Alphabet committed to spend $75bn on data centre capacity in 2025
Cost of importing hardware might climb but customer demand continued to necessitate more investment, says Google official
LAS VEGAS: Google's parent company Alphabet has said it was commitment to spending around $75 billion this year to build out data centre capacity despite turmoil over US tariffs and sought to reassure investors that its AI plans were yielding good returns.
Investors are fretting about the massive capital costs of AI projects, especially as uncertainty surrounding US President Donald Trump's tariffs roil markets and clouds the economic outlook.
Asked about the potential for US tariffs to raise the cost of building data centres, Sachin Gupta, vice president and general manager for Google Cloud's infrastructure unit, said the cost of importing hardware might climb but customer demand continued to necessitate the increased investment.
"We're all processing what's happening with tariffs," he told Reuters.
Trump on Wednesday said he would temporarily lower the hefty duties he had just imposed on dozens of countries, while further ramping up tariff pressure on China. Alphabet's shares closed nearly 10% higher, part of the $1.5 trillion gains in market value for the "Magnificent Seven" tech stocks.
A Microsoft executive this week in a LinkedIn post also re-emphasised the company's plans to spend more than $80 billion on AI infrastructure in 2025.
Meta Platforms has said it would spend as much as $65 billion.
AI represents one of two key areas, alongside cybersecurity, where enterprises have stayed the course on investments despite macroeconomic uncertainty, said Chiraj Mehta, principal analyst at Constellation Research.
"Early success from customers who have chosen Google Cloud as their preferred AI platform is reinforcing the case for continued aggressive investment," he said.
Customers including TurboTax maker Intuit pizza maker Papa John's and Verizon spoke at the conference about how AI was helping their businesses.
Intuit was "doubling down" on plans to integrate AI into its financial services software, its chief data officer Ashok Srivastava said.
Kevin Vasconi, Papa John's chief digital officer, said he didn't see any slowdown in the firm's AI spending, adding "I can get a better return on an AI-based project than I can with any other project right now."
Verizon said earlier this week that an AI assistant for the company's customer service representatives built using Google models had cut down on call times and freed them up to sell products to customers, leading to a surge in sales.
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