New Photo - Brewers star Jackson Chourio likely headed to IL with hamstring injury

Brewers star Jackson Chourio likely headed to IL with hamstring injury Sean LeahyAugust 1, 2025 at 9:45 PM Jackson Chourio is likely heading to the 10day injured list after the Milwaukee Brewers outfielder tweaked his right hamstring while running out a triple on Tuesday night.

- - Brewers star Jackson Chourio likely headed to IL with hamstring injury

Sean LeahyAugust 1, 2025 at 9:45 PM

Jackson Chourio is likely heading to the 10-day injured list after the Milwaukee Brewers outfielder tweaked his right hamstring while running out a triple on Tuesday night.

The 21-year-old Chourio went 2-for-3 during the 9-3 win over the Chicago Cubs and was seen slowing down after rounding second base to lead off the bottom of the fifth inning.

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Jackson Chourio left tonight's game after pulling up lame to third on this triple pic.twitter.com/Fv8ZWL5Fi5

— Talkin' Baseball (@TalkinBaseball_) July 30, 2025

Afterward, Chourio told reporters his hamstring was "tight" and he felt "a little tickle" as he accelerated once he realized he could get to third base. As he reached the base, he thought it might have just been a cramp.

The Brewers are not taking any chances on their young star and he'll likely get some time off. Chourio sat out Wednesday's series-finale loss to the Cubs.

"With a hamstring [injury], we're going to be cautious there, so it's probably going to be a little bit longer than we had initially anticipated," Brewers general manager Matt Arnold said via MLB.com. "We're not expecting anything excessive, but we just want to be super patient with a player the caliber of Jackson Chourio."

Chourio has followed up a rookie season where he finished third in NL Rookie of the Year voting with numbers that are on pace to top what he did in 2024. Through 106 games, the Venezuela native is slashing .276/.474/.786 with 17 home runs, 67 RBI and 18 stolen bases.

Brandon Lockridge, whom the Brewers acquired Thursday from the San Diego Padres in the Nestor Cortes deal, is set to take Chourio's place on the roster should he require an IL stint.

"Adding somebody like Lockridge and his athleticism should definitely help us there," Arnold said. "Obviously, we'll miss Chourio, [but] for hopefully a short amount of time here."

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Brewers star Jackson Chourio likely headed to IL with hamstring injury

Brewers star Jackson Chourio likely headed to IL with hamstring injury Sean LeahyAugust 1, 2025 at 9:45 PM Jackson...
New Photo - Harrison Ford was told to ditch 'pretentious' name, copy Elvis Presley to succeed in Hollywood

Harrison Ford was told to ditch 'pretentious' name, copy Elvis Presley to succeed in Hollywood Janelle AshAugust 1, 2025 at 4:00 PM Harrison Ford was never going to be a household name, according to a Hollywood executive in the '60s.

- - Harrison Ford was told to ditch 'pretentious' name, copy Elvis Presley to succeed in Hollywood

Janelle AshAugust 1, 2025 at 4:00 PM

Harrison Ford was never going to be a household name, according to a Hollywood executive in the '60s.

Ford explained that when he got his debut role in "Dead Heat on a Merry-Go-Round," he was making $150 per week and was treated accordingly.

"I was under contract to Columbia Pictures at the time for $150 a week and all the respect that that implies. I was called into the office of the head of the new talent program, and he told me that I had no future in the business, which was OK," Ford told Variety.

Harrison Ford was told by a Hollywood executive early in his career to change his name and look.

He explained that the head of talent at Columbia Pictures told him to change his look and his name.

Tom Cruise, Harrison Ford, Charlize Theron Suffer Brutal Injuries Risking Their Bodies On Set

"And then he asked me to get my hair cut like Elvis Presley. That I didn't go along with."

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"He thought that 'Harrison Ford' was too pretentious a name for a young man," the actor said.

Harrison Ford was told by a Hollywood exec to look more like Elvis Presley.

Ford told the outlet that, later on in his career, he saw the Hollywood executive while he was at dinner one night.

