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Alphabet's Google announced a $1.5 billion 2026-27 expansion of its Alabama data center campus, funding its own power and infrastructure costs.

Wire

Update: AI Revenue May Jump Fivefold to $200 Billion This Year as Spending Race Intensifies

(Updates to add stock prices in 22nd paragraph.)The world's largest artificial intelligence firms could earn $200 billion in revenue this year, more than five times the $37 billion they brought in last year, according to estimates from Menlo Ventures.The venture capital firm has tracked AI revenue growth from Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Alphabet's Google (GOOG, GOOGL), OpenAI, Anthropic, Cursor and other companies for the past three years.Revenue, which in 2024 was $11.5 billion, is on track to blow previous years' numbers out of the water, Derek Xiao, a principal at Menlo and co-author of the firm's annual AI research report, said in an interview with."We've always actually had a trend of underestimating how these things grow because it's hard to predict an exponential, but I would put it at $200 billion," he said.While that number is an estimate, growth in AI revenue since January "hockey sticked" and is based on new models of AI now being used, he said."Instead of just this call and response chat pattern that we've seen traditionally, you have background agents that can run for minutes or hours at a time, and that unlocks an order of magnitude more of both things that it can do, but also spend on some of these AI tools," Xiao said.The revenue growth is at the heart of an ongoing debate as company spending has raised fears of an AI bubble. Capital expenditures by Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta Platforms Inc. (META) -- collectively known as hyperscalers because they offer massive cloud computing services and global data center infrastructure -- is expected to be around $800 billion this year, with another $1 trillion in 2027, according to the companies and analyst estimates.The investment in new data centers, software and equipment was so large in the first quarter that it accounted for about two-thirds of the growth in US gross domestic product, according to data from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis.While revenue growth has been robust, the capital outlays are still sparking fears that spending has gotten too far ahead of future earnings potential."Most enterprises are yet to generate any returns from their AI spending," James Covello, head of Global Equity Research at Goldman Sachs, said in a note to clients this week."The companies making the models and the hyperscalers building the AI infrastructure are burning through cash and boosting their borrowing. While semiconductor companies are seeing record revenue and profits, the overall dynamic is 'unprecedented and unsustainable,'" Goldman Sachs said in a summary of Covello's report.Covello cited a Massachusetts Institute of Technology study last year that said 95% of AI investment has had no effect on company earnings. While AI tools helped improve individual worker efficiency, "the core barrier to scaling is not infrastructure, regulation, or talent."It is learning," the MIT study said. "Most GenAI systems do not retain feedback, adapt to context, or improve over time."Still, the revenue growth in the AI sector is unlike anything most analysts have seen in other technologies including the advent of the personal computer or the Internet. On the consumer side, AI adoption "has been spectacular," Covello said in his note. He cited a Stanford Institute of Human-Centered AI study that found that 53% of consumers have adopted generative AI tools within three years of the release of ChatGPT."The bull-bear gap on AI is wider than almost anything I've written about," said Philipp Dubach, a strategy consultant and independent researcher who has written widely about AI.He cited reports that showed OpenAI went from $2 billion in annualized run-rate revenue to $24 billion in 24 months and Anthropic growth from $1 billion to $30 billion in 15 months as "unprecedented growth rates." Anthropic declined to comment and OpenAI didn't immediately respond to a request for comment Friday.Yet "the math on capex still doesn't close at any plausible revenue figure I can build up to," he said.Dubach estimates that year-to-date 2026 revenue for AI is about $100 billion shared between Microsoft, Anthropic, OpenAI, Amazon and Google. That figure accounts for double-counting that's common in the industry, he said. Many AI systems are integrated into each other and their services can overlap.The capex spending, however, "is a staggering amount of money chasing returns that haven't fully landed," Dubach said.In the three months through March, Microsoft reported 30% revenue growth in its Intelligent Cloud segment, with sales for its cloud-based computing Azure service up 40%. Google Cloud revenue rose 63% from a year earlier; Amazon Web Services was up 28%.Microsoft and Amazon declined to comment to, while Google didn't respond to a request for comment.Microsoft shares were up 4.3% to $427.16 in late trading, Google was down 1% to $393.23, Meta rose 0.3% to $620.09 and Amazon fell 1.5% to $263.12."The thing is, can these companies grow their revenue fast enough to fund the AI build that's required?" said Bruce Murray, CEO and chief investment officer at the Murray Wealth Group.Murray, who owns all four stocks, said the companies have other business lines to generate the capital to spend on building out their AI infrastructure."It's going to be really difficult to tell who gets over their skis a little too far," he said. As a long-term investor Murray said he has confidence that the AI play will pan out."Meta's maybe the one we'd be the most concerned about, but still, on a relative basis we're still sticking with it," he said. Meta's first-quarter ad revenue rose 33%. The company didn't respond to a request for comment.The Facebook parent "is growing nicely in their advertising business, but it seems to be a bit behind on getting something achievable with AI that's actually going to generate the money," Murray said.One area of AI revenue that has yet to emerge is retail users. A separate Menlo Ventures report from June 2025 found that while 61% of consumers it surveyed had used AI in the past six months, only 3% of users were paying for it. Still, companies including Google and Amazon can earn advertising revenue from those users who aren't yet paying. "My wife uses ChatGPT for everything before she sends it out," but doesn't pay for it, Murray said.As a venture capital firm, Menlo Ventures invests in some of the companies it analyzes such as Anthropic, Wispr Flow, OpenRouter, Numeric and others.Menlo's Xiao said the firm saw very different activity in AI revenue compared with what the MIT report concluded last year."Part of our report was sort of standing in opposition to the MIT report, pointing to the real use cases and the real enterprise dollars that are flowing into the ecosystem and being spent and actually transforming how work is done," Xiao said. "AI looks a lot different from previous waves that we've seen where there has been maybe irrational exuberance."The demand for the tech that's driving the spending may appear "scary," he said."If you contrast that to the build out of the telco boom in the early 2000s, they were laying thousands of miles of fiber that would not be used for years," Xiao said. "There's a difference between this time as opposed to last time, that I think does make it quite exciting, at least from our view. It feels like this time is much more sustainable."Matthew LeisingPrice: $425.98, Change: $+16.55, Percent Change: +4.04%

