Alphabet to tap international bond markets again as AI spending surges
Alphabet is tapping European debt markets again as its AI spending ramps up.
The Google parent is selling at least €3 billion ($3.5 billion) in bonds across six tranches, according to Bloomberg. The filing says that it’s for “general corporate purposes,” and the timing aligns with its plans to spend up to $190 billion this year on data centers and other AI infrastructure. In a separate filing released today, Alphabet also said it’s issuing Canadian dollar-denominated bonds, colloquially referred to as a “maple bonds,” but no values were available.
These are the latest in a broader funding push as the company increases its already high capex expectations. Earlier this year, Alphabet raised about $20 billion in a heavily oversubscribed US bond sale and also tapped sterling and Swiss franc markets as part of a roughly $32 billion deal.
These are the latest in a broader funding push as the company increases its already high capex expectations. Earlier this year, Alphabet raised about $20 billion in a heavily oversubscribed US bond sale and also tapped sterling and Swiss franc markets as part of a roughly $32 billion deal.