The latest round of tech earnings has revealed staggering new spending figures on artificial intelligence (AI), with Alphabet, Meta, and Microsoft together committing well over $200 billion to AI development in 2025. Investors reacted nervously, sending stocks and crypto into a brief selloff amid growing fears of an AI bubble.
Good to Know
According to quarterly earnings reports released Wednesday, Alphabet and Meta plan to invest $93 billion and $72 billion, respectively, into artificial intelligence initiatives this year. Meanwhile, Microsoft has already poured $35 billion into AI during a single quarter—underscoring the scale and pace of tech’s commitment to the sector.
Executives say the spending is necessary to stay competitive as AI reshapes everything from search to social media and cloud computing. But for Wall Street, the massive figures are beginning to raise alarms about overheated valuations and unrealistic growth expectations.
Thursday trading reflected those concerns. The Nasdaq fell nearly 300 points, the S&P 500 dropped 44 points, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average remained mostly flat. The volatility spilled over into crypto, with Bitcoin falling about 3% in 24 hours before stabilizing near $109,879, according to CoinMarketCap data.
Despite market jitters, CEOs defended their AI investment strategies. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg told investors, “We want to make sure that we’re not underinvesting.” Meta shares, however, fell 11.63% during Thursday’s session.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella struck a similar tone, saying, “AI is driving real world impact. It’s why we continue to increase our investments in AI across both capital and talent to meet the massive opportunity ahead.” Microsoft’s stock was down 3.42% at the time.
In contrast, Alphabet shares gained 3.21%, as analysts praised the company’s ability to turn AI risks into advantages—especially in its search business. JPMorgan noted that Google’s adaptation to AI-enhanced search results may transform what was once seen as a threat into a long-term growth opportunity.
Market concern centers around whether the current pace of AI investment is sustainable. Experts estimate that total global AI spending in 2025 could reach $1.5 trillion, a scale some analysts fear mirrors the exuberance of past tech bubbles.
Bill Gates, speaking on CNBC, acknowledged the uncertainty:
“There are a ton of these investments that will be dead ends. AI is the biggest technical thing ever in my lifetime… but you have a frenzy.”
Bitcoin mirrored equity market moves, briefly tumbling to $106,398 before recovering to $109,879, marking a modest 0.14% daily decline and 1.17% weekly drop. The dip followed optimism earlier in the week after a U.S. rate cut and a positive trade meeting between President Trump and China’s Xi Jinping, both of which had buoyed risk assets before the AI-related selloff.
Firms like Alphabet, Meta, and Microsoft view AI as central to their future growth in search, advertising, and cloud services.
Heavy AI spending triggered investor fears of an overheated market, dragging down tech stocks and Bitcoin prices.
Alphabet rose over 3%, while Meta and Microsoft dropped sharply after their earnings calls.
Analysts project global AI spending could approach $1.5 trillion by the end of the year.
Yes. Bitcoin fell about 3% as investors reduced exposure to risk assets following the selloff.