$AMZN$GOOG$GOOGL$META$MSFT
Equities Fall, Yields Surge Intraday Amid Inflation Concerns; Oil Jumps
US Markets

Equities Fall, Yields Surge Intraday Amid Inflation Concerns; Oil Jumps

US benchmark equity indexes were lower intraday as Treasury yields jumped amid inflation concerns, while oil prices moved higher on the back of renewed Middle East worries.The Nasdaq Composite and the Dow Jones Industrial Average were down 0.8% each at 26,412.7 and 49,658.24, respectively, after midday Friday. The S&P 500 fell 0.7% to 7,448.3. The Nasdaq and S&P 500 hit fresh record highs in the previous session.Barring energy, all sectors were in the red intraday Friday, led by materials' 2.5% drop.US Treasury yields surged, with the 10-year rate up 13.2 basis points at 4.59% and the two-year rate rising 8.7 basis points to 4.08%."The sustained back-up in long-term yields has finally broken the preternatural serenity in equities, which saw the S&P 500 crack the 7,500 level for the first time on Thursday," BMO said in a report Friday. "A series of increasingly problematic US inflation readings for April was capped by a late-week run-up in oil prices to nearly $105, and aggravated by mounting fiscal concerns in some major economies."Recently, official data showed that US producer prices in April rose at the fastest pace in four years, while annual consumer inflation accelerated to the fastest pace in almost three years.West Texas Intermediate crude was up 4.2% at $105.37 a barrel intraday, while Brent climbed 3.4% to $109.28.US President Donald Trump said he is losing patience with Iran, CNBC reported, citing Trump's interview to Fox News that aired late Thursday. "They should make a deal," he said, according to the report.Trump reportedly concluded his two-day visit to Beijing Friday after holding policy discussions with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, on trade, tariffs and technology, among other matters. In a pre-recorded interview with Fox News, Trump reportedly said China has agreed to purchase oil from the US.Beijing hasn't confirmed the energy purchases, according to the report.Trump said he is considering lifting sanctions on Chinese firms buying Iranian oil, CNN reported. "I'm going to make a decision over the next few days. We did talk about that," he reportedly said.In company news, Bill Ackman said his Pershing Square hedge fund has established a new position in Microsoft (MSFT), noting that the technology giant's stock "offers analogous and compelling long-term value at today's valuation."The billionaire investor has sold his long-owned investment in Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL), Reuters reported.Microsoft shares were up 4.4% intraday, the second-biggest gainer on the Dow. Alphabet's class A and C shares fell 0.9% each.In economic news, US industrial production rebounded more than projected in April, buoyed the manufacturing and utilities categories, Federal Reserve data showed."The winners and losers in the latest report are likely to persist over the balance of 2026," Oxford Economics said in a note. "Besides supportive fiscal policy, the (artificial intelligence) buildout will continue to lift production of computers and electronics, while an inventory restocking cycle will support new orders growth for factories."New York manufacturing activity grew at the fastest pace in more than four years this month amid robust new orders, the New York Fed reported.Gold was down 2.6% at $4,564.80 per troy ounce, while silver slid 9.1% to $77.58 per ounce.

Dow JonesNasdaq CompositeS&P 500$GOOG$GOOGL$MSFT
Update: AI Revenue May Jump Fivefold to $200 Billion as Spending Race Intensifies
US Markets

Update: AI Revenue May Jump Fivefold to $200 Billion as Spending Race Intensifies

