Akamai CFO Edward McGowan detailed the company's "Act Three" transformation, highlighting the acceleration of its Compute business to a $400 million run rate and the launch of the Akamai Inference Cloud. A significant catalyst is a new $200 million, four-year contract with a major tech client for GPU capacity. While this buildout and the broader AI strategy are creating near-term margin pressure due to upfront capital expenditures and colocation costs, McGowan outlined attractive unit economics for GPU deployments. Additionally, Akamai is implementing price increases in its traditional delivery business to offset rising infrastructure costs while seeing triple-digit growth in API security.

Key Takeaways

Q&A

Sanjit K. Singh (Morgan Stanley): Can you lay out the vision for Akamai's "Act Three" in public cloud and edge AI inferencing and why the team is excited about growth in the AI era?

Sanjit K. Singh (Morgan Stanley): Is the acceleration in the Cloud Infrastructure Services business fueled by a handful of customers or broad breadth?

Sanjit K. Singh (Morgan Stanley): Why do customers choose Linode over hyperscalers, given that the major hyperscalers are also Akamai customers?

Sanjit K. Singh (Morgan Stanley): Regarding the "$200 million four-year deal" with a major tech customer, why did they choose Akamai and what is the timeline for revenue realization?