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IBM to spend $10bn on quantum over five years EU fines Temu €200m for failing to prevent the sale of illegal products Europe rates highly with Dealroom for tech ecosystem density Cork employee experience firm Poppulo bags France’s Sociabble Dropbox founder Drew Houston steps down after 19 years at helm Micron, SK Hynix hit $1trn valuation amid AI chip demand Netherlands blocks Kyndryl’s Solvinity acquisition Opinion: AI transforming how tenders are written but not how they're evaluated Report: Google to receive highest DMA fine over its Search practices Bloomberg: Prosus asks EU to drop forced sale of Delivery Hero stake Cork’s Republic of Work to launch Celtic Link with partner CodeBase Kyran O’Mahoney on the accessibility gap and a new AI tool to solve it WhatsApp ads could make Irish debut after discussions with DPC SpaceX files publicly for what could be largest IPO in history Nvidia posts record $81.6bn Q1 amid AI infrastructure boom Expedia acquires Dublin’s CarTrawler to expand B2B offerings AIB, Bank of Ireland join group pushing for euro stablecoin Roughly 350 Irish employees reportedly impacted by global cuts at Meta Analog Devices buys Empower Semiconductor in $1.5bn deal Samsung strike talks collapse with chip supply chains in the balance Google launches 'biggest' Search revamp in 25 years with Gemini ‘It’s funny, I went from admiring tech companies to helping found one myself’ Irish business leaders more likely than European peers to value empathy in AI Meta reportedly reassigns 7,000 jobs ahead of mass layoffs Samsung strike talks closing as global chip supply chains at risk France's Publicis bags LiveRamp for $2.2bn in agentic push Can EU AI Act actually regulate models like Mythos? Pharmaceutical Takeda to cut 4,500 from global workforce Anthropic sets sights on small business after enterprise push Cerebras Systems IPO set to raise more than $5.5bn LinkedIn announces layoffs: 78 Irish jobs reportedly at risk SETU gets new €11.5m IBM system to boost skill development Meta opens WhatsApp to rival AI chatbots to steer clear of EU ire Alphabet’s Isomorphic Labs raises $2.1bn in Series B funding Anthropic upcoming raise could value it above OpenAI – reports Carmaker GM, coding platform GitLab plan hundreds of job cuts AI layoffs do not result in returns for companies, finds report Quantinuum files for IPO as quantum stocks gain popularity Cloudflare cuts headcount by 20pc for leaner, AI-powered workforce Quantexa opens new Dublin office and R&D centre Major European markets still lagging on salary transparency, finds report Anthropic joins forces with SpaceX for Colossus capacity Coimisiún na Meán opens investigation into Meta’s content promotion Dublin’s GridBeyond to support energy efficiency with new global headquarters Coinbase cuts 14pc of jobs to save costs and embrace AI National research partnership to examine flexible work and Ireland’s economy Anthropic, Blackstone, Goldman Sachs to create AI services company Meta bags Assured Robot Intelligence to further humanoid plans Spotify unveils verified badge to distinguish humans from AI Dublin’s Version 1 to acquire CreateFuture consultancy Apple posts ‘best March quarter’ with iPhone sales up 21.6pc Cork HQ for new onshore renewables company Perigus Energy Oracle reportedly cutting up to 150 Irish jobs The Leaders’ Room: Boston Scientific’s Sean Gayer on a meaningful mission EU finds Meta not doing enough to keep underage users at bay TSMC $231m share sale marks full exit from UK chip designer Arm Datavant opens new global R&D centre in Galway’s Bonham Quay Revolut plans a physical store in Barcelona Report: Meta to undo Manus acquisition after Chinese block 700 fear job cuts at Meta contractor Covalen China blocks Meta’s $2bn Manus acquisition After Amazon, Google commits up to $40bn in Anthropic Bloomberg: Bezos’ Project Prometheus bags $10bn at $38bn value Meta to lay off 10pc of its workforce amid an AI push Intel’s shares soar as Q1 results signal brighter future OpenAI taps Airbnb exec as first EMEA managing director EAM platform Blue Mountain acquires Cork’s CompuCal Calibration Solutions SpaceX agrees right to buy AI coding darling Cursor for $60bn Amazon investing up to $25bn in Anthropic AI infrastructure deal Tim Cook passes Apple leadership to hardware head John Ternus AIM Centre strengthening medtech and life sciences link with new Galway base Kerry Group expands Cork facility as lactose-free demand grows Netflix shares fall on Q2 forecast as co-founder Hastings steps aside The Leaders' Room: Equinix's Peter Lantry on powering Ireland sustainably ‘No more excuses’ as EU launches free age verification app Snap cuts 16pc workforce to prioritise AI and savings Amazon buys Globalstar to bolster Leo's satellite capabilities ASML forecasts €36bn in 2026 net sales amid AI race chip demand Klaviyo building out its engineering team at Dublin facility UK neobank Monzo makes Irish launch after US market exit Meta to pay CoreWeave $21bn for additional cloud capacity Digital rights group EFF leaves X Alibaba leads $293m round in Chinese AI start-up after HappyHorse reveal OpenAI pauses Stargate UK over energy costs US court won't pause Anthropic ban, but wants case expedited Meath ITAD provider ICT acquired by US recycling firm Paladin FT: Bezos's Project Prometheus taps xAI co-founder Kyle Kosic Irish Government approves ‘next-generation sites’ for industry OpenAI purchases online tech talk show TBPN Capacity and speed: Why TikTok shelved its second Irish data centre SpaceX confidentially files for US IPO – reports Intel repurchasing 49pc stake in Leixlip chip factory for $14.2bn Manna, Neurent, Sisterly among EY Entrepreneur of the Year finalists Apple turns 50: 8 of the company's biggest tech milestones OpenAI closes larger than expected funding round of $122bn Oracle cutting thousands of jobs in round of layoffs – CNBC Wearables company Whoop raises $575m in Series G round West Pharmaceutical opens expanded Dublin manufacturing site Musk’s last xAI co-founder quits before SpaceX IPO: reports Bloomberg: Apple to move away from ChatGPT exclusivity for Siri
Meta, Microsoft, Amazon and Alphabet post positive quarterlies
Suhasini Sri · 2026-04-30 · via Business – Silicon Republic

Meta and Alphabet are bumping up capex by billions as the AI race shows no signs of slowing down.