(Updates to show Anthropic declined to comment in the 16th paragraph.)The world's largest artificial intelligence firms could earn $200 billion in revenue this year, more than five times the $37 billion they brought in last year, according to estimates from Menlo Ventures.The venture capital firm has tracked AI revenue growth from Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Alphabet's Google (GOOG, GOOGL), OpenAI, Anthropic, Cursor and other companies for the past three years.Revenue, which in 2024 was $11.5 billion, is on track to blow previous years' numbers out of the water, Derek Xiao, a principal at Menlo and co-author of the firm's annual AI research report, said in an interview with."We've always actually had a trend of underestimating how these things grow because it's hard to predict an exponential, but I would put it at $200 billion," he said.While that number is an estimate, growth in AI revenue since January "hockey sticked" and is based on new models of AI now being used, he said."Instead of just this call and response chat pattern that we've seen traditionally, you have background agents that can run for minutes or hours at a time, and that unlocks an order of magnitude more of both things that it can do, but also spend on some of these AI tools," Xiao said.The revenue growth is at the heart of an ongoing debate as company spending has raised fears of an AI bubble. Capital expenditures by Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta Platforms Inc. (META) -- collectively known as hyperscalers because they offer massive cloud computing services and global data center infrastructure -- is expected to be around $800 billion this year, with another $1 trillion in 2027, according to the companies and analyst estimates.The investment in new data centers, software and equipment was so large in the first quarter that it accounted for about two-thirds of the growth in US gross domestic product, according to data from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis.While revenue growth has been robust, the capital outlays are still sparking fears that spending has gotten too far ahead of future earnings potential."Most enterprises are yet to generate any returns from their AI spending," James Covello, head of Global Equity Research at Goldman Sachs, said in a note to clients this week."The companies making the models and the hyperscalers building the AI infrastructure are burning through cash and boosting their borrowing. While semiconductor companies are seeing record revenue and profits, the overall dynamic is 'unprecedented and unsustainable,'" Goldman Sachs said in a summary of Covello's report.Covello cited a Massachusetts Institute of Technology study last year that said 95% of AI investment has had no effect on company earnings. While AI tools helped improve individual worker efficiency, "the core barrier to scaling is not infrastructure, regulation, or talent."It is learning," the MIT study said. "Most GenAI systems do not retain feedback, adapt to context, or improve over time."Still, the revenue growth in the AI sector is unlike anything most analysts have seen in other technologies including the advent of the personal computer or the Internet. On the consumer side, AI adoption "has been spectacular," Covello said in his note. He cited a Stanford Institute of Human-Centered AI study that found that 53% of consumers have adopted generative AI tools within three years of the release of ChatGPT."The bull-bear gap on AI is wider than almost anything I've written about," said Philip Dubach, a strategy consultant and independent researcher who has written widely about AI.He cited reports that showed OpenAI went from $2 billion in annualized run-rate revenue to $24 billion in 24 months and Anthropic growth from $1 billion to $30 billion in 15 months as "unprecedented growth rates." Anthropic declined to comment and OpenAI didn't immediately respond to a request for comment Friday.Yet "the math on capex still doesn't close at any plausible revenue figure I can build up to," he said.Dubach estimates that year-to-date 2026 revenue for AI is about $100 billion shared between Microsoft, Anthropic, OpenAI, Amazon and Google. That figure accounts for double-counting that's common in the industry, he said. Many AI systems are integrated into each other and their services can overlap.The capex spending, however, "is a staggering amount of money chasing returns that haven't fully landed," Dubach said.In the three months through March, Microsoft reported 30% revenue growth in its Intelligent Cloud segment, with sales for its cloud-based computing Azure service up 40%. Google Cloud revenue rose 63% from a year earlier; Amazon Web Services was up 28%.Microsoft and Amazon declined to comment to, while Google didn't respond to a request for comment."The thing is, can these companies grow their revenue fast enough to fund the AI build that's required?" said Bruce Murray, CEO and chief investment officer at the Murray Wealth Group.Murray, who owns all four stocks, said the companies have other business lines to generate the capital to spend on building out their AI infrastructure."It's going to be really difficult to tell who gets over their skis a little too far," he said. As a long-term investor Murray said he has confidence that the AI play will pan out."Meta's maybe the one we'd be the most concerned about, but still, on a relative basis we're still sticking with it," he said. Meta's first-quarter ad revenue rose 33%. The company didn't respond to a request for comment.The Facebook parent "is growing nicely in their advertising business, but it seems to be a bit behind on getting something achievable with AI that's actually going to generate the money," Murray said.One area of AI revenue that has yet to emerge is retail users. A separate Menlo Ventures report from June 2025 found that while 61% of consumers it surveyed had used AI in the past six months, only 3% of users were paying for it. Still, companies including Google and Amazon can earn advertising revenue from those users who aren't yet paying. "My wife uses ChatGPT for everything before she sends it out," but doesn't pay for it, Murray said.As a venture capital firm, Menlo Ventures invests in some of the companies it analyzes such as Anthropic, Wispr Flow, OpenRouter, Numeric and others.Menlo's Xiao said the firm saw very different activity in AI revenue compared with what the MIT report concluded last year."Part of our report was sort of standing in opposition to the MIT report, pointing to the real use cases and the real enterprise dollars that are flowing into the ecosystem and being spent and actually transforming how work is done," Xiao said. "AI looks a lot different from previous waves that we've seen where there has been maybe irrational exuberance."The demand for the tech that's driving the spending may appear "scary," he said."If you contrast that to the build out of the telco boom in the early 2000s, they were laying thousands of miles of fiber that would not be used for years," Xiao said. "There's a difference between this time as opposed to last time, that I think does make it quite exciting, at least from our view. It feels like this time is much more sustainable."Matthew LeisingPrice: $426.36, Change: $+16.93, Percent Change: +4.14%

$AMZN$GOOG$GOOGL$META$MSFT
Wire

Update: AI Revenue May Jump Fivefold to $200 Billion This Year as Spending Race Intensifies

