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Tech Giant Makes History With 100-Year Bond to Fund AI Race

By Taylor Reed · Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Finn's Take· TL;DR
  • Alphabet raised $20 billion via bonds, including a historic 100-year debt—first tech firm since Motorola in 1997—signaling confidence in AI dominance and long-term stability.
  • Tech hyperscalers plan $630+ billion combined spending on AI this year; five major firms issued $121 billion in bonds last year versus $28 billion average previously.
  • Century bonds carry significant risks despite investor appetite; JC Penney's 100-year bond preceded bankruptcy in 23 years, reminding investors that tech dominance isn't guaranteed forever.
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Unprecedented Debt Strategy for AI Dominance

Alphabet is planning to raise $20 billion from a bond sale, including a 100-year bond , marking the first time a technology company has issued century-long debt since Motorola in 1997. The deal comes amid booming investor demand for artificial-intelligence-linked debt, with the offering attracting more than $100 billion of orders at its peak — among the strongest ever for a corporate bond offering.

This extraordinary borrowing strategy underscores just how dramatically the AI revolution is reshaping corporate finance. The company announced last week it will spend $175 billion to $185 billion this year on artificial intelligence infrastructure, more than double its 2025 investment of $91.4 billion. Data cited by Bloomberg shows this is the first 100 year bond from a tech firm since Motorola did it in 1997. These ultra long bonds are usually issued by governments or institutions like universities, not fast changing technology companies.

The Massive AI Spending Spree

Cloud-computing companies known as hyperscalers are expected to pour more than $630 billion combined, largely into AI this year, even though returns have lagged the pace of growth in the outlays. Morgan Stanley expects cloud giants to borrow $400 billion, about ₹35.2 lakh crore, this year, up sharply from 2025. The scale of investment suggests tech companies view AI infrastructure as essential to their competitive survival.

Alphabet isn't alone in this borrowing frenzy. The five major AI hyperscalers – Amazon, Alphabet's Google, Meta, Microsoft and Oracle – issued $121 billion in U.S. corporate bonds last year, compared with an average $28 billion per year between 2020 and 2024, according to a January 9 report by BofA Securities. Oracle sought $18 billion in new debt in September, while Meta raised $30 billion in October, the largest-ever individual non-M&A high-grade bond sale.

Investor Appetite and Market Dynamics

These 100-year notes target a very specific crowd, primarily pension funds and insurers. These buyers need super long-duration assets to match their decades-long liabilities. UK pension funds prefer long duration assets, making Britain a natural home for such a deal. The sterling-denominated century bond represents Alphabet's first foray into the British pound market.

However, this unprecedented confidence carries substantial risks. Still, century bonds remain risky. Business models change, technology shifts fast, and history offers warnings. US retailer JC Penney issued a 100 year bond and filed for bankruptcy just 23 years later. Observers point out that the 100-year bond marks a peak in corporate confidence that often precedes significant market shifts, reminding investors that no tech company has ever dominated for a century without radical transformation.

The Future of Tech Finance

Market experts view this move as a signal that the world's largest tech companies are increasingly being treated by investors like "quasi-sovereign" entities. With cash flows exceeding those of many developed nations, Alphabet is leveraging its financial dominance to secure capital at rates and durations that were previously unimaginable for a software company.

The success of Alphabet's bond offering signals a fundamental shift in how investors view technology companies' longevity and stability. Market observers note the bond's success indicates strong institutional belief in AI's major potential. Yet the AI infrastructure arms race shows no signs of slowing, with companies betting their futures on capturing market share in what many believe will be the defining technology of the next decade. Whether these massive investments will generate proportional returns remains the trillion-dollar question facing the industry.

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