As it taps the debt market to fund its AI buildout, Google-parent company Alphabet is planning to issue the tech industry's first century bond since the dotcom days.
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Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Google’s borrowing binge: $20 billion in new debt and a rare 100 year bond


Good morning. What do Spotify, Robinhood, and Lyft have in common?

All three apps can be used simultaneously. Try it: Next time you’re sitting in a ride-share, slap on some headphones to stream your favorite tunes and get to trading your favorite equities, crypto or what not.

There’s another common link. All three companies are reporting their quarterly earnings on Tuesday. Spotify is up first, ahead of the opening bell, with Lyft and Robinhood doing clean-up after the market closes. More of today’s tech news below.

Alexei Oreskovic
@lexnfx
alexei.oreskovic@fortune.com

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Google to sell a 100 year bond in mega debt deal



Google-parent company Alphabet raised $20 billion in its largest bond sale ever on Monday, and plans to issue a rare 100-year bond in the U.K., as the AI arms race pushes the tech giant to borrow money. 

Alphabet tapped the debt market just days after announcing that it planned to spend up to $185 billion in capital expenditures this year to build the infrastructure that powers its AI services. Rivals including Meta, Amazon, and Microsoft have all vowed to spend similarly vast sums this year. While the giants of Big Tech once had more cash on their balance sheets than they knew what to do with, the cost of building AI data centers is now so extreme that companies like Alphabet are being forced to borrow cash. 

To judge by Monday's bond sale, the market seems more than willing to extend credit. Alphabet had initially aimed to raise $15 billion in the U.S. bond sale, but ended up raising $20 billion, Bloomberg reported.

As for the so-called century bond, which matures over 100 years and will reportedly be denominated in British sterling, it's an unusual move for a tech company. Century bonds are typically the province of governments and universities. In fact, a tech company hasn't issued a 100-year bond since the days of the dotcom boom, when Motorola did so in 1997. Interpret that however you will.—AO

EU Takes Aim at Meta Over WhatsApp AI Access

Meta is facing fresh heat from European regulators over WhatsApp's AI policies. The European Commission has launched a formal investigation into Meta over concerns that the company is unfairly restricting which AI assistants can work within WhatsApp.

The move follows Meta's October announcement of changes to WhatsApp's business terms, which will prohibit companies from distributing third-party AI chatbots through the platform's API. Regulators warned that the company's restrictions could prevent other AI developers from competing in what's becoming one of tech's fastest-growing sectors and risked “irreparably harming competition in Europe.”

European competition authorities have the power to impose interim measures and, if they ultimately find an abuse, order changes and potential penalties reaching up to 10% of the company's worldwide annual revenue for violations.

Meta has pushed back on the investigation in a statement shared with news outlets, saying there was “no reason” for the EU to intervene in its protocols. A company spokesperson argued that WhatsApp's business API isn't a critical gateway for AI chatbot distribution.—Beatrice Nolan