(Updates to show Anthropic declined to comment in 16th paragraph.)The world's largest artificial intelligence firms could earn $200 billion in revenue this year, more than five times the $37 billion they brought in last year, according to estimates from Menlo Ventures.The venture capital firm has tracked AI revenue growth from Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Alphabet's Google (GOOG, GOOGL), OpenAI, Anthropic, Cursor and other companies for the past three years.Revenue, which in 2024 was $11.5 billion, is on track to blow previous years' numbers out of the water, Derek Xiao, a principal at Menlo and co-author of the firm's annual AI research report, said in an interview with."We've always actually had a trend of underestimating how these things grow because it's hard to predict an exponential, but I would put it at $200 billion," he said.While that number is an estimate, growth in AI revenue since January "hockey sticked" and is based on new models of AI now being used, he said."Instead of just this call and response chat pattern that we've seen traditionally, you have background agents that can run for minutes or hours at a time, and that unlocks an order of magnitude more of both things that it can do, but also spend on some of these AI tools," Xiao said.The revenue growth is at the heart of an ongoing debate as company spending has raised fears of an AI bubble. Capital expenditures by Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta Platforms Inc. (META) -- collectively known as hyperscalers because they offer massive cloud computing services and global data center infrastructure -- is expected to be around $800 billion this year, with another $1 trillion in 2027, according to the companies and analyst estimates.The investment in new data centers, software and equipment was so large in the first quarter that it accounted for about two-thirds of the growth in US gross domestic product, according to data from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis.While revenue growth has been robust, the capital outlays are still sparking fears that spending has gotten too far ahead of future earnings potential."Most enterprises are yet to generate any returns from their AI spending," James Covello, head of Global Equity Research at Goldman Sachs, said in a note to clients this week."The companies making the models and the hyperscalers building the AI infrastructure are burning through cash and boosting their borrowing. While semiconductor companies are seeing record revenue and profits, the overall dynamic is 'unprecedented and unsustainable,'" Goldman Sachs said in a summary of Covello's report.Covello cited a Massachusetts Institute of Technology study last year that said 95% of AI investment has had no effect on company earnings. While AI tools helped improve individual worker efficiency, "the core barrier to scaling is not infrastructure, regulation, or talent."It is learning," the MIT study said. "Most GenAI systems do not retain feedback, adapt to context, or improve over time."Still, the revenue growth in the AI sector is unlike anything most analysts have seen in other technologies including the advent of the personal computer or the Internet. On the consumer side, AI adoption "has been spectacular," Covello said in his note. He cited a Stanford Institute of Human-Centered AI study that found that 53% of consumers have adopted generative AI tools within three years of the release of ChatGPT."The bull-bear gap on AI is wider than almost anything I've written about," said Philipp Dubach, a strategy consultant and independent researcher who has written widely about AI.He cited reports that showed OpenAI went from $2 billion in annualized run-rate revenue to $24 billion in 24 months and Anthropic growth from $1 billion to $30 billion in 15 months as "unprecedented growth rates." Anthrophic declined to comment and OpenAI didn't immediately respond to a request for comment Friday.Yet "the math on capex still doesn't close at any plausible revenue figure I can build up to," he said.Dubach estimates that year-to-date 2026 revenue for AI is about $100 billion shared between Microsoft, Anthropic, OpenAI, Amazon and Google. That figure accounts for double-counting that's common in the industry, he said. Many AI systems are integrated into each other and their services can overlap.The capex spending, however, "is a staggering amount of money chasing returns that haven't fully landed," Dubach said.In the three months through March, Microsoft reported 30% revenue growth in its Intelligent Cloud segment, with sales for its cloud-based computing Azure service up 40%. Google Cloud revenue rose 63% from a year earlier; Amazon Web Services was up 28%.Microsoft and Amazon declined to comment to, while Google didn't respond to a request for comment."The thing is, can these companies grow their revenue fast enough to fund the AI build that's required?" said Bruce Murray, CEO and chief investment officer at the Murray Wealth Group.Murray, who owns all four stocks, said the companies have other business lines to generate the capital to spend on building out their AI infrastructure."It's going to be really difficult to tell who gets over their skis a little too far," he said. As a long-term investor Murray said he has confidence that the AI play will pan out."Meta's maybe the one we'd be the most concerned about, but still, on a relative basis we're still sticking with it," he said. Meta's first-quarter ad revenue rose 33%. The company didn't respond to a request for comment.The Facebook parent "is growing nicely in their advertising business, but it seems to be a bit behind on getting something achievable with AI that's actually going to generate the money," Murray said.One area of AI revenue that has yet to emerge is retail users. A separate Menlo Ventures report from June 2025 found that while 61% of consumers it surveyed had used AI in the past six months, only 3% of users were paying for it. Still, companies including Google and Amazon can earn advertising revenue from those users who aren't yet paying. "My wife uses ChatGPT for everything before she sends it out," but doesn't pay for it, Murray said.As a venture capital firm, Menlo Ventures invests in some of the companies it analyzes such as Anthropic, Wispr Flow, OpenRouter, Numeric and others.Menlo's Xiao said the firm saw very different activity in AI revenue compared with what the MIT report concluded last year."Part of our report was sort of standing in opposition to the MIT report, pointing to the real use cases and the real enterprise dollars that are flowing into the ecosystem and being spent and actually transforming how work is done," Xiao said. "AI looks a lot different from previous waves that we've seen where there has been maybe irrational exuberance."The demand for the tech that's driving the spending may appear "scary," he said."If you contrast that to the build out of the telco boom in the early 2000s, they were laying thousands of miles of fiber that would not be used for years," Xiao said. "There's a difference between this time as opposed to last time, that I think does make it quite exciting, at least from our view. It feels like this time is much more sustainable."Matthew LeisingPrice: $426.79, Change: $+17.36, Percent Change: +4.24%

$AMZN$GOOG$GOOGL$META$MSFT
Sectors

Sector Update: Tech Stocks Fall in Afternoon Trading

Tech stocks were lower Friday afternoon, with the State Street Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) falling 0.7% and the State Street SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) down 1.6%.The Philadelphia Semiconductor index slumped 2.6%.In sector news, the world's largest AI firms could earn $200 billion in revenue this year, more than five times the $37 billion they brought in last year, according to estimates from Menlo Ventures. The venture capital firm has tracked AI revenue growth from Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Alphabet's Google (GOOGL), OpenAI, Anthropic, Cursor and other companies for the past three years.In corporate news, Nvidia (NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and Intel (INTC) shares declined in Friday trading, while ASML (ASML) and STMicroelectronics (STM) also fell after a US-China summit ended without major semiconductor agreements, Yahoo Finance reported. The pullback came after talks between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping failed to produce significant developments on semiconductor trade issues, despite investor expectations for progress on advanced chip sales to China, the report said. Nvidia shares fell 2.5%, AMD lost 3.5%, Intel declined 5.3%, ASML dropped 4.2%, and STMicroelectronics slumped 3.8%.Bill Ackman said Friday on the social media platform X that his Pershing Square hedge fund has sold Alphabet (GOOGL) shares and established a new position in Microsoft (MSFT). Alphabet shares were down 1%, and Microsoft climbed 4.3%.Xerox (XRX) shares jumped past 9% after alternative investment fund Starteepo Invest acquired 6.6 million shares of the company, representing a 5.05% stake.

$AMD$ASML$GOOGL$INTC$MSFT$NVDA$STM$XRX
Wire

Investor Bill Ackman Says Pershing Hedge Fund Sold Alphabet, Bought Microsoft

Bill Ackman said Friday on the social media platform X that his Pershing Square hedge fund has sold Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) shares and established a new position in Microsoft (MSFT).Pershing began buying Microsoft in February after a notable share price decline following its fiscal Q2 results, acquiring a position at a valuation of 21 times forward earnings, in line with the market multiple and well below Microsoft's trading average over the last few years, Ackman said.Ackman said investors underestimate the resilience of the Microsoft 365 franchise given its embedded role across enterprises and highly attractive price-to-value proposition, according to the X post.Concerns regarding the growth trajectory of Microsoft's Azure cloud business are similarly misplaced, especially after the franchise's exceptional recent performance, he added."We believe that $MSFT offers analogous and compelling long-term value at today's valuation," Ackman said on X.Price: $392.13, Change: $-5.04, Percent Change: -1.27%

$GOOG$GOOGL$MSFT
AI Revenue May Jump Fivefold to $200 Billion as Spending Race Intensifies
US Markets

