Alphabet’s second‑quarter earnings report has landed, and the headline numbers leave little doubt that Google’s AI push is filling the coffers. Revenue climbed 14 percent year‑on‑year to $96.4 billion, easily topping Wall Street’s consensus and marking an acceleration from last quarter’s 12 percent clip. Net income jumped to $28.2 billion, or $2.31 a share, up 19 percent and well ahead of the $2.18 many analysts pencilled in. Google Search still pays the bulk of the bills—advertising rose 12 percent to $54.2 billion—but the real star was Google Cloud, whose revenue surged 32 percent to $13.6 billion, the unit’s fastest pace since early 2023. Sundar Pichai credited “a clear shift in enterprise spending toward generative‑AI workloads,” noting that more than 70 percent of gen‑AI unicorns now run at least part of their stack on Google’s TPU or Nvidia H100 clusters.
Investors absorbed two competing story lines. First, Google’s AI bets are working: Cloud has swung from operating losses two years ago to margin expansion that now rivals Microsoft Azure, and the company says every point of cloud share it gains adds a full percentage point to group operating margin. Second, that progress carries a steep price tag. Capital expenditure nearly doubled to $22.4 billion this quarter, and Alphabet lifted its full‑year cap‑ex outlook yet again to “about $85 billion,” up from the $75 billion figure given just three months ago. Chief financial officer Ruth Porat said most of the cash is earmarked for data‑centre builds in Iowa, Texas and The Netherlands as Google readies TPU v6 and “Gemini‑scale” GPU pods. Shares slipped roughly two‑and‑a‑half percent in after‑hours trading as some holders fretted over the spending binge, even though the stock is still up five percent year‑to‑date.
Beyond cloud and ads, YouTube and “subscriptions & other services” grew a solid 15 percent, thanks to the Premium bundle and the NFL Sunday Ticket, and Waymo logged 71 million autonomous miles across five U.S. cities. Pichai wouldn’t disclose Waymo’s revenue but said discussions are under way with UK and Middle‑Eastern regulators about new robotaxi corridors—evidence that Alphabet’s moon‑shot portfolio is inching closer to commercial lift‑off.
Regulatory clouds linger. A U.S. district judge’s April ruling that Google abused dominance in adtech still hangs over the company, and the European Commission is preparing formal charges against Alphabet’s Gemini AI‑overview search product. Pichai argued that AI features such as “AI Overviews” have not cannibalised core ad clicks and are in fact boosting query growth in markets like India and Brazil. Analysts will be watching Q3 closely for proof that the new search experience can grow ads without hand‑cuffing margins.
AI demand is juicing Google Cloud, advertising keeps compounding, and Alphabet is willing to plough nearly a hundred billion dollars into infrastructure to keep the flywheel spinning. If that bet pays off, Wednesday’s cap‑ex sticker shock will look cheap. If it doesn’t, the after‑hours wobble may be a preview of tougher investor questions to come. Either way, Alphabet just reminded the market that the cost of staying in the AI arms race is measured in data centres, not decimals—and it intends to keep spending like the category leader it still is.
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