Following a wave of earnings from Meta Platforms Inc. (NASDAQ:META), Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), Microsoft Corp. (NASDAQ:MSFT), and Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOG) (NASDAQ:GOOGL), the hyperscalers revealed that a historic infrastructure build-out is not a speculative bubble, but a calculated expansion funded by tens of billions in realized, compounding AI revenue.
Daniel Newman expressed that the artificial intelligence (AI) deceleration narrative is officially dead.
The Bull Thesis Validated
For months, skeptical analysts and “bubble bears” have questioned whether the massive capital expenditures deployed by the world’s largest tech companies would ever yield a proportional return on investment. The latest earnings reports delivered a resounding answer.
“The bull thesis just got validated. In a single afternoon,” Newman, who is CEO of the Futurum Group, wrote in a post on X. “The ‘AI capex is speculative’ narrative is dead. The ‘where’s the AI revenue’ narrative is dead. This was the prove-it quarter. They proved it.”
The numbers bear this out. According to J.P. Morgan, the top four U.S. hyperscalers are on track to collectively drive a "significant increase of more than +$200 bn of additional data center capex in 2026."
Alphabet CFO Anat Ashkenazi justified the raised guidance by pointing to “unprecedented internal and external demand for AI compute resources,” a sentiment echoed across the board.
As Wall Street digests the sheer scale of the revenue being generated, the overarching message from the recent earnings is clear: the AI boom is tethered to reality. As Newman aptly summarized, “Sorry bubble bears. This isn’t 1999. Real customers. Real revenue. Real cycle.”
Show Me The Money: Billions In Realized Run Rates
The defining takeaway from this earnings season is that AI is no longer just an infrastructure story; it is a massive software and services business. Big Tech has successfully transitioned from the “build” phase to intense monetization.
The realized financial metrics are staggering:
- Microsoft’s Total AI Business: Hit a $37 billion annualized revenue run rate (ARR), up a massive 123% year-over-year. Beyond the core platform, Microsoft’s LinkedIn agentic AI products have already surpassed a $450 million ARR amid rapid enterprise adoption. Microsoft 365 Copilot paid seats also surpassed 20 million.
- Amazon’s AWS AI Services: Reached an ARR of over $15 billion. Amazon’s custom silicon chips business alone is running at a $20 billion ARR, growing nearly 40% quarter-over-quarter.
- Meta’s AI-Powered Ad Suites: The company’s Value Optimization Suite, heavily powered by AI, surpassed a $20 billion revenue run rate, more than doubling in the past year. Partnership Ads (driven by AI discovery) also doubled to a $10 billion ARR.
- Alphabet’s Google Cloud: Revenue skyrocketed 63% to $20 billion, explicitly propelled by generative AI. Revenue from products built on its GenAI models grew nearly 800% year-over-year.
| Company | Key AI Segment / Product | Realized Financial Metric | Growth & Momentum |
| Microsoft | Total AI Business | $37 Billion ARR | +123% YoY |
| Microsoft | LinkedIn Agentic AI Products | $450 Million ARR | Rapid enterprise adoption |
| Amazon | AWS AI Services | $15 Billion+ ARR | Bedrock spend up 170% QoQ |
| Amazon | Custom Silicon (Chips) | $20 Billion ARR | +40% QoQ |
| Meta | Value Optimization Suite (AI Ads) | $20 Billion ARR | >100% YoY |
| Meta | Partnership Ads (AI Discovery) | $10 Billion ARR | >100% YoY |
| Alphabet | Cloud GenAI Models | Not explicitly disaggregated | Segment grew ~800% YoY |
Capex Underwritten By Hard Commitments, Not Optimism
While the staggering $725 billion in projected 2026 capital expenditures, according to Yahoo Finance, might look like a gamble from the outside, the tech giants proved these investments are heavily derisked by signed, long-term customer commitments.
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy highlighted that the company’s backlog explicitly requires this capacity. Amazon has already locked in over $225 billion in revenue commitments for its custom Trainium AI chips, alongside a total AWS backlog of $364 billion, which doesn’t even include a recent $100 billion deal with Anthropic.
“We have high confidence this will be monetized well, as we already have customer commitments for a substantial portion of it,” Jassy explained.
Similarly, Alphabet reported that its cloud backlog nearly doubled sequentially to $462 billion, heavily driven by enterprise AI offerings and newly introduced TPU hardware agreements.
The Era Of Agentic Computing
Looking ahead, management teams across all four companies signaled that the next growth phase will be driven by autonomous, “agentic” AI systems that execute multi-step tasks rather than just answering questions.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella highlighted how deeply embedded these tools have become for enterprises, noting that AI is compressing workflows, improving revenue, and decreasing costs. “We are at the beginning of one of the most consequential platform shifts that will change the entire tech stack as agents proliferate and become the dominant workload,” Nadella stated.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg emphasized that the focus is shifting toward AI that actively completes goals for consumers and businesses. “I think that AI is going to amplify people’s ability to do what they want,” Zuckerberg stated, adding that Meta is building both personal and business agents to “work day and night to help you achieve them.”
Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.
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