AI Revenue May Jump Fivefold to $200 Billion as Spending Race Intensifies

The world's largest artificial intelligence firms could earn $200 billion in revenue this year, more than five times the $37 billion they brought in last year, according to estimates from Menlo Ventures.The venture capital firm has tracked AI revenue growth from Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Alphabet's Google (GOOG, GOOGL), OpenAI, Anthropic, Cursor and other companies for the past three years.Revenue, which in 2024 was $11.5 billion, is on track to blow previous years' numbers out of the water, Derek Xiao, a principal at Menlo and co-author of the firm's annual AI research report, said in an interview with."We've always actually had a trend of underestimating how these things grow because it's hard to predict an exponential, but I would put it at $200 billion," he said.While that number is an estimate, growth in AI revenue since January "hockey sticked" and is based on new models of AI now being used, he said."Instead of just this call and response chat pattern that we've seen traditionally, you have background agents that can run for minutes or hours at a time, and that unlocks an order of magnitude more of both things that it can do, but also spend on some of these AI tools," Xiao said.The revenue growth is at the heart of an ongoing debate as company spending has raised fears of an AI bubble. Capital expenditures by Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta Platforms Inc. (META) -- collectively known as hyperscalers because they offer massive cloud computing services and global data center infrastructure -- is expected to be around $800 billion this year, with another $1 trillion in 2027, according to the companies and analyst estimates.The investment in new data centers, software and equipment was so large in the first quarter that it accounted for about two-thirds of the growth in US gross domestic product, according to data from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis.While revenue growth has been robust, the capital outlays are still sparking fears that spending has gotten too far ahead of future earnings potential."Most enterprises are yet to generate any returns from their AI spending," James Covello, head of Global Equity Research at Goldman Sachs, said in a note to clients this week."The companies making the models and the hyperscalers building the AI infrastructure are burning through cash and boosting their borrowing. While semiconductor companies are seeing record revenue and profits, the overall dynamic is 'unprecedented and unsustainable,'" Goldman Sachs said in a summary of Covello's report.Covello cited a Massachusetts Institute of Technology study last year that said 95% of AI investment has had no effect on company earnings. While AI tools helped improve individual worker efficiency, "the core barrier to scaling is not infrastructure, regulation, or talent."It is learning," the MIT study said. "Most GenAI systems do not retain feedback, adapt to context, or improve over time."Still, the revenue growth in the AI sector is unlike anything most analysts have seen in other technologies including the advent of the personal computer or the Internet. On the consumer side, AI adoption "has been spectacular," Covello said in his note. He cited a Stanford Institute of Human-Centered AI study that found that 53% of consumers have adopted generative AI tools within three years of the release of ChatGPT."The bull-bear gap on AI is wider than almost anything I've written about," said Philip Dubach, a strategy consultant and independent researcher who has written widely about AI.He cited reports that showed OpenAI went from $2 billion in annualized run-rate revenue to $24 billion in 24 months and Anthropic growth from $1 billion to $30 billion in 15 months as "unprecedented growth rates." OpenAI and Anthrophic didn't immediately respond to requests for comment Friday.Yet "the math on capex still doesn't close at any plausible revenue figure I can build up to," he said.Dubach estimates that year-to-date 2026 revenue for AI is about $100 billion shared between Microsoft, Anthropic, OpenAI, Amazon and Google. That figure accounts for double-counting that's common in the industry, he said. Many AI systems are integrated into each other and their services can overlap.The capex spending, however, "is a staggering amount of money chasing returns that haven't fully landed," Dubach said.In the three months through March, Microsoft reported 30% revenue growth in its Intelligent Cloud segment, with sales for its cloud-based computing Azure service up 40%. Google Cloud revenue rose 63% from a year earlier; Amazon Web Services was up 28%.Microsoft and Amazon declined to comment to, while Google didn't respond to a request for comment."The thing is, can these companies grow their revenue fast enough to fund the AI build that's required?" said Bruce Murray, CEO and chief investment officer at the Murray Wealth Group.Murray, who owns all four stocks, said the companies have other business lines to generate the capital to spend on building out their AI infrastructure."It's going to be really difficult to tell who gets over their skis a little too far," he said. As a long-term investor Murray said he has confidence that the AI play will pan out."Meta's maybe the one we'd be the most concerned about, but still, on a relative basis we're still sticking with it," he said. Meta's first-quarter ad revenue rose 33%. The company didn't respond to a request for comment.The Facebook parent "is growing nicely in their advertising business, but it seems to be a bit behind on getting something achievable with AI that's actually going to generate the money," Murray said.One area of AI revenue that has yet to emerge is retail users. A separate Menlo Ventures report from June 2025 found that while 61% of consumers it surveyed had used AI in the past six months, only 3% of users were paying for it. Still, companies including Google and Amazon can earn advertising revenue from those users who aren't yet paying. "My wife uses ChatGPT for everything before she sends it out," but doesn't pay for it, Murray said.As a venture capital firm, Menlo Ventures invests in some of the companies it analyzes such as Anthropic, Wispr Flow, OpenRouter, Numeric and others.Menlo's Xiao said the firm saw very different activity in AI revenue compared with what the MIT report concluded last year."Part of our report was sort of standing in opposition to the MIT report, pointing to the real use cases and the real enterprise dollars that are flowing into the ecosystem and being spent and actually transforming how work is done," Xiao said. "AI looks a lot different from previous waves that we've seen where there has been maybe irrational exuberance."The demand for the tech that's driving the spending may appear "scary," he said."If you contrast that to the build out of the telco boom in the early 2000s, they were laying thousands of miles of fiber that would not be used for years," Xiao said. "There's a difference between this time as opposed to last time, that I think does make it quite exciting, at least from our view. It feels like this time is much more sustainable."Matthew LeisingPrice: $418.12, Change: $+8.69, Percent Change: +2.12%

$AMZN$GOOG$GOOGL$META$MSFT
Wire

AI Revenue May Jump Fivefold to $200 Billion This Year as Spending Race Intensifies

