Assessing the Likelihood of Success for the Google-Blackstone Neocloud Joint Venture
By Leo Gergs |
29 May 2026 |
IN-8148
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By Leo Gergs |
29 May 2026 |
IN-8148
NEWSThe Deal: A US$25 Billion TPU Cloud Venture |
Google and alternative asset manager Blackstone have announced a Joint Venture (JV) to establish a new U.S.-based neocloud company, offering data center capacity and Google's Tensor Processing Units (TPUs) as a Compute-as-a-Service (CaaS) product. Blackstone will commit an initial US$5 billion in equity capital, with the total investment value reaching approximately US$25 billion through leverage, while Google will supply hardware, software, services, and technical expertise.
The new company will bring its first 500 Megawatts (MW) of capacity online by 2027, with significant scale-up plans thereafter. Benjamin Treynor Sloss, a 22-year engineering executive veteran at Google, has been named Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the venture. The partnership positions the new entity as a direct competitor to established neocloud providers such as CoreWeave and Nebius, which have gained significant traction offering on-demand, supplementary compute capacity beyond traditional hyperscaler offerings.
IMPACTDoes the Market Need Another Neocloud—and Can TPUs Compete? |
While certain select neoclouds are scaling at rates that have no historical precedent (look at CoreWeave at US$5.1 billion in revenue with a US$66.8 billion backlog and Nebius at 684% Year-over-Year (YoY) growth), the broader market is quietly entering a consolidation phase. Weaker players are being squeezed between hyperscalers closing the supply gap and a pricing environment that increasingly rewards scale and long-term contracted revenue over opportunistic capacity leasing. While the structural demand signals remain real (think about Microsoft having committed more than US$60 billion to neocloud providers, for example), the window for undifferentiated entrants is narrowing, and the ventures now attracting serious capital are those that bring something the incumbents cannot easily replicate.
At the same time, CUDA is deeply embedded in every major Artificial Intelligence (AI) training pipeline, and migrating to JAX or TorchXLA imposes real re-engineering costs on most enterprise teams. However, this pressure will ease as the AI adoption cycle gradually moves toward inference: This shift reduces dependency on high-performance software stacks like CUDA and creates room for smaller neocloud providers to compete, beyond their current role as training infrastructure for hyperscalers.
Google’s move into the neocloud segment is predominantly motivated by the need to monetize its substantial TPU and infrastructure investment, and improve production economics against significant Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) commitments. A dedicated neocloud entity also provides a more disciplined framework for managing compute allocation, addressing internal capacity constraints that have arisen from overcommitment to external customers. Beyond the financial rationale, the JV gives Google a purpose-built vehicle to compete for frontier AI workloads with the speed and flexibility this customer segment demands, free from the legacy enterprise Information Technology (IT) focus that defines the core hyperscaler business.
RECOMMENDATIONSRecommendations for the Success of This JV |
The Google–Blackstone venture is entering a market where the competitive positions are already hardening. Nscale, Nebius, Vultr, and CoreWeave are actively expanding data center footprints, deepening customer relationships, and locking in multi-year contracted revenue that will be difficult to displace. CoreWeave alone carries US$66.8 billion in backlog. The JV, by contrast, does not yet have a name, has no capacity online, and will not bring its first 500 MW to market until 2027 at the earliest. In a sector where speed of deployment and depth of customer integration are the primary competitive levers, arriving 2 or more years behind the leaders is a material handicap that capital alone cannot overcome.
To make a tangible impact on this crowded market, the new JV will have to carefully assess the current competitive landscape. While (as the previous section argued) the reported revenue of leading neocloud providers certainly read impressive, there are structural deficits that the new JV can/should be prepared to exploit:
- Customer Concentration/Limited Visibility into Enterprise Verticals: Established neoclouds often remain concentrated around a relatively narrow base of AI-native customers; in part, because they lack the vertical market visibility, enterprise relationships, and consultative sales capabilities needed to address broader enterprise demand. To become a successful competitor in this market, the new company should: 1) gain a profound understanding of enterprise AI use cases; 2) develop tailored offerings that center around use cases/solutions; and 3) develop a convincing commercial offering that focuses on monetizing outcomes. The Google-Blackstone JV will have an important headstart here, as they leverage expertise and capabilities of the existing Google enterprise sales teams. This should be the starting point to identify two or three priority verticals where AI infrastructure demand is large, structurally underserved, and deep solution expertise creates defensible differentiation.
- Reliance on Third-Party Technology Roadmap: Most neocloud providers remain heavily dependent on external silicon and infrastructure roadmaps, limiting differentiation, margin control, and alignment with customer needs. This also creates a mismatch between technology refresh cycles and buyer investment horizons, complicating upgrade timing and monetization. Here, Google’s involvement in the JV is a competitive advantage compared to other neocloud providers. In order to be successful, the JV must tightly couple its technology roadmap to market demand, using customer signals from priority verticals to shape infrastructure buildout, accelerator strategy, and higher-layer service offerings. Utilizing Google’s enterprise credibility (and the access to compute infrastructure), the JV can then design offerings that are commercially viable at scale. Instead of pricing compute on Graphics Processing Unit Hours (GPUhr)/token basis, Google-Blackstone should focus on building trusted partnerships, with the JV becoming an integral part.
- Limited Service-Layer Differentiation/Weak Customer Lock-in: Many neocloud providers still compete primarily at the infrastructure layer, with limited managed services, platform tooling, or vertical specialization to create durable differentiation. The JV should, therefore, invest early in higher-value managed services, orchestration tools, and vertical solutions that strengthen customer stickiness and support margin expansion. Being able to utilize Google’s managed service portfolio will give the JV a good starting point to go to market quickly, but the decision makers will need to bear this in mind: white-labeling existing services does not manifest sufficient differentiation. The JV should, therefore, continue to invest in a proprietary orchestration and integration layer, vertical-specific solutions, and managed service capabilities that create independent Intellectual Property (IP), strengthen customer stickiness, and support sustainable margin expansion over time.
Written by Leo Gergs
Principal Analyst Leo Gergs leads enterprise connectivity and cloud and data center research at ABI Research. His work covers enterprise drivers, use cases, and provider strategies for technologies such as private cellular, SD WAN, and Fixed Wireless Access.
He also analyzes key trends shaping the data center market, including the rise of neocloud providers, the growing importance of sovereign cloud models, and their implications for enterprise infrastructure, regulation, and workload placement.
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