Alphabet Shares Rise 4% on Dow Jones Inclusion Amid Ongoing Pressures
L'essentiel
Alphabet's stock rose 4% after joining the Dow Jones Industrial Average, despite facing pressure, including compute capacity shortages, AI competition, and a shrinking cash pile.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Alphabet's inclusion in the Dow Jones Industrial Average is symbolic, with the stock already in other major indices.
Alphabet shares rose 4% on Monday as the company officially joined the Dow Jones Industrial Average, replacing Verizon and adding a symbolic blue-chip designation. The move comes despite continued pressure on the stock. Even with Monday's gain, Alphabet is still tracking for its worst month since February of last year, with six of the past seven weeks in the red. That marks a sharp reversal from May, when the company briefly eclipsed Nvidia after-hours to become the world's most valuable company by market capitalization. Alphabet's Dow inclusion is more symbolic than mechanical. The stock is already in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100, where most benchmarked assets sit, limiting the amount of forced fund buying tied to the index change. Recent Dow additions have also struggled after joining: Nvidia, Salesforce and Apple all traded lower 60 days after entering the index. Alphabet reportedly does not have enough compute capacity to meet demand from enterprise customers such as Meta, and is turning to infrastructure rivals, including SpaceX, to help close the gap. Alphabet did not respond to multiple requests for comment on reports about Meta's Gemini usage. Compute access has also become a recruiting tactic. Noam Shazeer, the former Gemini co-lead who recently left Google for OpenAI, reportedly cited reduced access to compute as part of his frustration. At the same time, Chinese models are pushing pricing lower just as Google tries to build an enterprise business around Gemini. DeepSeek has said the fourth version of its open-source model is coming in two weeks. That strain is now showing up on Alphabet's balance sheet. Its cash pile is shrinking, it skipped buybacks in the first quarter for the first time in nearly a decade, and it has raised more than $140 billion in debt and equity as the AI capex race gets more expensive. WATCH: Alphabet shares continue downward slide as AI talent departs DeepMind for Anthropic
À surveiller
Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes
Alphabet will announce strategic partnerships to address compute capacity by Q3 2026.
Probable · En quelques semaines
Questions ouvertes
- How will Alphabet address its compute capacity gap?