The world's largest artificial intelligence firms could earn $200 billion in revenue this year, more than five times the $37 billion they brought in last year, according to estimates from Menlo Ventures.The venture capital firm has tracked AI revenue growth from Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), Alphabet's Google (GOOG, GOOGL), OpenAI, Anthropic, Cursor and other companies for the past three years.Revenue, which in 2024 was $11.5 billion, is on track to blow previous years' numbers out of the water, Derek Xiao, a principal at Menlo and co-author of the firm's annual AI research report, said in an interview with."We've always actually had a trend of underestimating how these things grow because it's hard to predict an exponential, but I would put it at $200 billion," he said.While that number is an estimate, growth in AI revenue since January "hockey sticked" and is based on new models of AI now being used, he said."Instead of just this call and response chat pattern that we've seen traditionally, you have background agents that can run for minutes or hours at a time, and that unlocks an order of magnitude more of both things that it can do, but also spend on some of these AI tools," Xiao said.The revenue growth is at the heart of an ongoing debate as company spending has raised fears of an AI bubble. Capital expenditures by Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta Platforms Inc. (META) -- collectively known as hyperscalers because they offer massive cloud computing services and global data center infrastructure -- is expected to be around $800 billion this year, with another $1 trillion in 2027, according to the companies and analyst estimates.The investment in new data centers, software and equipment was so large in the first quarter that it accounted for about two-thirds of the growth in US gross domestic product, according to data from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis.While revenue growth has been robust, the capital outlays are still sparking fears that spending has gotten too far ahead of future earnings potential."Most enterprises are yet to generate any returns from their AI spending," James Covello, head of Global Equity Research at Goldman Sachs, said in a note to clients this week."The companies making the models and the hyperscalers building the AI infrastructure are burning through cash and boosting their borrowing. While semiconductor companies are seeing record revenue and profits, the overall dynamic is 'unprecedented and unsustainable,'" Goldman Sachs said in a summary of Covello's report.Covello cited a Massachusetts Institute of Technology study last year that said 95% of AI investment has had no effect on company earnings. While AI tools helped improve individual worker efficiency, "the core barrier to scaling is not infrastructure, regulation, or talent."It is learning," the MIT study said. "Most GenAI systems do not retain feedback, adapt to context, or improve over time."Still, the revenue growth in the AI sector is unlike anything most analysts have seen in other technologies including the advent of the personal computer or the Internet. On the consumer side, AI adoption "has been spectacular," Covello said in his note. He cited a Stanford Institute of Human-Centered AI study that found that 53% of consumers have adopted generative AI tools within three years of the release of ChatGPT."The bull-bear gap on AI is wider than almost anything I've written about," said Philip Dubach, a strategy consultant and independent researcher who has written widely about AI.He cited reports that showed OpenAI went from $2 billion in annualized run-rate revenue to $24 billion in 24 months and Anthropic growth from $1 billion to $30 billion in 15 months as "unprecedented growth rates." OpenAI and Anthrophic didn't immediately respond to requests for comment Friday.Yet "the math on capex still doesn't close at any plausible revenue figure I can build up to," he said.Dubach estimates that year-to-date 2026 revenue for AI is about $100 billion shared between Microsoft, Anthropic, OpenAI, Amazon and Google. That figure accounts for double-counting that's common in the industry, he said. Many AI systems are integrated into each other and their services can overlap.The capex spending, however, "is a staggering amount of money chasing returns that haven't fully landed," Dubach said.In the three months through March, Microsoft reported 30% revenue growth in its Intelligent Cloud segment, with sales for its cloud-based computing Azure service up 40%. Google Cloud revenue rose 63% from a year earlier; Amazon Web Services was up 28%.Microsoft and Amazon declined to comment to, while Google didn't respond to a request for comment."The thing is, can these companies grow their revenue fast enough to fund the AI build that's required?" said Bruce Murray, CEO and chief investment officer at the Murray Wealth Group.Murray, who owns all four stocks, said the companies have other business lines to generate the capital to spend on building out their AI infrastructure."It's going to be really difficult to tell who gets over their skis a little too far," he said. As a long-term investor Murray said he has confidence that the AI play will pan out."Meta's maybe the one we'd be the most concerned about, but still, on a relative basis we're still sticking with it," he said. Meta's first-quarter ad revenue rose 33%. The company didn't respond to a request for comment.The Facebook parent "is growing nicely in their advertising business, but it seems to be a bit behind on getting something achievable with AI that's actually going to generate the money," Murray said.One area of AI revenue that has yet to emerge is retail users. A separate Menlo Ventures report from June 2025 found that while 61% of consumers it surveyed had used AI in the past six months, only 3% of users were paying for it. Still, companies including Google and Amazon can earn advertising revenue from those users who aren't yet paying. "My wife uses ChatGPT for everything before she sends it out," but doesn't pay for it, Murray said.As a venture capital firm, Menlo Ventures invests in some of the companies it analyzes such as Anthropic, Wispr Flow, OpenRouter, Numeric and others.Menlo's Xiao said the firm saw very different activity in AI revenue compared with what the MIT report concluded last year."Part of our report was sort of standing in opposition to the MIT report, pointing to the real use cases and the real enterprise dollars that are flowing into the ecosystem and being spent and actually transforming how work is done," Xiao said. "AI looks a lot different from previous waves that we've seen where there has been maybe irrational exuberance."The demand for the tech that's driving the spending may appear "scary," he said."If you contrast that to the build out of the telco boom in the early 2000s, they were laying thousands of miles of fiber that would not be used for years," Xiao said. "There's a difference between this time as opposed to last time, that I think does make it quite exciting, at least from our view. It feels like this time is much more sustainable."Matthew LeisingPrice: $413.95, Change: $+4.51, Percent Change: +1.10%

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Sectors

Sector Update: Tech Stocks Fall Late Afternoon

Tech stocks were lower late Tuesday afternoon, with the State Street Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) falling 2.2% and the State Street SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) dropping 5.5%.The Philadelphia Semiconductor index declined 5.2%.In corporate news, Alphabet's (GOOGL) Google said Tuesday it is introducing Googlebook, a new category of laptops built around its AI models and Gemini Intelligence. Its shares were down 0.7%.Zebra Technologies (ZBRA) raised its full-year guidance after reporting fiscal Q1 results above Wall Street's estimates amid broad-based growth across segments and regions. Its shares jumped 10%.Microsoft-backed (MSFT) OpenAI was sued by a college student's family who said that ChatGPT caused their son's overdose because he followed the chatbot's medical advice about mixing substances, Bloomberg reported, citing a lawsuit filed in the Superior Court of California for the County of San Francisco. Microsoft shares were down 1.2%.ZoomInfo Technologies (GTM) faces execution risk in delivering a material re-acceleration in top-line growth amid job cuts, and a downward revision to its full-year 2026 sales guidance is discouraging, RBC Capital Markets said in a note. Stifel downgraded ZoomInfo to hold from buy, while adjusting its price target to $4 from $12. ZoomInfo shares slumped 32%.