"I met him later, across a crowded dining room. He sent me a card on which he'd written, 'I missed my guess.' I looked around, couldn't remember which one he was, but then he nodded at me and smiled, and I thought, 'Oh yeah, I know you,'" he told the outlet.

Harrison Ford has become a household name for roles like "Indiana Jones."

Although he's undeniably one of the most famous leading men in Hollywood history, he said he never expected or necessarily desired the level of fame he's achieved.

WATCH: Harrison Ford walks the red carpet at the 2024 Critics Choice Awards

"No one ever believes this, but I never wanted to be rich and famous. I just wanted to be an actor," he told People in 2023.

"I never thought that I would be a leading man. I really was just hoping I could make a living as an actor and not have to supplement my income with some other side hustle.

"I thought I would be lucky to have a character part on a regular TV show."

Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher and Mark Hamill in "Star Wars."

During his interview with Variety, Ford took a trip down memory lane and recalled the moment he discovered a love for acting. He was in college and was searching for an easy course to get his GPA up and stumbled upon drama.

"The first line of the paragraph that described the course said, 'You read and discuss plays,' and I thought, 'I can do that.' I didn't read all the description — typical of me in those days — because the last few lines described that the course also required you to be part of the school plays for that academic year. I hadn't ever done anything like that before, so I was shocked by that part of it.

Harrison Ford in a scene from the movie "Blade Runner" in 1982.

"But I quickly recognized that I loved telling stories. I liked dressing up and pretending to be somebody else. And the people that I met had a similar bent, people that I might have overlooked. They're people that probably hadn't been really seen before, for who they are, for what they were — and they were storytellers," Ford told Variety.

Ford has made a name for himself in numerous iconic roles, including "Star Wars," "Indiana Jones" and the "Blade Runner" franchises.

In 2017, Ford reprized his role as Rick Deckard in "Blade Runner 2049," which starred Ryan Gosling.

Harrison Ford accidentally punched Ryan Gosling in the face while filming "Blade Runner 2049."

While on set, Ford accidentally punched Gosling in the face.

"[We were rehearsing a fight] and we got too close, and I hit him. I apologized right away. What more could I do? Can't take back a punch. Just take it. He's a very handsome man. He's still very handsome," he told Variety.

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Ford is never going to retire from acting.

"No. That's one of the things I thought was attractive about the job of an actor, was that they need old people, too, to play old people's parts," he told the outlet.

Harrison Ford debuted as an actor in the '60s.

In 2023, Ford admitted that although things have been getting tougher for him as he gets older, he's also glad to be his age.

"I don't want to be young again. I was young, and now I enjoy being old," he told People at the time.

"You are certainly physically diminished by age," he explained, "but there are wonderful things about age — richness of experience, the full weight of all the time you've been spending getting to being old — and there's a certain ease in it for me."

Harrison Ford will never retire.

Another thing that comes easily to Ford is being a movie star.

"I am very gratified that I still have the opportunities that I have to work, and I owe that to the audience," he said.

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With a decades-long acting career to support him, Ford doesn't care about how anyone sees him.

In 2023, Ford sat down with The Hollywood Reporter to discuss therapy. He plays a therapist on the Apple TV+ show "Shrinking," and he revealed his thoughts on the subject.

Harrison Ford doesn't care what people think about him.

"My opinion is not of the profession, it's of the practitioner. There are all kinds of therapy. I'm sure many of them are useful to many people. I'm not anti-therapy for anybody — except for myself. I know who the f--- I am at this point," he said at the time.

Original article source: Harrison Ford was told to ditch 'pretentious' name, copy Elvis Presley to succeed in Hollywood

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New Photo - Rupert Everett walks back claims he was 'fired' from Emily in Paris

Rupert Everett walks back claims he was 'fired' from Emily in Paris Jacob Stolworthy and Kevin E G PerryAugust 1, 2025 at 11:17 AM Rupert Everett has issued a statement to clarify that he was not "fired" from the hit Netflix series Emily in Paris.

- - Rupert Everett walks back claims he was 'fired' from Emily in Paris

Jacob Stolworthy and Kevin E G PerryAugust 1, 2025 at 11:17 AM

Rupert Everett has issued a statement to clarify that he was not "fired" from the hit Netflix series Emily in Paris.

