Investors may be wondering if the post-earnings selloff in Alphabet (GOOGL) stock is an overaction.
Google is scrapping its diversity targets, citing "recent court decisions and U.S. Executive Orders." The company's chief people officer said in an internal memo that "in the future, we will no longer have aspirational goals," when it comes to diversity, equity and inclusion.
Carter Worth, Worth Charting, looks at the technicals on Apple and Google's divergence.
Alphabet Inc. a.k.a., Google's Q4 earnings report showed strong growth in Search, YouTube, and Cloud, despite a slight revenue miss and higher-than-expected capital expenditures. The recent selloff is likely due to concerns over capital expenditures and capacity constraints in Cloud, but GOOGL stock remains up over 20% in six months. Google's expanding margins, resilience in Search, and potential payoffs from Other Bets like Waymo and TPUs make it a compelling investment.
Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG) shares fell sharply Wednesday as weaker-than-expected cloud revenue overshadowed fourth-quarter earnings that came in ahead of analysts' estimates.
Alphabet's Google is scrapping its goal to hire more employees from historically underrepresented groups and is reviewing some of its diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.
Yahoo Finance Senior Reporter Josh Schafer sits down with "Morning Brief" hosts Seana Smith and Brad Smith to discuss how Big Tech earnings and AI spending are shifting the bull market narrative. Big Tech earnings have been strong overall, and there are several signs of a bull market persisting.
Alphabet Inc GOOG GOOGL analysts share thoughts about the company's latest CapEx estimate and provide sum-of-the-parts valuations of how much YouTube could be worth after the company reported a mixed fourth-quarter.
Shares of Google parent Alphabet (GOOGL) tumbled Wednesday as several analysts lowered their price targets for the stock, citing concerns about the tech giant's weaker-than-expected cloud growth and plans to ramp up spending on AI.
Facebook's parent is a Wall Street darling, despite spending billions on AI. There's a good reason why.
A whole new range of AI-powered research and interactions that simply can't be matched by DeepSeek and OpenAI.
John Belton, Gabelli Funds portfolio manager, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss the market's reaction to Alphabet, where the company is in the business cycle, and much more.