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Sectors

Sector Update: Tech

Tech stocks were lower late Tuesday afternoon, with the State Street Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) falling 2.2% and the State Street SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) dropping 5.5%.The Philadelphia Semiconductor index declined 5.2%.In corporate news, Alphabet's (GOOGL) Google said Tuesday it is introducing Googlebook, a new category of laptops built around its AI models and Gemini Intelligence. Its shares were down 0.7%.

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Wire

Alphabet's Google Launches Googlebook AI-Powered Laptops

Alphabet's (GOOG, GOOGL) Google said Tuesday it is introducing Googlebook, a new category of laptops built around its artificial intelligence models and Gemini Intelligence.The company said Googlebook is designed to integrate Android and ChromeOS, marking a shift toward what it describes as an "intelligence system" rather than a traditional operating system.Being part of the Android ecosystem, users will be able to access and use files from their phones directly on Googlebook laptops without requiring file transfers, the company said.Google said it is working with partners including Acer, Asus, Dell (DELL), HP (HPQ) and Lenovo to launch the first Googlebook laptops.Price: $381.74, Change: $-5.03, Percent Change: -1.30%

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Sectors

Sector Update: Tech Stocks Fall Tuesday Afternoon

Tech stocks were lower Tuesday afternoon, with the State Street Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) falling 2.7% and the State Street SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) dropping 6.4%.The Philadelphia Semiconductor index declined 5.3%.In corporate news, Microsoft-backed (MSFT) OpenAI was sued by a college student's family who said that ChatGPT caused their son's overdose because he followed the chatbot's medical advice about mixing substances, Bloomberg reported, citing a lawsuit filed in the Superior Court of California for the County of San Francisco. Microsoft shares were down 0.8%.ZoomInfo Technologies (GTM) faces execution risk in delivering a material re-acceleration in top-line growth amid job cuts, and a downward revision to its full-year 2026 sales guidance is discouraging, RBC Capital Markets said in a note. Stifel downgraded ZoomInfo to hold from buy, while adjusting its price target to $4 from $12. ZoomInfo shares slumped 34%.Alphabet's (GOOGL) Waymo is recalling 3,791 robotaxis in the US due to a software issue that could likely cause the vehicles to drive onto flooded roads, Reuters reported Tuesday, citing the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Alphabet shares were shedding 1.1%.

$GOOGL$GTM$MSFT
Sectors

Sector Update: Tech

Tech stocks were lower Tuesday afternoon, with the State Street Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) falling 3.2% and the State Street SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) dropping 7.1%.The Philadelphia Semiconductor index fell 5.7%.In corporate news, Alphabet's (GOOGL) Waymo is recalling 3,791 robotaxis in the US due to a software issue that could likely cause the vehicles to drive onto flooded roads, Reuters reported Tuesday, citing the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Alphabet shares were down 1.4%.

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Wire

Market Chatter: Alphabet's Google Discussing Rocket Launch Agreement With SpaceX for Orbital Data Centers

Alphabet's (GOOG, GOOGL) Google unit is discussing a potential rocket launch arrangement with SpaceX to expand orbital data center initiatives, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter.The search company is also holding discussions with other rocket launch firms regarding the project, according to the news outlet.Google previously announced plans for Project Suncatcher to launch prototype satellites by 2027, the media outlet noted.Google and SpaceX did not immediately respond to' requests for comment.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)Price: $382.71, Change: $-4.06, Percent Change: -1.05%

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Wire

Reddit May Benefit From Google AI Search Changes, RBC Says

Reddit's (RDDT) renewal of its content licensing deal with Alphabet's (GOOG) Google isn't due until early 2027, though the chances of a favorable outcome may be improving, RBC Capital Markets said Tuesday in a report.Google has rolled out updates to its AI Search features that improve link visibility and make it easier for users to see and click through to original sources, RBC said. One change places links directly inside AI responses next to relevant text, which may more clearly attribute information to publishers such as Reddit, the report said.With the renewal approaching, bullish investors are looking for a significant increase to Reddit's current $60 million-a-year agreement with Google, with expectations ranging from $300 million to $500 million annually due to Reddit's "internet-leading citation share." RBC said it is skeptical of that outcome, noting it could set an unattractive precedent for Google's content acquisition costs.RBC rates Reddit stock as sector perform, citing slowing daily active user growth. Better visibility on traffic improvements may be more constructive, and a pickup in referral traffic leading "would obviate the bear case and cause a rerating," the report said.RBC has a $250 price target on the stock.Price: $154.13, Change: $-5.38, Percent Change: -3.37%

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Wire

Street Color: Google in Discussions With SpaceX Over Rocket Launch Deal, WSJ Reports

Street Color: Google in Discussions With SpaceX Over Rocket Launch Deal, WSJ Reports

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Wire

Top Midday Stories: April CPI Rises 3.8% YoY, Highest Level Since May 2023; EBay Board Rejects GameStop's Acquisition Proposal

