Alphabet returned to the debt markets on Tuesday, launching a euro bond sale of at least €3 billion ($3.5 billion) spread across six tranches. GOOGL stock was down 0.93% on the day.
Alphabet Inc., GOOGL
The offering comes just months after the Google parent raised nearly $32 billion in February across dollar, sterling and Swiss franc markets — its biggest-ever US dollar bond sale, which alone pulled in $20 billion.
That February deal attracted peak orders of $103 billion, well above the $15 billion initially targeted. It also included a rare 100-year bond — the first from a tech company since Motorola issued one during the dot-com era in the late 1990s.
Tuesday’s euro deal includes a note maturing in 2063 as its longest tranche, with initial price talk in the 205 basis points area above midswaps.
Proceeds will be used for general corporate purposes, which may include repaying existing debt.
Last week, Alphabet said it plans capital expenditures of up to $190 billion this year, with data centers at the center of that investment.
Alphabet is not alone. Meta, Microsoft and Amazon are together expected to spend as much as $725 billion on AI data center equipment and related capital in 2025 — up from earlier projections.
Meta priced its own $25 billion bond deal on April 30, though conditions were tougher. Nearly all six tranches priced at higher risk premiums than Meta’s October sale, and peak orders were lower, pointing to some investor caution.
Around $300 billion in AI-related debt has already been sold across the sector, and bankers are noting signs of fatigue. Some recent hyperscaler deals have required higher compensation to attract buyers.
Ian Horn, portfolio manager at Muzinich & Co, said these companies are becoming a bigger part of the bond market, much like they did in equities.
Alphabet’s euro deal is being arranged by Barclays, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank and HSBC, and was expected to price later on Tuesday.
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