Meta surges on report it’s starting a cloud business to sell excess AI compute Meta shares surged after Bloomberg reported the social media giant plans to launch a cloud business selling excess AI compute, joining hyperscaler peers. The move could improve Meta's cash flow outlook by monetizing unused capacity, but neocloud competitors like CoreWeave and Nebius fell on the news. Meta surges on report it’s starting a cloud business to sell excess AI compute The story of the hyperscalers in 2026 has largely been “the beatings will continue until the cash flow outlook improves;” this could help change the story for Meta. Or not. Meta https://robinhood.com/us/en/stocks/META/?source=sherwood is surging in early trading after Bloomberg reported https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-07-01/meta-is-building-a-cloud-business-to-sell-excess-ai-compute that the social media giant is planning to join its Mag 7 hyperscaler peers and start a cloud business that sells excess AI compute. In late May, CEO Mark Zuckerberg suggested https://sherwood.news/tech/meta-looks-to-enterprise-cloud-subscriptions-to-justify-ballooning-capex-bill/ that a foray into this business was “definitely on the table.” Investor attitudes towards Meta’s lack of a cloud business have, to date, shifted with the wind. Sometimes, it’s seemingly been cause to question https://sherwood.news/tech/meta-is-diving-because-its-not-google-or-microsoft/ the rationale for the company’s massive AI capex bill. Other times, harnessing its AI capabilities to accelerate sales has been proof positive of the utility of those outlays https://sherwood.news/markets/why-meta-is-ripping-higher-after-q4-2025-earnings-while-microsoft-craters/ . Neocloud and data center companies CoreWeave https://robinhood.com/us/en/stocks/CRWV/?source=sherwood , Nebius https://robinhood.com/us/en/stocks/NBIS/?source=sherwood , IREN https://robinhood.com/us/en/stocks/IREN/?source=sherwood , and Cipher Digital https://robinhood.com/us/en/stocks/CIFR/?source=sherwood are getting slammed in the wake of this report — Meta having excess compute to sell is a direct shot at firms whose raison d'être is to provide just that. The story of the hyperscalers in 2026 has largely been, “the beatings will continue until the cash flow outlook improves.” You can make the argument that Meta’s move has the potential to improve this situation from either end: more cash in, or less out. Selling compute rather than using it for, say, training models that disappoint https://sherwood.news/markets/meta-reportedly-delays-the-launch-of-its-new-avocado-ai-model-because-its-just-not/ , would offer an immediate short-term financial benefit. And the idea that there’s excess compute to begin with implies that maybe Meta’s AI capex bill won’t be so high going forward. On the other hand, it’s not like the market has been rewarding cloud businesses lately. Hyperscalers recently traded at their lowest forward valuation since the launch of ChatGPT, and at a discount to the S&P 500. Hell, Microsoft https://robinhood.com/us/en/stocks/MSFT/?source=sherwood just had its worst month since 2000 during the S&P 500’s best quarter since 2020 The implicit assumption that the market seems to be making here is that admitting you have enough excess compute for a cloud business is the first step toward not spending so damn much on compute. That may be a safe assumption; it may not. Cloud businesses require scale, and moving into the cloud business is a de facto commitment to having excess capacity that you’re able to sell And that means it’s not necessarily a clean down-arrow for the forward capex outlook; if anything, it’s a bet on the continuity and breadth of AI downstream demand. And so far this year, market participants have routinely preferred to bet on picks-and-shovels or “bottleneck” stocks that benefit from AI capex than any potential ROI from would-be downstream demand.