DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

The $665 billion question: Will Big Tech’s AI gamble pay off?

April 30, 2026
in News
The $665 billion question: Will Big Tech’s AI gamble pay off?
  • In today’s CEO Daily: Diane Brady crunches the numbers from yesterday’s tech earnings bonanza.
  • The big leadership story: Starbucks’ turnaround is starting to take hold.
  • The markets: Down as oil hits a four-year high.
  • Plus: All the news and watercooler chat from Fortune.

Good morning. And you thought the dollar figures being tossed around by the big banks this quarter were impressive? Prepare to be blown away by the budgets of Big Tech. Alphabet, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft all reported earnings yesterday, collectively estimating they will invest up to $665 billion in AI this year, almost 75% more than the $381 billion they spent in 2025. Some takeaways:

Spending is still surging. Banks profited nicely this quarter from investors trading like frenzied night-clubbers wondering if the party’s about to end. Now it’s the tech bros that are flashing Benjamins. (Fun fact: it would take a 413-mile stack of $100 bills to fund that $665-billion capital expenditure budget—according to my agent.) And the projected return on that investment? Good question. My colleague Shawn Tully points out that the expensive hardware fueling AI goes obsolete at lightning speed. OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar reportedly wants more discipline over spending at her company, which is careening towards a trillion-dollar valuation with nary a penny of profit in sight.

Cloud is king. Amazon traded higher yesterday, thanks to solid cloud demand. You know what else a strong public cloud business does? It gives you a way to resell excess computing capacity if, say, AI demand softens. That may be one reason why Meta stock fell yesterday. (It signed a $10 billion cloud deal with Google last year, and reported that “internet disruptions in Iran” curbed growth.) Alphabet’s profits were up by 81%, in part due to the fastest rate of cloud revenue growth since 2020. At Microsoft, Azure cloud growth was 40%.

Hope springs eternal. Or maybe there will be blood. Am I mixing my metaphors? Proof of a human in the loop. The volume of spending and revenue from these folks is staggering. So, too, could be the potential. Investors largely shrugged, perhaps because they’ve already invested a lot of their capital and their hopes in these folks. Oh, and there was a Fed meeting yesterday, not to mention higher oil prices, and other signs that AI alone is not the magic elixir to growth. Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at [email protected]

The post The $665 billion question: Will Big Tech’s AI gamble pay off? appeared first on Fortune.

Palantir Is Making a French Chore Coat. Yes, That Palantir.
News

Palantir Is Making a French Chore Coat. Yes, That Palantir.

by New York Times
April 30, 2026

Palantir, the data analysis and technology firm, is many things to many people. It’s a major military contractor, and its ...

Read more
News

The global economy has a month—eight weeks at most—to avoid a recession, warns top economist

April 30, 2026
News

Biden admin ‘zealously’ probed ‘traditional’ Christians — even keeping tabs on priests: DOJ report

April 30, 2026
News

Michaela Jaé Rodriguez’s Necklace Gives Her Peace

April 30, 2026
News

Resurrecting a discredited theory on COVID’s origin, DOJ indicts an ex-Fauci aide over old emails

April 30, 2026
Lost and Found in the Subway: Dentures Galore

Lost and Found in the Subway: Dentures Galore

April 30, 2026
Past Met Gala hosts, co-chairs: A list of every celebrity enlisted by Anna Wintour since 1995

Past Met Gala hosts, co-chairs: A list of every celebrity enlisted by Anna Wintour since 1995

April 30, 2026
‘Wowsabout’ Looks to Nature, and Jim Henson, in Hopes of Inspiring Awe

‘Wowsabout’ Looks to Nature, and Jim Henson, in Hopes of Inspiring Awe

April 30, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026