake to about 58 million shares. This isn’t a one-time move. It’s a conviction that’s been building for months.
His argument, simply put: Alphabet has $462 billion in signed customer contracts for Cloud. Over half converts to real revenue in the next two years. At Cloud’s current profit margins — roughly 33 cents of profit for every dollar of revenue — that backlog justifies every dollar of infrastructure being built today. Abel is betting the capex pays off.
Existing shareholders aren’t necessarily disagreeing with that thesis. They’re worried about something more immediate: dilution.
The Dilution Problem — Explained Simply
Think of a pizza. Right now, you own 1 slice of an 8-slice pie.
Alphabet is about to cut the pizza into more slices. Part of this raise includes a $40 billion program where Alphabet can sell new shares directly into the market starting Q3 2026, whenever it needs cash. No fixed end date.
More slices means your 1 slice is worth less of the total pizza — even if the pizza itself is getting bigger. That’s dilution. Slow, continuous, and open-ended.
That’s what the market reacted to. Not fear about Google’s business. Fear about the share supply that comes with it.
The Asset Nobody Is Talking About
Here’s the part both sides are missing.
Everyone is focused on Cloud and AI infrastructure. But Alphabet also owns YouTube — a $60 billion revenue business that barely comes up in this debate.
YouTube now leads U.S. streaming watch time ahead of Netflix — for the third consecutive year. It has over 125 million paid subscribers for YouTube Music and Premium. That subscription business is growing at nearly twice the rate of advertising. CEO Neal Mohan confirmed subscriptions are growing at high-teens rates annually.
Why does this matter for the $80 billion raise?
Because the AI infrastructure Alphabet is building doesn’t just serve Cloud customers. It makes YouTube’s recommendations sharper, its creator tools more powerful, and its advertising more precise. Every data center built to serve Google Cloud also serves YouTube. The return on this capex isn’t one revenue stream. It’s at least two — and the market is only valuing one of them.
What This Means for the Competition
The uncomfortable truth for Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN): Alphabet just told you it’s not backing down.
Google Cloud was capacity-constrained in Q1 — meaning both competitors have been quietly benefiting from a rival that literally couldn’t serve all its customers. The $80 billion raise is designed to end that advantage.
Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), JPMorgan (NYSE: JPM), and Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) — the banks running this deal — collect their fees either way.
The Bottom Line
Berkshire thinks the $462 billion Cloud backlog converts, the margins hold, and the AI infrastructure pays for itself. Existing shareholders think the $40 billion share program creates a ceiling while the capex bills pile up for another two years.
Both are reasonable. What resolves this is simple: watch whether Alphabet’s Cloud backlog converts to revenue at the pace it’s promised. The next two earnings calls will tell you more than any analyst note.
One side is right. The gap between these two outcomes is measured in hundreds of billions of dollars.
Disclaimer: We do not hold any positions in the above stock(s). Read our full disclaimer here.





