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Home Cloud

Meta Is Becoming a Cloud Computing Company

Paul Balo by Paul Balo
July 2, 2026
in Cloud
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For more than two decades, Meta has been known as a social media company.

Its business has revolved around advertising on Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger and, more recently, AI-powered products such as Meta AI.

That identity may be about to change.

According to reports from Bloomberg, confirmed by Reuters, Meta is developing a cloud computing business that will allow companies to rent access to its artificial intelligence infrastructure and computing power, potentially transforming the company into a direct competitor to Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud.

The news sent Meta’s stock soaring by nearly 10% as investors welcomed the possibility of an entirely new source of revenue beyond digital advertising. At the same time, shares of cloud infrastructure specialists including CoreWeave and Nebius fell sharply as investors weighed the arrival of another heavyweight competitor.

From Social Media Giant to Cloud Provider

The move would represent one of the biggest strategic shifts in Meta’s history.

Rather than using its enormous AI infrastructure solely to power its own products, the company plans to rent excess computing capacity to outside developers and enterprises.

The service could allow customers to access Meta’s AI models as well as raw graphics processing power, in a model similar to how Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud rent computing resources to businesses around the world.

At Meta’s shareholder meeting in May, CEO Mark Zuckerberg hinted that such a move was already under consideration.

He revealed that companies were approaching Meta almost every week asking whether they could buy access to its computing infrastructure or AI models, adding that commercial cloud services were “definitely on the table.”

That comment now appears to have been more than a passing remark.

Why Meta Is Doing This Now

Meta is expected to spend as much as $145 billion on AI infrastructure this year alone, making it one of the world’s biggest investors in data centres, networking equipment and AI chips. Across Big Tech, annual AI infrastructure spending is projected to exceed $700 billion.

Those investments have made some investors nervous.

Building massive AI clusters is expensive, and for months Wall Street has questioned whether companies like Meta would ever generate enough revenue to justify the enormous capital expenditure.

Launching a cloud business offers a straightforward answer.

Instead of leaving spare AI infrastructure idle, Meta can rent it to developers, startups and enterprises, creating an additional revenue stream while improving utilisation of the hardware it has already purchased.

In other words, Meta isn’t reducing its AI ambitions.

It’s looking for ways to make those ambitions pay for themselves.

If Meta follows through, it will enter one of the most competitive technology markets in the world.

Amazon Web Services remains the global cloud leader, followed by Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud.

These businesses have become some of the most profitable operations inside their respective parent companies, helping to finance everything from artificial intelligence research to consumer products.

Meta now appears to want a seat at that table. Rather than competing only in AI models, it could soon compete in the infrastructure that powers them.

That would also put pressure on newer “AI cloud” companies such as CoreWeave and Nebius, which have built their businesses around renting specialised AI computing capacity. Investors immediately recognised the potential threat, sending both companies’ shares lower following the reports.

Analysts have generally welcomed the development. For months, investors worried that Meta’s aggressive AI spending would weigh on profits without generating meaningful new revenue.

A cloud business changes that narrative. Instead of viewing Meta’s infrastructure as a cost centre, investors can begin seeing it as another business capable of generating recurring income.

Some analysts estimate that Meta’s data centres currently operate below full capacity, meaning the company could potentially generate additional revenue without immediately building significantly more infrastructure.

That prospect helps explain why the market reacted so positively.

The most interesting aspect of this story may be what it says about Meta’s future.

The company that once depended almost entirely on advertising is steadily diversifying.

Today it builds AI chips. It develops large language models. It manufactures smart glasses. It invests heavily in virtual and augmented reality.

And now it appears ready to enter cloud computing. That means Meta’s future competitors may no longer be limited to TikTok, Snap or YouTube.

Increasingly, they include Amazon, Microsoft and Google.

The cloud computing market has long been dominated by three companies.

Meta now looks ready to challenge that status quo. If the company succeeds, this won’t simply be another AI initiative.

It will represent one of the biggest strategic transformations in Meta’s history from a company that consumes cloud-scale infrastructure to one that sells it. And if Wall Street’s reaction is any indication, investors believe that transformation could become one of Meta’s most valuable businesses yet.

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Tags: cloudcloud computingmetasocial media
Paul Balo

Paul Balo

Paul Balo is the founder of TechBooky and a highly skilled wireless communications professional with a strong background in cloud computing, offering extensive experience in designing, implementing, and managing wireless communication systems.

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