The British star of My Best Friend's Wedding and An Ideal Husband played Italian fashion designer Giorgio Barbieri in season four of the show.

Media reports earlier Thursday in publications including Vanity Fair had claimed that the Bafta-nominated actor had said at an event in Italy that his failure to return to the show was "a tragedy."

"I was in bed for two weeks because I couldn't get over it," Everett reportedly continued. "I did a scene in the latest season, and they told me, 'Next year we'll speak.' I waited for them to call me – but ultimately, it never came, and they just fired me. Show business is always very difficult, from the beginning to the end. When they write the screenplay, they think they want you – but then things change, and they lose your character. I don't know why."

However in a statement to The Independent, Everett said: "In reference to the recent articles about me and the Netflix series Emily in Paris, I would like to confirm that I was never fired from the show.

Rupert Everett appears in season four of 'Emily in Paris' (Netflix)

"I was talking to a group of acting students — in my shaky Italian — at a festival in the south of Italy, and it all got a little lost in translation!"

Everett shot to fame in the play and film adaptation of Another Country, Julian Mitchell's play about a gay pupil in a 1930s private school.

One of his most memorable roles was as Julia Roberts' wingman in 1994 romantic comedy My Best Friend's Wedding; parts in St Trinian's and the Shrek franchise followed in the 2000s.

Another Emily in Paris star who won't be returning for season five is Camille Razat, who played Emily's "frenemy" and love rival Camille.

'Emily in Paris' (Netflix)

Razat said of the decision to quit the show after four seasons: "After an incredible journey, I've made the decision to step away from Emily in Paris. It has been a truly wonderful experience – one filled with growth, creativity, and unforgettable memories."

Her departure coincides with the revelation that the new series will be set in Rome, a decision that creator Darren Star said was designed to "stay ahead of the audience and take them to unexpected places" and prove that "the show has the ability to have a bigger footprint".

Emily in Paris will return to Netflix later this year.

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Rupert Everett walks back claims he was ‘fired’ from Emily in Paris

Rupert Everett walks back claims he was 'fired' from Emily in Paris Jacob Stolworthy and Kevin E G PerryAu...
New Photo - UnitedHealth Group appoints new CFO in wake of top leadership change

UnitedHealth Group appoints new CFO in wake of top leadership change Jake ConleyAugust 1, 2025 at 9:58 PM After a year that has seen its share price collapse by more than 50%, UnitedHealth Group (UNH) has swapped out its chief financial officer.

- - UnitedHealth Group appoints new CFO in wake of top leadership change

Jake ConleyAugust 1, 2025 at 9:58 PM

After a year that has seen its share price collapse by more than 50%, UnitedHealth Group (UNH) has swapped out its chief financial officer.

Wayne DeVeydt will take over as CFO of UnitedHealth effective Sept. 2, according to securities filings. He replaces John Rex, who has been in the role since 2016.

Shares of UnitedHealth dropped around .60% early Friday.

The move, announced Thursday night, follows UnitedHealth founder and executive chairman Stephen Hemsley taking back the reins following CEO Andrew Witty's sudden departure in May.

Rex will transition from CFO to strategic adviser to the CEO, a move that UnitedHealth said in filings was arranged in Rex's 2016 employment contract.

"Given the downward revisions to estimates in the past six months, the return of CEO Stephen Hemsley, and the extensive management changes made across UNH, we appreciate the desire to make a change at CFO," JPMorgan analyst Lisa Gill wrote in a note.

Read more: What is a healthcare FSA and how can it help you save on medical costs?

DeVeydt is joining an insurance giant under pressure. In its earnings release this week, UnitedHealth reported its highest-ever medical loss ratio (MLR), at 89.4%, highlighting the company's cost pressures. MLR is the ratio of claims paid versus revenue from premiums received; the Affordable Care Act defines good management as a window between 80% and 85%.

The company reported higher revenues than Wall Street expectations, $111.6 billion compared to estimates of $111.53 billion. UnitedHealth missed on earnings per share, reporting $4.08 compared to Street expectations of $4.59.

