Today: 6 June 2026
Alphabet GOOG stock jumps 3.7% — what to watch next week for Google shares
21 February 2026
2 mins read

Alphabet GOOG stock jumps 3.7% — what to watch next week for Google shares

New York, Feb 21, 2026, 11:25 EST — The market has closed.

Alphabet Inc’s Class C shares (GOOG) wrapped up Friday’s session at $314.90, gaining 3.7%. The stock moved within a $304.95 to $316.68 range, finishing the day with a market capitalization near $2.94 trillion.

Tech stocks snapped higher, dragging the broader market along, after the U.S. Supreme Court tossed out President Donald Trump’s global tariffs. The S&P 500 rose 0.69%, while the Nasdaq added 0.90%. Trump blasted the decision, calling it a “disgrace” and vowing to slap a 10% global tariff for 150 days using Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974. “Today is a removal of some uncertainty, and we’re on to the next phase,” said Mike Dickson, head of research and quantitative strategies at Horizon Investments. Reuters

For Alphabet, it’s a big deal—ads are still its main money-maker. Marketing budgets are often the first to get squeezed when trade jitters flare, but on Friday, investors saw the court’s move as a rare reduction in risk.

Google is ramping up its bid to push its AI chip business, aiming to boost demand for its tensor processing units, or TPUs. As part of the strategy, it’s backing data-center partners and reportedly in talks to invest about $100 million in Fluidstack, a cloud startup that would be valued near $7.5 billion, according to a report picked up by Investing.com. The company says it has no intention to restructure the TPU division.

Alphabet told analysts earlier this month that capital spending could hit $175 billion to $185 billion in 2026—a sharp climb from $91.45 billion planned for 2025—as the company gears up for more servers, data centers, and network gear. “We are seeing our AI investments and infrastructure drive revenue and growth across the board,” Chief Executive Sundar Pichai said on the earnings call. Google Cloud pulled in $17.7 billion for the December quarter, up 48%. That’s “importantly higher growth than Microsoft Azure for the first time in several years,” D.A. Davidson analyst Gil Luria noted. Reuters

The TPU push lines up with that jump in spending. Selling more of its own chips via Google Cloud would give Alphabet fresh control over both supply and cost—especially as competitors continue snapping up Nvidia GPUs.

Alphabet’s Class C shares trade under GOOG; these come without voting rights. GOOGL, on the other hand, covers the company’s voting Class A stock. Both tickers usually track together—they reflect the same underlying business.

Still, what happened Friday wasn’t about fundamentals. Trade policy could flip on a dime, and tech stocks have taken a hit before when the returns on AI spending seem too far off.

Markets are closed for now, but when trading picks up in New York on Monday, all eyes will be on GOOG to see if it can keep its footing above $300. Traders are also bracing to see if the coming batch of data nudges the rate outlook in a new direction.

Nvidia’s earnings drop on Feb. 25, and traders have that date marked. The stock often drags the rest of big tech along, especially with AI in the spotlight.

Stock Market Today

  • Berkshire Hathaway CEO Greg Abel Spearheads $6.8 Billion Taylor Morrison Deal
    June 6, 2026, 9:42 AM EDT. Berkshire Hathaway's new CEO, Greg Abel, swiftly led a $6.8 billion acquisition of homebuilder Taylor Morrison, signaling a shift in strategy. Warren Buffett praised Abel's quick and smooth execution, noting Abel completed the deal faster than Buffett would have. The move reflects Abel's vision to unify Berkshire's site-built homebuilding operations, including subsidiaries like Clayton Homes and Benjamin Moore, into a national platform. Taylor Morrison's CEO called the acquisition a "once in a lifetime opportunity." Abel's approach mirrors Buffett's emphasis on speed in dealmaking but marks a departure from Berkshire's usual hands-off management style for its subsidiaries.

Latest articles

P&G Stock Outpaced Market Drop—What’s Next for Shares

P&G Stock Outpaced Market Drop—What’s Next for Shares

6 June 2026
Procter & Gamble surged 4.09% to $146.54 on Friday, defying a broad market selloff as investors rotated into defensive consumer staples amid Fed rate fears; higher-than-average volume suggests real demand, but with shares still below their 52-week high and ongoing margin pressures, Monday’s open will test if the rally can last.
Flex Enters S&P 500. Monday Trading Could Be Tricky

Flex Enters S&P 500. Monday Trading Could Be Tricky

6 June 2026
Flex will join the S&P 500 on June 22, replacing Campbell’s, triggering index-fund buying; after falling 4.8% Friday, shares rose 1.5% post-announcement, as investors weigh index demand against a tech selloff and Flex’s AI data-center focus, with a planned Cloud and Power Infrastructure spinoff ahead.
Cooper Companies Jumps as Wall Street Drops, Next Move Coming Soon

Cooper Companies Jumps as Wall Street Drops, Next Move Coming Soon

6 June 2026
Cooper Companies surged 8.6% to $67.34 after second-quarter earnings beat estimates, defying a steep market selloff, as investors focused on strong non-GAAP profits and a strategic review despite a litigation-driven GAAP loss and lowered revenue outlook tied to Asia-Pacific weakness and CooperSurgical uncertainty.
AI Selloff Cuts $1.3 Trillion, Goldman Says Room Left in Trade

AI Selloff Cuts $1.3 Trillion, Goldman Says Room Left in Trade

6 June 2026
U.S. chip stocks plunged Friday, erasing $1.3 trillion and ending the S&P 500’s nine-week rally as a strong jobs report, looming Fed meeting under new chair Kevin Warsh, and Broadcom’s weak update triggered the worst market day since October; the Philadelphia chip index sank 10.3%, with analysts warning of a possible tactical pullback and risks if selling accelerates.
Meta Shares See $31 Million Spend Before AI Funding Jitters Arrive

Meta Shares See $31 Million Spend Before AI Funding Jitters Arrive

6 June 2026
Meta stock plunged 5.5% to $593 Friday after reports it may raise tens of billions via a stock sale to fund soaring AI infrastructure costs, despite delayed filings showing Waystone, Eaton, and Fidelis held $31.4 million in Meta at year-end; analysts’ average target is $840.60, but investors are wary of dilution and rising capex, as Meta lifts 2026 spending outlook to up to $145 billion.
IBEX 35 price closes at 18,186 on BME after US court blocks Trump tariffs — week ahead
Previous Story

IBEX 35 price closes at 18,186 on BME after US court blocks Trump tariffs — week ahead

Salesforce stock (CRM) steadies, but Wall Street trims targets again ahead of Feb. 25 results
Next Story

Salesforce stock (CRM) steadies, but Wall Street trims targets again ahead of Feb. 25 results

Go toTop