Alphabet (GOOGL) closed Wednesday at $358.68, down 0.76%, after the company raised the size of its equity offering to $84.75 billion — up from the $80 billion figure announced Monday.
The raise is one of the largest equity financings ever tied to AI development. Goldman Sachs International co-CEO Anthony Gutman told CNBC it puts markets in “unprecedented territory.”
“Let’s start by saying this is unprecedented territory, so we all enter it with a degree of humility and caution,” Gutman said in an exclusive interview Wednesday on CNBC’s Europe Early Edition.
The stock dropped as investors reacted to dilution concerns. The offering increases the total number of outstanding stock, which can weigh on existing holders if future returns don’t keep pace.
Alphabet said the capital will fund AI compute infrastructure to meet what it described as “unprecedented customer demand.” The Gemini app is nearing 900 million monthly users.
A $10 billion slice of the offering was placed privately with Berkshire Hathaway, now run by Greg Abel following Warren Buffett’s retirement. Berkshire serves as an anchor investor in the deal.
Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley are acting as joint book-running managers on the underwritten portion. Goldman is also the placement agent for the private placement.
Gutman said investor appetite for large equity issuances remains strong. As a percentage of total equity market cap, the offering looks “very manageable,” he said.
“The Alphabet issuance yesterday augurs well for the pipeline. That was just a record level of issuance on any level,” he added.
The broader market was mixed on Wednesday. The S&P 500 slipped 0.74% to 7,553.68. The Nasdaq fell 0.89% to close at 26,854.
Among peers, Meta closed up 4.24% at $622.98. Microsoft closed down 3.17% at $427.34.
Alphabet’s raise comes as 2026 is shaping up to be a record year for capital markets activity.
SpaceX’s IPO, expected June 12, is targeting a valuation of $1.75 trillion on the Nasdaq — potentially the largest IPO in history.
OpenAI and Anthropic have also announced plans to go public later this year.
Gutman called these “exceptional companies” and said they should be able to raise capital if they navigate the process appropriately.
Alphabet’s stock has grown 14,202% since its 2004 IPO. The company’s market cap currently sits at $4.3 trillion.
Day’s trading range for GOOGL on Wednesday was $358.10 to $366.39 on volume of approximately 2 million, well below its 28.9 million average daily volume.
Upcoming earnings results and capital expenditure guidance will be the next key datapoints investors look to for clarity on returns from the AI infrastructure buildout.
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