The company had previously slashed its annual forecast in April after its medical care costs came in higher than expected, sending shares down by 22% in UnitedHealth's biggest drop in a single day since 1998. In May, UnitedHealth had contributed to 88% of the Dow's decline in the past year.

UnitedHealth is also currently facing a criminal and civil investigation by the Department of Justice over potential fraudulent billing practices in its Medicare Advantage program.

DeVeydt was most recently an operating partner at private equity giant Bain Capital and was previously executive chair of surgical operator Surgery Partners.

CEO Hemsley said on an earnings call this week that over the past two months, the company has "made extensive management and operational changes" to align with its agenda of reform and performance.

"Other such changes — to our leadership, to our businesses, our culture, approaches, and practices, and to our board, governance, and succession oversight, as appropriate, will continue to be made as we proceed through this period," he said.

Jake Conley is a breaking news reporter covering US equities for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on X at @byjakeconley or email him at jake.co[email protected].

StockStory aims to help individual investors beat the market.

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UnitedHealth Group appoints new CFO in wake of top leadership change

UnitedHealth Group appoints new CFO in wake of top leadership change Jake ConleyAugust 1, 2025 at 9:58 PM After a ...
New Photo - Amazon Is Sinking Today -- Is the Stock a Buy Right Now?

Amazon Is Sinking Today Is the Stock a Buy Right Now? Keith Noonan, The Motley FoolAugust 1, 2025 at 11:52 PM Key Points Amazon reported its Q2 results yesterday, and the stock is falling despite betterthanexpected sales and earnings.

- - Amazon Is Sinking Today -- Is the Stock a Buy Right Now?

Keith Noonan, The Motley FoolAugust 1, 2025 at 11:52 PM

Key Points -

Amazon reported its Q2 results yesterday, and the stock is falling despite better-than-expected sales and earnings.

Investors are concerned that AI spending is eating into profitability, and the broader market is also selling off in response to U.S. jobs data today.

While Amazon stock could continue to see volatility in the near term, today's pullback could be a buying opportunity.

10 stocks we like better than Amazon ›

Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) stock is getting hit with significant sell-offs in Friday's trading despite a strong earnings report from the company yesterday. The tech giant's share price was down 7.7% at 11:15 a.m. ET. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 was down 1.6%, and the Nasdaq Composite was down 2.1%.

Amazon posted earnings per share of $1.68 on sales of $167.7 billion, far exceeding the average Wall Street analyst estimate's call for per-share earnings of $1.33 on revenue of $162.11 billion. Despite the big sales and earnings beats, investors are reacting negatively to the company's softer-than-anticipated profit forecast due to high artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure spending.

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Amazon's share price is also under pressure today due to bearish momentum shaping the broader market. The Bureau of Labor Statistics' jobs report for July came in with much weaker growth than expected, and jobs growth for May and June was revised far below previously reported figures.

A dollar sign zooming through cyberspace.

Image source: Getty Images.

Is Amazon stock a buy right now?

Amazon's Q2 numbers actually looked quite strong across the board, with margins coming in ahead of expectations and double-digit sales growth for the company's North America, international, and Amazon Web Services (AWS) reporting segments. While some investors may be concerned about the extent of the company's spending on AI, guidance for Q3 sales between $174 billion and $179.5 billion and operating income between $15.5 billion and $20.5 billion hardly suggests problems for long-term investors.

Investing heavily in AI is almost certainly the right move for Amazon right now, and devoting the resources necessary to ensure that it has forefront positions in key aspects of the broad tech category should help create foundations that power huge growth over the long term. For long-term investors, today's pullback on Amazon stock looks like a smart buying opportunity.

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Keith Noonan has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Amazon Is Sinking Today -- Is the Stock a Buy Right Now?

Amazon Is Sinking Today Is the Stock a Buy Right Now? Keith Noonan, The Motley FoolAugust 1, 2025 at 11:52 PM Key ...
New Photo - The job market may be sinking. Beware of buyouts.

USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change.The job market may be sinking. Beware of buyouts. Daniel de Visé, USA TODAY August 1, 2025 at 10:42 PM You've been offered a buyout. Your employer wants to pay you to quit.

- - USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change.The job market may be sinking. Beware of buyouts.

Daniel de Visé, USA TODAY August 1, 2025 at 10:42 PM

You've been offered a buyout. Your employer wants to pay you to quit. It's a big chunk of change.

Should you accept?

Companies offer buyouts to thin the ranks, spending money in the short term to save money in the long run.

Employers often leverage buyouts to avoid layoffs. And that thought, alone, should give you pause.

The Trump administration offered buyouts to the entire federal workforce this year, aiming to reduce it by as much as 10%. Roughly 75,000 workers accepted.

In the private sector, Google, UnitedHealthcare and Nissan, among others, have offered buyouts to U.S. workers this year.

Buyouts can sound tempting. A five-figure severance package might be the most money a worker has ever seen in one paycheck. But it's also the last paycheck your employer will give you.

"It's like lottery winners. Some people think the money lasts longer than it does," said Donna Walton, wealth strategist at TD Wealth.

If you are mulling a buyout, some considerations are universal: How large is the severance package? Am I close to retirement? Did I want to leave that job anyway?

But the current economic climate presents its own challenges.

The job market seems to be weakening. U.S. employers added a disappointing 73,000 jobs in July, as payroll growth slowed amid President Donald Trump's sweeping import tariffs, intensifying immigration crackdown and the aforementioned layoffs.

Even more concerning: Job gains for May and June were revised down by a whopping 258,000, portraying a much weaker labor market than previously believed.

Nearly 2 million Americans have been out of work for six months or longer, the Labor Department reported in May. Companies are doing less hiring due to uncertainty about President Donald Trump's tariffs. Artificial intelligence is taking jobs from new graduates. Recession fears loom.

"It is a very soft job market," said Michele Evermore, a senior fellow at the National Academy of Social Insurance and a former Labor Department official in the Biden Administration, speaking to USA TODAY earlier this year. "It's such a period of economic uncertainty, I think people are hanging onto their jobs."

Here are five tips for employees who are thinking about taking buyouts in 2025:

Jessica Henry, a US federal worker at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) who was placed on administration leave at the beginning of April, speaks with a recruiter at a job fair event in Silver Spring, Maryland, on April 16, 2025.Ask for a buyout

Let's start with a proactive step. Maybe your employer hasn't offered a buyout. But you're restless to make a change, and you've heard your company wants to cut costs.

Consider approaching your managers and asking for a buyout. In many cases, there's nothing to stop an employer from creating a voluntary severance package just for you.

"You do see these things happen, particularly if there's news that a company is planning on downsizing," said Michael Scarpati, CEO of RetireUS, a financial wellness platform. "It's kind of a win-win for both parties."

If you're the first to ask for a buyout, you may get a better severance package than the one your employer eventually offers everyone else.

But don't ask for a buyout if you aren't ready to take one.

"You have to be willing to leave if they do offer it to you," Walton said. "It's not something you want to bluff about."

Negotiate the buyout terms

A typical buyout might offer four weeks of pay, plus another week for every year you've worked at the company. You might get extra health insurance coverage, and even help in finding a new job.

Roughly half of workers accept buyout offers without negotiating, AARP reports. But it can't hurt to ask for better terms.

"Think of it as if you're going in for a job interview," Scarpati said.

You could ask for a full year of severance pay, rather than a few months. Perhaps your employer will cover the costs of health insurance while you look for a new job.

Some workers hire attorneys to negotiate buyouts, said David John, a senior strategic policy adviser at the AARP Public Policy Institute.

That might sound extreme, but remember: A buyout is a business proposition. The contracts can be complicated, sometimes including nondisclosure agreements or noncompete clauses.

Even if you don't bring a lawyer to a buyout negotiation, Walton said, "you should at least meet with one."

Test the job market

Unless you're planning to retire, experts say, you should gauge your chances of finding another job before you leave your current job.

If you work in a shrinking field or an economically afflicted region, you may already know it.

"It's a pretty different thing to take a buyout in D.C. if you work in a think tank, or to take a buyout if you work on an oil rig in South Dakota," Evermore said.

Look at Labor Department jobs reports, Evermore said, to find out how many people are applying for unemployment insurance in your area, and how many are lingering on the benefit rolls.

