Meta's Potential Stock Sale Sparks Big Tech Chain Reaction

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Meta's potential stock sale has triggered a chain reaction among Big Tech, with Microsoft and Amazon reportedly considering similar offerings. The move could shift how major firms fund AI expansion. On-chain data shows growing interest in altcoins to watch as market sentiment shifts. Meta's shares fell over 6% in after-hours trading. Alphabet raised $85 billion in 2026 for AI infrastructure. The four hyperscalers are expected to spend $650 billion to $725 billion on AI-related capital in 2026.

Meta is weighing an equity offering potentially worth tens of billions of dollars, and the ripple effects are already spreading. Microsoft and Amazon are now exploring similar stock sales of their own, turning what started as one company’s fundraising plan into a sector-wide phenomenon that could reshape how Big Tech finances its AI ambitions.

Meta’s stock dropped more than 6% in after-hours trading when the Financial Times broke the news on June 5. Some estimates put the decline as steep as 7%.

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The Alphabet blueprint

Alphabet already pulled off an $85 billion equity raise earlier in 2026, effectively proving that the public markets have an appetite for massive tech stock offerings, at least when the money is earmarked for AI infrastructure.

The four major hyperscalers, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft, are collectively expected to spend between $650 billion and $725 billion on AI-related capital expenses in 2026. These companies are building data centers, buying chips, and assembling AI hardware at a pace that makes previous tech booms look quaint by comparison.

What this means for investors

If you own shares in any of the major hyperscalers, prepare for potential dilution events. Meta’s offering may be the most imminent, but Microsoft and Amazon exploring similar moves means this could become a recurring theme throughout 2026 and into 2027.

It’s worth noting that this discussion centers on primary share issuance, meaning new shares created by the company. This is distinct from insider sales, where executives like Mark Zuckerberg sell their personal holdings. Primary issuance directly dilutes all existing shareholders, while insider sales simply transfer ownership.

The combined $650-$725 billion in planned 2026 capex represents a massive bet on a technology whose monetization pathways are still maturing. If these investments pay off, the dilution will look trivial in hindsight. If they don’t, shareholders will be left holding more shares of a less valuable company.

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