North American Tech Giants Pour $725 Billion into AI, Driving Free Cash Flow to Decade Low

Deep News
05/08

Major technology giants' record $725 billion investment strategy in artificial intelligence is beginning to strain the financial resources of leading US companies, causing their available cash flow this year to fall to the lowest level in the past decade. According to Wall Street projections, the combined free cash flow of four hyperscale tech giants—Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Meta—is expected to drop to approximately $4 billion in the third quarter, significantly lower than the average quarterly figure of $45 billion since the COVID-19 pandemic six years ago.

Data compiled by analytics firm Visible Alpha, based on analyst estimates, indicates that the annual free cash flow of these four tech giants may hit its lowest level since 2014, a year when their revenue was only about one-seventh of what it is today. This shift represents a stark contrast: these companies, once lean-asset, high-cash-flow profit engines, are rapidly transforming into some of the world's largest investors in physical infrastructure.

Justin Post, an internet analyst at Bank of America, stated, "This is the largest industry-wide capital expenditure cycle in the history of the tech sector, with each company viewing it as a once-in-a-generation opportunity." The free cash flow metric is closely watched by the market as it measures the cash remaining after covering operational costs and capital expenditures, which can be used to repay debt or return value to shareholders.

Analysts anticipate that Amazon will spend more cash this year than it generates from operations. Meta is expected to enter a cash-burning phase in the second half of the year, while Microsoft will experience at least one quarter of net cash outflow. Although Alphabet's free cash flow for the full year is projected to remain positive, it will decline to its lowest level in over a decade.

During the initial years of the AI boom, these tech giants largely funded their investments through their own revenue. Now, they face trade-offs typical of capital-intensive industries: reducing staff, cutting shareholder returns, or taking on debt to support infrastructure expansion. Post noted that these companies began this capital expenditure cycle with strong balance sheets, so taking on moderate debt during this period of pressured short-term free cash flow involves relatively manageable risks.

Analysts expect the cash generation capacity of these firms to recover next year as AI investments gradually translate into revenue. He added, "They prefer prioritizing infrastructure build-out over allocating capital for short-term returns to shareholders. Right now, everyone is racing to keep up with market demand."

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