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Alphabet, the parent company of Google, has just reported an impressive milestone by achieving its first-ever $100 billion revenue quarter. The company’s total revenue surged 16% year-over-year to reach $102.3 billion, while net income jumped 33% to $35 billion. A significant chunk of this growth stems from its cloud division and artificial intelligence initiatives, which are clearly driving the company’s strong financial performance.
Google Cloud revenue, in particular, saw a remarkable 34% year-over-year increase, climbing to over $25.2 billion. This boost is largely attributed to the rising demand for AI-powered services on the Google Cloud Platform (GCP). Sundar Pichai, Alphabet’s CEO, emphasized that the cloud business had another quarter of accelerating growth, with AI revenue playing a key role. Notably, the cloud backlog swelled 46% quarter-over-quarter, hitting $155 billion, signaling robust future revenue streams.
Pichai outlined three main trends fueling cloud demand: first, Alphabet is signing new customers at a faster pace, with GCP customer growth close to 34% year-over-year. Second, the company is locking in bigger deals, having secured more contracts worth over $1 billion through Q3 this year than in the previous two years combined. Third, existing customers are deepening their usage, with over 70% leveraging Google’s AI products. High-profile clients like Banco BV, Best Buy, and FairPrice Group are among those benefiting from these advancements.
Alphabet is unique among cloud providers as it offers its own leading generative AI models, including Gemini, Imagen, Veo, Chirp, and Lyria. Adoption of these models is accelerating quickly. For example, in Q3, revenue generated from products built on these AI models surged over 200% year-over-year. Around 150 Google Cloud customers processed roughly one trillion tokens each over the trailing 12 months using these models, spanning a wide array of applications. WPP, a major advertising firm, has seen campaign efficiency improvements of up to 70%, while Swarovski has boosted email open rates by 17% and accelerated campaign localization by tenfold.
However, this explosive growth comes at a cost. Capital expenditures (CapEx) for the third quarter were $24 billion, predominantly spent on expanding tech infrastructure. This spend was split roughly 60% on servers and 40% on data centers and networking equipment. For the full year, Alphabet now expects CapEx to total between $91 billion and $93 billion, up from an earlier estimate of $85 billion. CFO Anat Ashkenazi warned that spending will rise significantly in 2026 to keep pace with demand. She stressed that investment decisions are rigorously evaluated for potential returns and timeframes, especially in the cloud business where demand currently outstrips supply.
Overall, Alphabet’s quarter was notably strong, underpinned by cloud and AI innovation. This earnings season has also seen reports from Microsoft and Oracle on their cloud platforms, with Amazon AWS’s results anticipated soon. The competitive dynamics in the cloud hyperscaler market remain intense, but Alphabet’s ability to leverage advanced AI models and deepening customer relationships positions it well for continued growth despite the rising infrastructure costs.