Better still: Apply for some jobs. See if you get bites. If not, that might be a good sign that a buyout isn't for you.

In the best-case scenario, you can line up a new job before you take the buyout.

A Federal worker (R) who lost her job gets help carrying some of her belongings from her office at the Mary E. Switzer Memorial Building that houses the US Department of Health and Human Services in Washington, DC, on April 1, 2025.Gauge the risk of layoffs

Many employers offer buyouts to avoid layoffs, or at least to delay them.

If you have a buyout offer, weigh the odds that the company will resort to layoffs once the buyouts are past.

"A responsible company will address those worries right off the bat, and say yes or no," said John of AARP.

If layoffs are likely, think about whether you might land on a layoff list. Ask your manager if you are vulnerable.

If your company has endured layoffs in the past, look at the severance packages those workers received.

In some cases, Walton said, a buyout package might be "the same thing your company offers you if it lays you off six months from now."

Take your time

Many federal workers who took buyouts from the Trump administration had only weeks to decide.

That's not nearly long enough, experts say.

"Asking someone to make a major life decision that may involve relocating your whole family, you should get at least a few months for that," Evermore said.

Ideally, Scarpati said, six weeks is a "minimum" timeframe for a buyout offer. Ninety days is more reasonable.

Use that time to "think about where you're at in your career," Evermore said. Talk to friends, colleagues and loved ones about your options. Test the job market. Ask yourself if you're ready to uproot your household and move across the country.

And run the numbers. If you are midcareer, do you have enough emergency savings to survive a period of joblessness? How would you cover health insurance? How generous are the unemployment benefits in your state?

If you are near retirement: When were you planning to take Social Security? How would you cover health insurance until Medicare kicks in? Do you have enough retirement savings?

Consider meeting with a financial planner.

"Ideally," Walton said, "have this financial plan done before any of this happens."

Contributing: Paul Davidson

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: The job market is sinking. Beware of buyouts.

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The job market may be sinking. Beware of buyouts.

USA TODAY and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article. Pricing and availability subject to change.The...
New Photo - Big Tech's AI investments set to spike to $364 billion in 2025 as bubble fears ease

Big Tech's AI investments set to spike to $364 billion in 2025 as bubble fears ease Laura BrattonAugust 1, 2025 at 11:32 PM Big Tech firms Amazon (AMZN), Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), and Meta (META) reported that they were set to spend as much as a cumulative $364 billion in their respe...

- - Big Tech's AI investments set to spike to $364 billion in 2025 as bubble fears ease

Laura BrattonAugust 1, 2025 at 11:32 PM

Big Tech firms Amazon (AMZN), Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), and Meta (META) reported that they were set to spend as much as a cumulative $364 billion in their respective 2025 fiscal years, up from their prior estimates of around $325 billion.

Investors appeared to shrug off the increase for the most part.

Shares of three of the four tech giants spiked following their latest quarterly earnings reports over the past two weeks, which showed the companies broadly outperforming Wall Street's expectations and lifting their capital expenditure forecasts. Meta and Microsoft shares surged roughly 11% and 4%, respectively, in Thursday's trading session, following their quarterly results the prior afternoon. Microsoft's surge briefly pushed the firm's value north of $4 trillion for the first time. Alphabet stock also jumped following its report last week.

Microsoft reported capital expenditures of $88.7 billion in its 2025 fiscal year, which ended June 30, higher than the $80 billion it projected earlier. The company said its spending will grow at a slower pace in its 2026 fiscal year. During the first quarter, it expects to spend $30 billion, a 50% increase from the prior year.

"We will continue to invest against the expansive opportunity ahead across both capital expenditures and operating expenses given our leadership position in commercial cloud, strong demand signals for our cloud and AI offerings, and significant contracted backlog," Microsoft CFO Amy Hood said in an earnings call with analysts.

Meta lifted the bottom of its range for projected capital expenditures, as the Facebook and Instagram parent company spends truckloads of money to build AI data centers and poach talent. The firm said Wednesday it expects spending to tally between $66 billion and $72 billion in its fiscal year 2025 versus its prior range of $64 billion to $72 billion given in May. The latter was already bigger than Meta's initial estimate in February that it would spend up to $65 billion in 2025.

