Akamai’s $1.8 billion AI cloud deal lifts shares 20%
Akamai announced a $1.8 billion, seven-year deal with an unnamed "leading frontier model provider" for cloud infrastructure services, while also reporting first-quarter revenues of over $1 billion. This deal contributed to a 20% jump in Akamai's stock following the earnings announcement. The company's cloud infrastructure services revenue grew 40% to $95 million, positioning itself as a provider for AI infrastructure.
Key Takeaways
- The unnamed customer committed $1.8 billion over seven years for cloud infrastructure services, according to CEO Tom Leighton.
- First-quarter revenue rose 6% to over $1 billion, in line with estimates.
- Cloud infrastructure services revenue increased 40% to $95 million in the quarter.
- Security revenue rose 11% to $590 million, while delivery and other cloud applications revenue fell 7% to $389 million.
- Akamai expects second-quarter revenue of $1.08 billion to $1.1 billion and adjusted net income per share of $1.45 to $1.65.
Why It Matters
Akamai is showing that its cloud infrastructure business can attract long-dated AI workloads, not just support its legacy delivery and security lines. The company’s three-part model now puts cloud infrastructure alongside content delivery and cybersecurity, and management said it already runs an AI-operated inference cloud. For the streaming ecosystem, the relevant signal is not the stock move but the scale of AI-related infrastructure demand flowing to an edge-network provider. Watch the next quarter’s cloud infrastructure revenue and whether Akamai names any details about the frontier model customer or expansion plans.
Read full article at cnbc.com
