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Big Tech

City PM Published Jun 17, 2026 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Total capital expenditure by Google, Meta, Amazon and Microsoft is expected to reach $750bn (£560bn) this year, about half of the UK government's annual spending.
750 bn USD · capex560 bn GBP · capex50 % · capex relative to UK gov spending
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Since 2023 the average share price across the four firms has doubled.
2 x · share price
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Average quarterly capital expenditure budgets of the four firms have roughly quadrupled over the same period.
4 x · quarterly capex budgets
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Alphabet has raised $85bn in debt over the past year.
85 bn USD · debt raised
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Alphabet plans to raise $80bn in equity over the coming months.
80 bn USD · equity raised
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Data centre servers last between three and six years before replacement.
3 years · server lifespan6 years · server lifespan
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The kit inside AI data centres accounts for up to two-thirds of the build cost.
66.7 % · kit cost relative to build cost
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Annual depreciation of property and equipment across the four firms has almost doubled over the past two years to $116bn.
116 bn USD · depreciationabout 2 x · depreciation
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Amazon cut the expected useful life of its data centre assets from six years to five.
5 years · useful life6 years · useful life
Amazon
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The eye-watering capital expenditure plans of Big Tech has been one of the year’s biggest stories. 

Google, Meta, Amazon and Microsoft have all splurged to secure a podium spot in the race to build out the infrastructure which will run the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution.

Total capex by these four firms is expected to reach $750bn (£560bn) this year, around half the annual spending of the entire UK government. It is much higher than this high-tech quartet has budgeted for before. And it is expected to be even higher next year.

Shareholders are on board with the plan, up to a point.

Since 2023 the average share price across the four firms has doubled. But that hasn’t kept pace with the average quarterly capex budgets, which have roughly quadrupled over the same period.

These trillion-dollar businesses can’t be too far away from hitting a ceiling on growing their computing power. 

Firstly, because of physical constraints – things like the supply of chips and the availability of power and water infrastructure – with the latter beginning to come under genuine constraint in some parts of the developed world.

Secondly, because of the sheer build cost, given most AI projects are far from hitting profitability, and there isn’t enough cashflow elsewhere to fill the hole.

Alphabet, Google’s parent company, has raised $85bn on its own in debt over the past year. It plans to raise another $80bn in equity over the coming months – an unprecedented fundraise and not something it can keep doing forever.

Most of the focus has been on data centre build-out. But there is also another major factor, and one in danger of being overlooked: maintenance. The cost of keeping AI running once the infrastructure is in place will be vital. 

Data centre servers tend to last in the region of three to six years before they have to be replaced.  Given the speed of innovation and intensity of compute needed for AI, you can expect that to skew towards the lower end of the range for the hyperscalers. 

The kit inside AI data centres accounts for as much as two-thirds of the build cost. Add replacement costs on to the capex projections over the next few years and things start to look scarily expensive.

Annual depreciation of property and equipment across the four firms has almost doubled over the past two years to $116bn.  You can expect that to accelerate given how much equipment has been added to their balance sheets over the past 18 months.

Last year, Amazon cut the expected useful life of its data centre assets from six years to five, a move which it said was “due to the increased pace of technology development, particularly in the area of artificial intelligence and machine learning.” 

So far Meta, Microsoft and Alphabet have yet to follow suit, sticking with six years, but it seems like only a matter of time before they capitulate and cut this back, pushing up depreciation costs even further.

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