New York, March 3, 2026, 10:38 (EST) — Regular session
- Alphabet Class C (GOOG) dropped roughly 2.5%, hit as Wall Street slipped amid fresh oil-fueled inflation fears.
- Brent crude surged roughly 7% with tensions escalating in the Middle East and mounting concerns over shipping safety.
- Focus shifts to Friday’s U.S. jobs numbers, with traders eyeing the Fed’s March meeting for the next move on rates.
Alphabet Inc’s Class C stock slipped 2.5% to $298.65 late Tuesday morning. The move followed Monday’s close at $306.36.
Selling hit across the board, with investors facing up to steeper energy prices and inflation getting stickier. “The main concern is that oil prices go over $100 a barrel and stay there,” said Robert Pavlik, senior portfolio manager at Dakota Wealth. All three major indexes—Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq—dropped by more than 2%. Reuters
This is significant for Alphabet and the other megacaps—elevated inflation usually props up bond yields and delays rate cuts, a headwind for pricey growth stocks. On top of that, traders are already on edge about how fast AI investment actually delivers profits.
Oil took the hit. Brent crude jumped nearly 7%, settling at $83.44 a barrel—levels not seen since July 2024. Traders zeroed in on mounting threats near the Strait of Hormuz and fresh production hiccups rippling through the area. “A greater risk to the market would be Iran targeting additional energy infrastructure in the region,” ING analysts wrote in a note. Reuters
Rates bets tracked the moves in energy. Fed funds futures now imply about a 31% chance of a June cut—down sharply from 50% just last week—as traders look for the pause to drag on. Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid weighed in, cautioning, “I don’t think we have room to be complacent,” and throwing cold water on hopes for near-term easing. Reuters
Alphabet wasn’t the only one under pressure. Microsoft shed around 0.5%. Meta was off by roughly 1.4%. Amazon dropped 2.2%. Nvidia declined 2.3%. Big tech names all took a hit.
Alphabet is dealing with a macro shock layered over an ongoing investor argument—just how much it will take to stay competitive in AI. Last month, the company put out a 2026 capital spending estimate of $175 billion to $185 billion, a figure that shot past what analysts were looking for. Reuters
Alphabet is moving to boost shareholder payouts. The board announced a quarterly cash dividend of $0.21 per share, set for payment on March 16 to investors holding shares as of March 9. That covers holders of Class C shares, too. SEC
But what happens next likely hinges more on developments in the war and swings in the oil market than on individual company headlines. If hostilities wind down quickly, energy prices might retreat—potentially driving money back into tech. On the flip side, lasting trouble for shipping and supply chains could fuel inflation concerns and keep investors wary, sitting on the sidelines.
Next up, investors are eyeing two big dates: The Labor Department drops its employment report Friday, March 6, at 8:30 a.m. ET. Then comes the Fed’s policy meeting, set for March 17–18. Bureau of Labor Statistics