Meta Platforms is exploring a major strategic pivot into the cloud computing business, aiming to lease out its surplus artificial intelligence (AI) computing capacity. The news, first reported by Bloomberg on Wednesday, sparked a sharp rally in the company’s stock, sending shares up nearly 6% in early trading.
The move marks a significant shift for the social media giant. If executed, it could directly diversify Meta’s revenue streams, lowering its historical reliance on digital advertising while positioning it as a surprise competitor to cloud infrastructure titans like Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud.
Pivoting Surplus into Profit
The core strategy under consideration involves giving commercial customers direct access to AI models hosted on Meta’s massive, existing infrastructure. Analysts note this approach would function similarly to Amazon Web Services’ Bedrock platform, which lets developers rent computing muscle and leverage pre-built AI models.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg laid the groundwork for this pivot earlier this year, acknowledging that entering the enterprise cloud space could act as a financial safety valve.
“It’s definitely on the table,” Zuckerberg stated at Meta’s annual shareholder meeting in May. “Almost every week, other companies approach Meta asking us to sell them access to our AI models… or looking to buy our spare computing capacity at a premium.”
“We haven’t done that yet, because we think that we have a use for the compute. But obviously, if we get to a point where we feel that we have overbuilt, then that is an option that we have.”
The Scale of the Big Tech AI Boom
The potential pivot comes amid an unprecedented capital expenditure war among the world’s largest tech firms. Hyperscalers are rushing to construct data centers and buy advanced semiconductors to power the generative AI revolution.
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Explosive Capital Expenditure: Big Tech companies are projected to spend more than $700 billion on AI infrastructure this year alone, a staggering leap from the roughly $400 billion spent in 2025.
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The Oversupply Hedge: With Meta investing tens of billions of dollars annually into its own hardware infrastructure, offering a commercial cloud product ensures that any temporary overcapacity can be immediately monetized at a premium, rather than sitting idle.