Earlier this year, Meta, Amazon, Google and Microsoft collectively announced a massive $650bn capital expenditure package as they ramped up their AI and cloud spending, sending investors into a frenzy and driving share prices down as a result.

These massive investments were expected to cause $900bn in collective damages to Amazon, Google and Microsoft’s market capitalisation.

Surprisingly, AI-related capital expenditure are showing no signs of slowing down, with Big Tech giants Meta and Alphabet collectively announcing a capex bump of about $15bn.

“The public cloud platform earnings numbers are big as usual, but the capital investment to achieve them are getting big faster,” said Forrester’s principal analyst Lee Sustar. “That’s why questions will persist about the sustainability of hyperscaler AI data centre buildouts.”

Alphabet drives capex up $5bn

Google’s parent company Alphabet beat revenue expectations this past quarter, led by its growing cloud business which rose 63pc to hit $20bn. Consolidated revenue grew 22pc to nearly $110bn.

Success in the cloud business is attributed to a rise in Google Cloud Platform (GCP) across enterprise AI Solutions, and enterprise AI Infrastructure, as well as the core GCP services. Shares are up more than 6pc in after-hours trading.

Alphabet is adding an estimated $5bn extra to its 2026 capex, taking it to around $180bn to $190bn for the year – up from the $175bn to $185bn it previously announced. It reported $37.5bn in capex during this quarter, spending which includes real estate, servers and data centres.

Gemini Enterprise grew its paid monthly active users by 40pc from the previous quarter. This was their strongest quarter ever on record driven by the Gemini App, CEO Sundar Pichai said in a press release.

Its home-grown series of AI models under the Gemini wing is processing more than 16bn tokens per minute via direct API use – up a staggering 60pc from the previous quarter.

Last week, the company made a series of new enterprise-focused launches, including a new platform to build and manage AI agents and the latest generation of its AI-specific Tensor Processing Units. Google also committed up to $40bn to Anthropic this past week, as the AI giant attempts to overtake OpenAI in enterprise users.

Meta pumps AI spending after mass layoffs

Meta, meanwhile, projected a full-year capex of between $125bn to $145bn – up around 7.5pc from its previous estimated range of $115bn to $135bn. Quarterly capex reached nearly $20bn.

Meta said that the expanded budget is expected to help support the company as it navigates higher component pricing this year, as well as additional data centre costs.

The pumped up capex comes just after the company announced that it is laying off about 10pc of its headcount, coming to around 8,000 employees. Current headcount stands at 77,986 as of 31 March, with the number expected to go down as the upcoming layoffs materialise in late May.

Quarterly revenue at the Facebook-parent is up 35pc to more than $33bn, while second quarter revenue is expected to be in the range of $58bn to $61bn, Meta said. Shares are down more than 8pc in after-hours trading following the results.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that the “milestone quarter” reflects momentum across its apps, as well as the launch of its first model under the Alexandr Wang-led Superintelligence Labs.

“Our biggest milestone so far this year has been the release of our Muse family of models and our first model, Muse Spark, along with a significantly upgraded new version of Meta AI.”

Microsoft loses OpenAI tech exclusivity

In a major blow to the company, a revised deal has revoked Microsoft’s exclusive access to OpenAI’s tech. OpenAI, meanwhile, immediately jumped to announce exclusive AI products with Microsoft’s cloud rival, Amazon.

Chairperson and CEO Satya Nadella, however, noted that Microsoft still has much to gain from OpenAI, namely the 27pc equity stake it has in the AI giant. Microsoft shares are down more than 5pc in pre-market trading.

“They’re a large customer of ours, not just on the AI accelerator side, but also on all the other compute sides. And so we want to serve them well. And then, of course, we have our equity,” he said.

Revenue at the company is up 18pc this past quarter to around $83bn, with cloud revenue accounting for around $54.5bn – marking a sectoral growth of 29pc. Annual revenue run rate is up 123pc at $37bn.

“We are focused on delivering cloud and AI infrastructure and solutions that empower every business to eval-max their outcomes in the agentic computing era,” Nadella said.

Fastest AWS growth since Q2 2022

Amazon Web Services (AWS) is growing at an exponential rate thanks to the massive cloud requirements stemming from the AI wave. AWS revenue is up 28pc to more than $37.5bn, its fastest in 15 quarters – or nearly four years – with its chip businesses topping a $20bn annual revenue rate.

Other major achievements this past quarter include a 2 GW deal with OpenAI for its Trainium capacity through AWS, as well as a 5 GW deal for the same from Anthropic. The company is also investing $25bn into Anthropic.

The company also announced a collaboration with up and coming Nvidia rival Cerebras, a deal with Uber for its Graviton and Trainium chips, as well as a deal with Meta to deploy tens of millions of AWS Graviton cores for its AI workflow. Shares at the company are up around 1.5pc in pre-market trading.

Much like Meta, Amazon is also offsetting some of its AI expenses with massive layoffs at the company. In January, it cut about 16,000 jobs, which followed about 14,000 job cuts last October. Around 450 Irish jobs are understood to have been affected in this move.

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