All Content from Business Insider 10月30日 08:43
科技巨头持续加码AI投资,2026年支出将更高
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谷歌、Meta和微软近期公布了强劲的财报,并均表示将持续加大在人工智能(AI)领域的投资。这三家公司本季度在AI基础设施上的支出均有所增加,并预警2026年的相关成本将进一步攀升。尽管市场对AI泡沫的担忧存在,但这些科技巨头正通过其AI产品和服务产生可观的收入,以支撑其巨额投资。分析师认为,虽然存在泡沫迹象,但主要科技公司因拥有大量客户而风险相对较低,真正的挑战可能在于AI生态系统中的其他参与者。

🚀 **AI投资力度不减,支出持续攀升**:谷歌、Meta和微软在最新季度财报中均披露了对AI基础设施的持续高额投入。谷歌预计2024年资本支出在910亿至930亿美元之间,高于此前预期;微软本季度资本支出达349亿美元,并计划在2026年增加对GPU和CPU的支出;Meta也上调了2025年的资本支出指引,并预计2026年AI支出将进一步增长,主要受基础设施成本驱动。

📈 **AI驱动营收增长,支撑巨额投资**:尽管AI投资巨大,但这些科技巨头正通过其AI产品和服务实现显著的营收增长。谷歌报告了创纪录的1023亿美元季度收入,微软营收增长18%至近780亿美元,Meta营收也超出预期达到512亿美元。这表明AI的商业化进程正在推进,为持续的巨额投资提供了支撑,并可能帮助它们未来收回投资。

⚖️ **AI泡沫担忧与现实:机遇与风险并存**:部分分析师对AI投资热潮是否会形成泡沫表示担忧,指出存在如公司为投机性投资大举借贷等“泡沫化”迹象。然而,也有观点认为,这些大型科技公司代表着真实的市场需求,其对芯片和数据中心的购买是健康的。即使存在泡沫,其破裂的风险主要集中在下游的AI生态系统参与者,而非拥有广泛客户群和内部应用的大型科技公司。

Talk of an AI bubble isn't slowing down Big Tech. Google, Meta, and Microsoft are spending more than ever to build the backbone of the AI boom.

All three reported earnings on Wednesday, and all three told investors they'll spend even more on the data centers and chips at the heart of their massive AI bets — raising guidance and saying 2026 will bring even higher spending than 2025.

Google said it now expects to spend between $91 billion and $93 billion this year on capital expenditures. That's an increase from the $85 billion figure it gave to analysts and investors in July, which was itself an increase over the guidance it gave in April.

"We are investing to meet customer demand and capitalize on the growing opportunities across the company," CEO Sundar Pichai said in the company's earnings release. Google reported a record $102.3 billion in revenue for the quarter.

Microsoft said it spent $34.9 billion in capital expenditures in the quarter, up from $24.2 billion in the previous quarter, as "demand again exceeded supply" for its cloud computing capacity. Amy Hood, the company's CFO, told investors it will spend more in 2026 than it spent in 2025, "increasing our spend on GPUs and CPUs." Its revenue was up 18% to nearly $78 billion.

Meta updated its 2025 capex guidance to $70 to $72 billion, up from its previous guidance of $66 billion to $72 billion, and CFO Susan Li said 2026 will bring even more AI spending, "with growth primarily driven by infrastructure costs." It reported revenue for the quarter of $51.2 billion, beating Wall Street's estimates of $49.5 billion.

With Big Tech collectively spending hundreds of billions of dollars on AI infrastructure, analysts and investors have begun sounding the alarm about an AI bubble.

The earnings results may calm some of those fears, proving that Big Tech is generating significant revenue from their AI products and services, making it possible that they might someday be able to recoup their investments.

Gil Luria, an equity analyst at DA Davidson, takes the middle view on whether a bubble is forming. "These companies represent real demand," he said. "So if they are buying more chips and building more data centers, that's healthy."

"We are also seeing elements that are bubbalicious," he said. Companies borrowing tens of billions of dollars for speculative investment, and circular spending, such as Nvidia investing in cloud computing provider CoreWeave, is worrying. "That's unhealthy behavior."

"Both things are happening," he said. "It depends on what side of the elephant you are looking at."

Coming into this quarter, Business Insider estimated these three companies, along with Amazon, would spend $320 billion on capex in 2025, primarily for AI infrastructure. That's more than the GDP of Finland and just shy of the total revenue ExxonMobil earned in 2024 — and it's now destined to be even more with the recently announced spending.

On Tuesday, the CEO of chipmaker Nvidia, Jensen Huang, provided a preview of the companies' capex spend when he said his company had $500 billion in orders for the chips that power artificial intelligence.

Jacob Sonnenberg, a portfolio manager at Denver-based Irving Investors, said Wednesday's results were in line with that announcement.

"The capex spending trends tonight were confirmatory to what Jensen said," he said. "People expected big numbers and they got big numbers."

Even if it's not a bubble, the spending on AI can't continue indefinitely, said Sonnenberg. It leaves investors struggling to predict when a slowdown will come. Earlier this month, Apptopia, which measures app usage, reported that OpenAI's active users had started to flatten.

Luria says even if there is a bubble, the pain when it pops likely won't be felt by Big Tech, which have millions of customers and can use compute capacity regardless. It will be felt by other companies downstream.

"The problem is CoreWeave, Oracle, and those companies," he said. "If they get stuck with this capacity, they won't have anything to do with it. They don't have customers, they don't have an internal use of this. That's where the problems will be."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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