Quarterly Outlook
Macro outlook: Trump 2.0: Can the US have its cake and eat it, too?
John J. Hardy
Global Head of Trader Strategy
Global Head of Investment Strategy
Despite the revenue miss, net income surged 28% highlighting Alphabet’s profitability.
Alphabet’s cloud division, a key growth area, saw revenue rise 30% to USD 11.96 billion – which is strong, but slower than the 35% growth in the previous quarter and short of analysts’ forecasts. CFO Anat Ashkenazi pointed to capacity constraints, meaning demand outpaced Alphabet’s ability to scale.
What might also have rattled investors is Alphabet’s massive USD 75 billion capital expenditure (CapEx) plan for 2025, primarily for data centers and AI infrastructure. This represents a 42% increase from 2024 and far exceeds Wall Street’s estimates. CEO Sundar Pichai defended the spending, emphasizing that AI efficiency is improving and the investments are essential to stay ahead.
However, this didn’t reassure markets. Alphabet shares fell 9% in after-hours trading, erasing nearly USD 200 billion in market value, marking one of its worst trading days in a decade.
Alphabet is doubling down on AI, but the competitive landscape is heating up.
Pichai acknowledged DeepSeek’s efficiency, calling them a “tremendous team,” but insisted that Google’s AI models remain highly competitive.
Opportunities:
Risks:
Alphabet’s advertising empire remains rock-solid, and its push into AI is ambitious. However, slowing cloud growth and aggressive AI spending have raised legitimate investor concerns, and for now, the company needs to prove that its massive investments will pay off.