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AI NewsIn more good news for Amazon, Snowflake signs $6B deal with AWS for AI CPU chips

In more good news for Amazon, Snowflake signs $6B deal with AWS for AI CPU chips

3:06 AM IST · May 28, 2026

In more good news for Amazon, Snowflake signs $6B deal with AWS for AI CPU chips

Cloud data storage giant Snowflake has signed a new $6 billion five-year agreement with Amazon Web Services, the companiesannouncedon Wednesday. Snowflake has always run on AWS, though obviously, these days, it is also available on Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud. For comparison on just how big this deal is for these companies, Snowflake has sold $7 billion worth of its services via AWS Marketplace total since it was founded in 2012, AWS says. So this new contract is close to all the money it has ever brought in from that cloud. It can do that because Snowflake’s customers are accelerating their spending on AWS as of late, Snowflake says, doubling in 2025 to $2 billion for that calendar year alone. What’s driving the growth is, naturally, AI. Snowflake has been offering its AI building tool, Cortex AI, for a couple of years now. It’s a tool that makes sense: Snowflake is where much of an enterprise’s data lives. The AI tool can provide features like a text interface for database queries (just ask, in regular language), summary reports, and so on. Of particular note is that Snowflake is signing this contract for more access to AWS’s home-grown ARM-based CPU chip, Graviton. As AI moves from training to daily usage to automation via agents, CPU usage skyrockets. While GPUs handle training and reasoning, CPUs handle most of the rest of the tasks associated with AI, particularly agents. Amazon CEO Andy Jassylast month boasted that Amazon’s own homegrown AI chipsoffer “better price-performance” than Nvidia’s offerings, though AWS still uses Nvidia’s chips in its cloud. Demand is so high for AI processing that cloud providers like AWS are deploying chips as fast as they can. On top of that, all of the major AI model makers (and many other AI offerings) have architected their apps specifically for Nvidia’s chips. Still, Amazon’s own chips are a more affordable option for the cloud giant to deploy. Amazon, ever the price-conscious company, says it passes those savings along to its customers. Consequently, these chips are luring in new multi-billion-dollar deals. Last month, for instance, AWS signed a deal to providemillions of Graviton chips to Metafor its growing AI compute needs. That was a big win for AWS because Meta had signed a $10 billion deal with Google Cloud a few months earlier. More than that, these deals are serving as notice to Nvidia that competitive CPUs from the cloud giants are attempting to come for its lunch. Google has also been making its own AI chips for years. Microsoft just launched itsMaia AI chip in January. Not surprisingly, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said last week that he’s more than ready to defend, and even grow, his turf. The new AI-specific CPU his company launched, called Vera,represents a ‘brand new” $200 billion market for Nvidia, he proclaimed after delivering another record-breaking quarter last week. And he’s already sold $20 billion worth, he said. While Nvidia may not be giving up market share to Amazon or any cloud provider that easily, AWS’s multi-billion-dollar cloud deals show how AI is lifting its boat. Whichever companies benefit most from the rise of AI in our work and home lives, the cloud providers are getting their share.

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Alphabet plans to raise $80B to pay for AI buildout

Alphabet plans to raise $80B to pay for AI buildout

Google parent company Alphabet said Monday that it plans to raise $80 billion to help pay for the massive AI infrastructure buildout it has planned. Alphabet will sell off that amount in stock and will then use the funds to pay for “general corporate purposes, including capital expenditures to scale AI infrastructure and global compute,” the company saidin a statement. Part of the plan involves selling $10 billion in stock to Berkshire Hathaway, the massive global holding company formerly led by Warren Buffett. “The company is experiencing strong demand for its AI solutions and services from enterprises and consumers, at levels that are exceeding the company’s available supply,” Alphabet said in its statement. “By scaling its investments, the company seeks to expand its foundational infrastructure to support the significant growth opportunity ahead.” The company added that the stock plan represented a way to “fund its investments in a balanced way while retaining a healthy balance sheet.” Like other tech giants, Google has announced plans for a massive investment in compute this year, the likes of which will be used to support a flurry ofnew AI services. At Google I/O last month, CEO Sundar Pichaisaid thatthe company expects to spend between $180 billion and $190 billion on capex before the year is out. Google and other tech giants areexpected to spendas much as $700 billion this year on AI capex.

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Water access is now a risk factor in SpaceX’s IPO

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Florida sues OpenAI, Sam Altman, in first-of-its-kind lawsuit over violent incidents

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Nvidia chases $200B CPU market with AI agent PCs from Microsoft, Dell, and HP

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