Anthropic commits to spending $200 billion on Google's cloud and chips, the Information reports


FILE PHOTO: Anthropic logo is seen in this illustration taken May 20, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

May 5 (Reuters) - Anthropic has committed ⁠to spend $200 billion with Google Cloud over five years as part of ⁠a recent agreement, The Information reported on Tuesday, citing a person ‌with knowledge of the matter.

The commitment suggests the AI startup accounts for more than 40% of the revenue backlog Google disclosed to investors last week, according to the report. The backlog reflects contractual ​commitments from cloud customers.

Google parent Alphabet shares were ⁠up about 2% in extended trading ⁠on Tuesday following the report.

Anthropic signed a deal in April with Google and the ⁠tech ‌firm's chip partner Broadcom for multiple gigawatts of tensor processing unit capacity, which it expects to come online starting in 2027.

Alphabet is also ⁠investing up to $40 billion in Anthropic, deepening its partnership with ​the artificial intelligence startup, ‌which is also its rival in the global AI race.

Contracts involving Anthropic ⁠and OpenAI ​now account for more than half of the $2 trillion in backlogs at major cloud providers such as Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Platform, the U.S. digital news ⁠outlet reported.

Reuters could not immediately verify the report. ​Anthropic declined to comment, while Google redirected queries to the AI firm.

Strong demand for its Claude family of AI models has driven Anthropic to sign a series of ⁠major agreements to acquire more computing capacity.

Last month, Anthropic struck a multi-year deal with cloud infrastructure firm CoreWeave and is also set to secure nearly 1 gigawatt of capacity via Amazon's chips by year-end.

Anthropic has said it trains and runs Claude on ​a range of AI hardware, including Amazon Web Services' ⁠Trainium, Google TPUs and Nvidia GPUs.

Meanwhile, Alphabet is on the cusp of overtaking Nvidia ​as the world's most valuable company, driven by ‌a record stock rally fueled by its ​artificial intelligence efforts and booming cloud business.

(Reporting by Disha Mishra in Bengaluru; additional reporting by Mihika Sharma; Editing by Tasim Zahid and Sriraj Kalluvila)

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