All three major US stock indexes were down in late-morning trading after April inflation data came in hotter than expected.The US seasonally adjusted consumer price index rose by 0.6% in April, as expected and following a 0.9% increase in March, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Tuesday. Core CPI, which excludes food and energy prices, rose by 0.4%, higher than the consensus estimate of a 0.3% increase. Core CPI rose by 0.2% in March. Year over year rates for overall and core CPI rose to 3.8% and 2.8%, respectively from 3.3% and 2.6% in March. The overall year-over-year figure was the highest recorded since May 2023.In company news, eBay (EBAY) said Tuesday its board rejected GameStop's (GME) unsolicited, non-binding $55.5 billion buyout offer. The board concluded the company is better positioned to generate growth and shareholder value as a standalone business under its existing management, eBay said. Shares of eBay were up 0.2%, while GameStop shares were down 1.9% around midday.On Holding (ONON) reported Q1 adjusted earnings Tuesday of 0.37 Swiss francs ($0.47) per diluted share, up from 0.21 francs a year earlier and above the FactSet consensus analyst estimate of 0.27 francs. Net sales were 831.9 million francs, up from 726.6 million francs a year ago and above the FactSet consensus of 818.5 million francs. For full-year 2026, the company said it expects net sales to grow by at least 23% year over year on a constant-currency basis, implying reported sales of at least 3.51 billion francs at current spot rates, it said. On Holding shares were down 4.6%.Under Armour (UAA) reported a fiscal Q4 adjusted loss Tuesday of $0.03 per diluted share, narrowing from a loss of $0.08 a year earlier but below the FactSet consensus of a loss of $0.02. Fiscal Q4 net revenue was $1.17 billion, down from $1.18 billion a year ago but matching the FactSet consensus. For fiscal 2027, the company said it expects adjusted EPS of $0.08 to $0.12 on a slight decline in revenue. Analysts polled by FactSet expect adjusted EPS of $0.23 on revenue of $5.05 billion. Under Armour shares were down 17%.Wendy's (WEN) faces a potential take-private bid from Trian Fund Management, which is seeking investor backing for a takeover, the Financial Times reported Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter. Wendy's shares were up 15%.Alphabet's (GOOG, GOOGL) Waymo is recalling 3,791 robotaxis in the US due to a software issue that could likely cause the vehicles to drive onto flooded roads, Reuters reported Tuesday, citing the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The recall pertains to certain fifth- and sixth-generation automated driving systems in the robotaxis, the report said. Alphabet's Class C and Class A shares were down 0.5% and 0.4%, respectively.JPMorgan Chase (JPM) Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said Tuesday on Bloomberg TV that financial markets may be showing "a little bit too much exuberance" given current inflation risks and geopolitical tensions. JPMorgan shares were up 0.5%.Price: $108.27, Change: $+0.14, Percent Change: +0.13%

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Wire

Klarna Integrates Payment Options Into Google Search, Gemini App

Klarna (KLAR) said Tuesday it will bring its payment services to Alphabet's (GOOG, GOOGL) Google Search and Gemini app in the US via Google Pay.The integration will enable Google Pay users shopping via Google Search or the Gemini app to choose Klarna's payment services, including the option to pay in four interest-free installments, Klarna said.The company said the partnership reflects a broader shift toward conversational and AI-driven commerce.Shares of Klarna were up 2.7% in Tuesday trading.Price: $14.78, Change: $+0.39, Percent Change: +2.71%

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Wire

Top Midday Stories: Moderna Working on Hantavirus Vaccine, Shares Rise; Blackstone, Halliburton to Invest Combined $1 Billion in VoltaGrid

The three major US stock indexes were up slightly in late-morning trading Monday after President Donald Trump said Sunday on Truth Social that he has rejected Iran's latest proposal to end the war.In company news, Moderna (MRNA) said it has been working on early-stage vaccines targeting hantaviruses, Bloomberg reported. The research began before recent infections were reported aboard the Dutch-flagged Hondius, the report said, citing the company. Moderna shares were up 4.9% around midday.Blackstone (BX) and Halliburton (HAL) will invest a combined $1 billion into energy startup VoltaGrid in a deal that values the company at over $10 billion, Bloomberg reported Monday, citing people familiar with the matter. Separately, Blackstone agreed to acquire a majority stake in Greek online marketplace Skroutz from CVC Capital Partners, Bloomberg reported Monday. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed, though people familiar with the matter reportedly told Bloomberg it values Skroutz at 635 million euros. Lastly, Blackstone Real Estate Debt Strategies has launched a lending platform to provide capital and flexibility to US homebuilders, the company said Monday. Blackstone shares were down 1.0%, while Halliburton shares were up 0.6%.Cerebras Systems is planning to increase the size and price of its initial public offering, the company said in a regulatory filing. Cerebras plans to raise its IPO price to a range of $150 to $160 per share from $115 to $125 per share and increase the number of shares marketed to 30 million from 28 million.Apollo Global Management (APO) said Monday its managed funds signed definitive agreements to buy Emerald Holding (EEX) and Questex to form a combined business events platform. The company will pay $5.03 per share to acquire Emerald, assigning the target company an expected value of about $1.50 billion, the company said. Separately, Apollo is in talks to sell its MidCap Financial Investment (MFIC) business development company, The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday, citing people familiar with the matter. Apollo values the business at around $3 billion, the report said, citing the sources. Apollo shares were down 0.8%, while Emerald shares were up 9.3% and MidCap shares were down 2.6%.FS KKR Capital (FSK) reported a Q1 loss Monday of $1.57 per diluted share. Total Q1 investment income was $304 million down from $400 million a year ago and below the FactSet consensus analyst estimate of $316.8 million. The company said Monday that KKR's (KKR) KKR Alternative Assets unit will launch a tender offer to buy up to $150 million of FS KKR Capital's shares at $11 each. The offering will begin Tuesday and is expected to expire on June 9, the company said. KKR Alternative Assets agreed to buy $150 million in newly issued shares of cumulative convertible perpetual preferred stock, FS KKR Capital said Sunday. FS KKR shares were up 0.5%, while KKR shares were down 2.8%.Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) on Monday filed a preliminary prospectus supplement with the SEC for a multi-tranche yen-denominated bond offering targeting qualified institutional investors in Japan. The offering consists of five series of notes with varying maturities and interest rates, with all payments to be made in Japanese yen, the filing said. Alphabet's Class C and Class A shares were down 1.8% and 1.9%, respectively.Walt Disney's (DIS) ABC network has been the victim of "sustained, coordinated" censorship by the Trump administration, Federal Communications Commissioner Anna Gomez said in a letter to Disney Chief Executive Josh D'Amaro, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday, citing the letter, which it viewed. Disney shares were down 2.0%.Price: $54.87, Change: $+0.52, Percent Change: +0.95%

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Wire

Market Chatter: Google's Isomorphic Labs in Advanced Talks to Raise over $2 Billion in New Funding

Isomorphic Labs, a drug discovery company that was spun out of Alphabet's (GOOG, GOOGL) Google DeepMind, is in advanced talks to raise over $2 billion in a new round of funding, Bloomberg reported Friday, citing people familiar with the matter.Isomorphic Labs didn't immediately reply to a request for comment from.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)Price: $395.42, Change: $+0.12, Percent Change: +0.03%

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