# Google Is A Full Stack AI Player, And Is Playing Well

> Source: <https://www.nextplatform.com/cloud/2026/05/02/google-is-a-full-stack-ai-player-and-is-playing-well/5219190>
> Published: 2026-05-02 19:16:54+00:00

cloud

# Google Is A Full Stack AI Player, And Is Playing Well

Google might have come late to the cloud game and it might be a distant third compared to Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, but Google Cloud is making up for lost time thanks to the killer app that GenAI has become. And while Nvidia is the dominant full stack player out there when it comes to hardware, which is why its revenues and profits have exploded, Nvidia’s Nemotron models are not anywhere as popular as Google Gemini, OpenAI GPT, or Anthropic Claude.

Here’s the funny bit. Google never really believed in raw infrastructure clouds. The original cloud services from Google – Compute Engine and App Engine – abstracted all of that infrastructure away to make infrastructure easier, invisible. More like the Borg and Omega platform that internal Google programmers had access to. And customers didn’t care.

But here we are, more than a decade later, and IT organizations have learned to stop hugging their physical and virtual servers and they are perfectly happy to use APIs for Google’s Gemini model as well as to train their models and run their inference against Google’s vast global fleet of GPUs and TPUs. Which is why Google Cloud is growing faster than either AWS or Azure in the first quarter. The customers have finally caught up to the Google vision, and there are customers who are choosing the full Google stack for the GenAI, from the raw iron up through data services and inference engines.

Building a cloud has not been easy for Google, and it lost a lot of money on it in the early years, as the chart above shows. But now, Google Cloud is as large as all of Google was a decade ago – and Google Cloud is more profitable by a factor of 1.25X compared to the entirety of Google was back then. It is arguable that Google is the best company in the history of IT in terms of building hyperscale infrastructure and running it efficiently, and that is showing up in the operating income for Google Cloud. It just took a bit of time for Google to get there and for IT shops to catch up to the culture that the search engine and advertising giant was peddling.

The bad news if you are a competitor of Google’s is that the search engine business and the various other advertising businesses at the company (YouTube and network advertising) are collectively doing well. Search revenues were up 19 percent to $60.4 billion, YouTube advertising was up 11 percent to $9.9 billion, while network advertising was off 4 percent to $7 billion. The subscriptions, platforms, and devices business, which includes Pixel phones, YouTube Music, Google One, and other services, rose by 19 percent to $12.4 billion. So, despite all the grief that comes as we use chattybots to do searches, these businesses are still growing, and growing faster than you might think possible.

It is not clear how many subscribers Google has for its flagship Gemini model, but the company did say that its “first party models” – meaning its own Gemini models served out as APIs, as well as Lyria, Nano Banana, Veo, and Gemma – processed an average of 16 billion tokens per minute in the March quarter, up 60 percent from 10 billion tokens per minute in the Q4 2025 quarter. By our math and what Google said about its averages, that means it processed 917.3 trillion tokens against Gemini on behalf of customers in Q3 2025, with 1,310.4 trillion tokens in Q4 2025 and 2,050.6 trillion tokens in Q1 2026.

Presumably
the Google Gemini App division pays Google Cloud for the use of TPUs, just like
any other customer does. (Albeit at an attractive price, I suspect.) Google does
not talk about how many tokens it is generating for customers using Nvidia or
AMD GPUs. But Sundar Pichai, the company’s chief executive officer, said on a
call with Wall Street analysts that in the past twelve months, 330 customers on
Google cloud had processed over 1 trillion tokens each, and 35 of these had
broken through the 10 trillion token barrier. The use of the BigQuery tabular
database in conjunction with Gemini has grown by 30X in the past year as well
as companies see the benefits of a completely unified Google AI stack, from TPU
up through Gemini and [the
Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform (an enhanced version of what was formerly known
as Vertex AI)](https://www.nextplatform.com/ai/2026/04/27/the-genai-battle-shifts-from-frontier-models-to-agentic-platforms/5218897) that wraps around it.

This is the driving force for the phenomenal growth that Google saw in its eponymous cloud in the first quarter, and its enormous revenue backlog of $462 billion – about half of which will be recognized within the next two years – is why Wall Street did not freak out when Google talked about spending somewhere between $180 million and $190 million this year on capital expenses. The lack of such a revenue backlog is why Meta Platforms took a shellacking when it was going to spend on that order of magnitude.

As you can see, the capex has to rise to keep pace with the backlog, which is not dominated by model builder OpenAI, whose revenue streams and operating losses are something to worry about when you are planning three, four, or five years into the future.

Google Cloud is finally hitting its stride, and I think part of the reason is that full stack integration. So does the company’s CEO.

“Google Cloud is differentiated because we are the only provider to offer first party solutions across the entire enterprise AI stack,” Pichai said on the call. “Our growth in revenue, operating margin, and backlog highlights this differentiation. Our Enterprise AI solutions have become our primary growth driver for Cloud for the first time. In Q1, revenue from products built on our gen AI models grew nearly 800 percent year over year. We are winning new customers faster, with new customer acquisition doubling compared to the same period last year. We are seeing strong deal momentum, doubling the number of $100 million to $1 billion deals year on year, and signing multiple billion dollar plus deals. And we are deepening relationships with existing customers. Customers outpaced their initial commitments by 45 percent, accelerating over last quarter.”

To
put the numbers on it, Google Cloud had revenues of just a tad over $20 billion,
up 63.4 percent year on year and up 13.4 percent sequentially. (That is more
than double [the
growth of Amazon Web Services in the same Q1](https://www.nextplatform.com/cloud/2026/04/30/aws-will-be-an-oem-just-like-google-and-maybe-microsoft/5219100), but AWS is almost twice as
large as Google Cloud.) If current growth rates persist, Google Cloud would
catch AWS, with each having more than $82 billion in revenues by Q1 2029.
Google can certainly afford to invest to underpin that level of cloud revenue.
But as I said higher up in this story, the important thing is that Google Cloud
is showing better profitability, with operating income up by more than a factor
of 3X year on year to $6.6 billion, which was up 24.2 percent sequentially. Some
prior investments in infrastructure are clearly paying off.

As Q1 2026 came to an end, Google had shelled out $35.67 billion in capital expenses, and the company said that about 60 percent was for servers and 40 percent was for networking and datacenters. This ratio has held for the past five quarters that Google has been talking about it.
