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AI Infrastructure News: Epoch AI Finds Hyperscaler Capex Growing 3x Faster Than Cash Flow

70% capex growth
2 min read Epoch AI Partial Weak
A new Epoch AI analysis finds AI infrastructure spending at the five largest cloud providers is growing at 70% annually, three times faster than their operating cash flow. The gap is forcing hyperscalers to fund AI buildout through equity raises and bond markets rather than retained earnings.
Hyperscaler capex vs. cash flow, 70% vs. 23%

Key Takeaways

  • Epoch AI finds hyperscaler capex growing at 70% YoY vs. 23% operating cash flow growth, a 3-to-1 divergence across the five largest cloud providers
  • Oracle's free cash flow has already fallen to negative $23.69 billion per SEC filings, reflecting AI infrastructure investment timing, not operating losses
  • Alphabet upsized its equity offering to $84.75B and Nvidia completed a $25B bond sale with reportedly $85B in orders, both signal the shift from cash-funded to externally-financed AI buildout
  • Epoch AI projects aggregate FCF across the five hyperscalers will reach approximately zero by Q3 2026, a structural marker, not a solvency crisis
Hyperscaler capex growth (YoY)
70%
vs. 23% operating cash flow growth, per Epoch AI June 2026 analysis
+47pp vs. cash flow

Hyperscaler External Capital Raises, June 2026

Entity Instrument Amount Notable Detail Verification
Oracle AI Infrastructure Capex (FCF impact) -$23.69B FCF Per SEC filings; net profitable partial
Alphabet Equity Offering (upsized) $84.75B Incl. $10B Berkshire private placement partial
Nvidia Bond Sale $25B Reportedly $85B in orders (June 15) partial

The numbers don’t lie, but they do require context.

According to Epoch AI’s June 2026 analysis, capital expenditure across Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, and Oracle is growing at 70% year over year. Operating cash flow at the same five companies is growing at 23%. That’s not a rounding error, it’s a structural divergence, and Epoch AI projects it will push aggregate free cash flow across the group to approximately zero by Q3 2026.

The leading indicator is Oracle. Per Oracle’s SEC filings, its free cash flow has already fallen to negative $23.69 billion as AI infrastructure capital expenditure accelerates. That figure reflects investment timing, not operating losses, capex is capitalized and depreciated over time, and Oracle remains net profitable. But it does mean the company is funding its AI infrastructure ambitions from external capital, not cash on hand.

Alphabet and Nvidia show the same pivot. Alphabet upsized its equity offering to $84.75 billion, including a $10 billion Berkshire Hathaway private placement, a notable upsize from the $80 billion raise first reported in early June. Nvidia completed a $25 billion bond sale on June 15, with orders reportedly reaching $85 billion, per reporting on the transaction.

Why it matters

The AI infrastructure story has shifted. Six months ago, the question was who would spend the most. Now it’s who can access enough external capital to keep spending at this pace. Alphabet’s equity raise and Nvidia’s bond sale aren’t signs of distress, they’re rational capital structure decisions when your capex growth rate is outrunning your cash generation by 3-to-1. But they signal something the prior “who’s biggest” narrative missed: the hyperscaler funding model has fundamentally changed.

This is the third major external capital raise from a top-five hyperscaler in 30 days, following the Apollo and Blackstone infrastructure financing deals documented in prior cycles. The pattern is consistent.

Analysis

All figures in this brief are attributed to Epoch AI's June 2026 analysis and SEC filings. The FCF-to-zero Q3 2026 figure is Epoch AI's projection, not a confirmed outcome. Oracle's negative FCF reflects capex investment timing; net profitability remains positive.

What to watch

Epoch AI’s Q3 2026 FCF-to-zero projection is the structural marker to track. If aggregate FCF turns negative and capital market conditions tighten simultaneously, a rate move, a credit spread widening, the cost of AI infrastructure buildout rises sharply for everyone dependent on these platforms. Enterprise buyers negotiating multi-year AI contracts this quarter are pricing risk against a vendor landscape that’s increasingly externally financed.

TJS synthesis

Negative free cash flow at Oracle isn’t a crisis signal. Combined with Alphabet’s equity upsize and Nvidia’s oversubscribed bond sale, it’s a confirmation that the AI infrastructure cycle has moved from cash-funded growth to externally-financed growth. That’s a mature capital market development, not a warning sign, but it does change what enterprise buyers and infrastructure investors need to monitor. Watch the Q3 2026 earnings cycle: if FCF turns negative across more than two of the five and guidance on capex commitment holds flat or rises, the external financing dependency is structural, not cyclical.

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