A new AI cloud company? In this economy?
Google and Blackstone
said Monday that they’ll create a new joint venture to leverage Google’s homegrown silicon and take on AI cloud providers like CoreWeave.
The JV doesn’t yet have a name, but it does have a starting price: $5 billion in equity capital from Blackstone, with hope to bring 500 megawatts of capacity online by 2027.
It also has a CEO: Benjamin Treynor Sloss, a 22-year Google executive.
It’s “the biggest attempt yet by Google to sell and monetize its own chips to external parties,” as the
Wall Street Journal notes, and will undoubtedly put pressure on chipmakers like Nvidia who supply Google and its peers with high-performance AI chips that could be replaced by Google’s own Tensor Processing Units, or TPUs.
Meta, Anthropic, and OpenAI already lease cloud compute from Google that runs on its custom chips.
The name of the AI game here is supply and demand. There’s not enough of the former and the latter is reaching never-before-seen heights as every big business jumps on the AI bandwagon.
Blackstone knows this well: The private equity giant has steadily amassed a portfolio of data center operators that it says is the world’s largest. It’s also made key investments in rising AI stars including Anthropic, OpenAI, and…come to think of it, CoreWeave.
—AN