Alphabet and Amazon Outpace Meta in AI as Big Tech’s Q1 2026 Earnings Confirm Cloud Dominance
April 30, 2026 - 9:43 am
Google Cloud grew 63%, AWS 28%. Meta raised its full-year capex guide to $125-$145 billion, sending its shares down 6% after hours. Combined 2026 AI spending across five hyperscalers is now on track to exceed $650 billion.
The question hanging over Wednesday’s earnings calls was whether the AI investment supercycle was producing commensurate returns, or whether the hyperscalers were building faster than demand could justify. The answers varied by company, but they were good enough to avoid a reckoning.
Alphabet Delivers $109.9 Billion in Revenue for Q1 2026
- Revenue: $109.9 billion (beating consensus by nearly $3 billion)
- Google Cloud Growth: 63% year on year to $20.02 billion (exceeding analyst estimates of $18.05 billion)
- Net Income: $62.57 billion (up 81% year on year, significantly inflated by a $36.9 billion unrealised gain on equity securities)
- Capital Expenditure: $35.7 billion for the quarter (a 107% year-on-year increase) raised full-year capex guidance to $180-$190 billion
CEO Sundar Pichai noted that the company is ‘compute constrained in the near term’ and that cloud revenue would have been higher had capacity kept pace with demand. The cloud backlog stood at over $460 billion, nearly double the prior quarter.
Amazon Reports Q1 Net Sales of $181.5 Billion
- Revenue: $181.5 billion (up 17% year on year and above the $177.2 billion consensus)
- AWS Growth: 28% to $37.59 billion, fastest growth in over three years
- Earnings per Share: $2.78, crushing the $1.62 estimate
- Capital Expenditure: Approximately $200 billion committed for 2026 (free cash flow for the trailing twelve months compressed to $1.2 billion)
- Second Quarter Guidance: $194-$199 billion in net sales (well above the $189.2 billion consensus)
Meta Reports Q1 Revenue of $56.31 Billion
- Revenue: $56.31 billion (ahead of the $55.51 billion estimate)
- Q2 Guidance: $58-$61 billion (bracketing the $59.56 billion consensus)
- Capex Guidance: Raised to $125-$145 billion, citing higher component costs and expanded data centre capacity
Across three companies, a consistent message emerges: demand for AI compute is exceeding the infrastructure built to meet it. Pichai, Jassy, and Meta’s guidance all point to this reality.