Meta CFO Susan Li said on a call with analysts Wednesday, "[W]e currently expect another year of similarly significant CapEx dollar growth in 2026 as we continue aggressively pursuing opportunities to bring additional capacity online to meet the needs of our AI efforts and business operations."

Alphabet CFO Anat Ashkenazi said the tech giant would spend $85 billion in 2025 rather than its prior estimate of $75 billion, "given the strong demand for our cloud products and services."

Using the top end of Meta's range, $72 billion, the higher forecasts would put Big Tech's spending at $364 billion, up from prior estimates of $325 billion in February.

Wall Street analysts broadly lifted their price targets on the three stocks, saying the investments are justified as they see companies benefiting from the AI boom.

Wedbush analyst Scott Devitt wrote in a note to clients Thursday that Meta's "infusion of AI capabilities across the company's ad stack and content recommendation engines are driving tangible results," raising his outlook on shares to $920 from $750.

RBC Capital's Rishi Jaluria said in his own note that Microsoft's "AI footprint and cloud growth remain underappreciated," raising his price target on the stock to $640 from $525.

Needham analyst Laura Martin said Google is "leading GenAI innovation," lifting her price outlook on Alphabet shares to $220 from $210 last week.

Amazon was an exception to Wall Street's bullish reception of the capital expenditures changes. Shares fell 8% Friday after the company raised its capital expenditure forecast, but its guidance for operating income at its AWS cloud computing unit was lower than expected, raising questions about its AI plans. Amazon said its $31.4 billion in second quarter capital expenditures was "reasonably representative of our quarterly capital investment rate for the back half of this year," implying it would spend around $118.5 billion in the full fiscal year.

Amazon aside, the overall excitement over Big Tech's AI spending is a reversal from investors' wariness over companies' torrid spending at the beginning of the year, when Chinese startup DeepSeek showed its AI models could produce similar results to OpenAI's and were trained at a fraction of the cost. The development raised concerns that tech firms had overspent on AI infrastructure as they were still working on monetizing the technology.

Recently, top voices in the investment world, from legendary short seller Jim Chanos to Apollo senior economist Torsten Sløk, have sounded alarm bells that the stocks are in an AI bubble bigger than the dot-com era.

"The difference between the IT bubble in the 1990s and the AI bubble today is that the top 10 companies in the S&P 500 today are more overvalued than they were in the 1990s," Apollo chief economist Torsten Sløk said in a July 16 blog post. (Disclosure: Yahoo Finance is owned by Apollo Global Management.)

It's unclear exactly how much money companies are making on the technology since they don't break out their AI revenue. Google said AI helped drive the company's latest earnings beat, with AI Overviews achieving 2 billion monthly users, while Meta said AI helped drive its larger-than-expected ad revenue. Microsoft did not break out its Azure AI services revenue as it has in prior quarters, but said it "was generally in line with expectations."

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said, "Our AI business has a multibillion-dollar annual revenue run rate, continues to grow triple-digit year-over-year percentages and is still in its very early days."

"They're not tight for cash. They're seeing some signs that these investments will bear fruit," Cornell University professor Karan Girotra said in an interview with Yahoo Finance on Thursday.

DA Davidson analyst Gil Luria told Yahoo Finance, "The optimism has to do with returns that are coming 1, 2, 3, 5, 10 years out."

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg during the Meta Connect annual event at the company's headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif., in September 2024. (Reuters/Manuel Orbegozo/File Photo) (Reuters / Reuters)

Join Groq CEO Jonathan Ross, along with other newsmakers and top investors, at Yahoo Finance Invest on November 12–13 in NYC as they discuss the agenda for success in 2026. Register to attend today.

Laura Bratton is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Bluesky @laurabratton.bsky.social. Email her at [email protected].

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Big Tech's AI investments set to spike to $364 billion in 2025 as bubble fears ease

Big Tech's AI investments set to spike to $364 billion in 2025 as bubble fears ease Laura BrattonAugust 1, 202...

 

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