Today: 4 June 2026
Google Stock Week Ahead: Alphabet’s $4.9 Trillion Run Faces EU Risk and Its Next AI Test

Google Stock Week Ahead: Alphabet’s $4.9 Trillion Run Faces EU Risk and Its Next AI Test

New York, May 10, 2026, 08:03 (EDT)

Alphabet heads into the week still facing uncertainty over Google’s unresolved EU antitrust negotiations, leaving a cloud over a stock that’s climbed thanks to cloud momentum, surging AI interest, and its renewed rivalry with Nvidia for the top market cap spot. On Friday, EU regulators gave Google extra time to respond, after finding the company’s previous proposal lacking.

This is notable: Google’s stock has shed the uncertainty that dogged companies scrambling to define their AI story. Alphabet’s Class A shares finished at $400.80, a 0.7% gain on the day. That puts its market cap close to $4.86 trillion. Nvidia remains on top, valued around $5.27 trillion.

Plenty for investors to track this week: Google’s The Android Show lands on May 12. Just two days later, YouTube CEO Neal Mohan is set to speak at the MoffettNathanson Media, Internet and Communications Conference, Alphabet confirmed. Right after, Google I/O kicks off May 19-20, with the tech giant promising news on Gemini, Android and more AI updates.

Since Alphabet’s first-quarter report, the stock’s base case looks a lot different. Revenue came in at $109.9 billion, up 22%. Google Search and other revenue increased 19%. YouTube ad sales gained 11%. Google Cloud jumped 63% to $20.0 billion. Net income surged 81%, with diluted earnings per share landing at $5.11.

Sundar Pichai, Alphabet’s chief executive, told analysts enterprise AI offerings now stand as the “primary growth driver” for the cloud business, according to Reuters. Alphabet noted its cloud backlog surged, nearly doubling from the previous quarter to over $460 billion—evidence that signed customer deals, not just investor optimism, are taking center stage in the Google narrative. Reuters

Wall Street wants to see if that backlog actually starts boosting revenue—without squeezing margins in the process. Stephanie Link, Hightower Advisors’ chief investment strategist, described the move to Reuters as “early signs of better monetization.” LPL Financial’s Jeff Buchbinder pointed to a “meaningful acceleration” fueled by cloud and AI demand. Reuters

Anthropic stands out as a wild card. Reuters, referencing The Information, said the AI start-up has pledged $200 billion in spending with Google Cloud over five years—a sum that, per the report, might represent north of 40% of Google’s stated revenue backlog. Reuters noted it couldn’t independently corroborate those details; Anthropic wouldn’t comment, and Google pointed queries back to Anthropic.

The competitive landscape may be tight, yet it matters. Alphabet is pushing its custom tensor processing units — or TPUs, chips built for AI acceleration — as real contenders against Nvidia’s graphics processors in major AI projects. Google Cloud, meanwhile, is in a spending race against Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure. Growth for Google Cloud has recently surged ahead of the bigger players, Amazon and Microsoft, Reuters noted.

The risk here isn’t minimal. The European Commission has accused Google of violating the Digital Markets Act, targeting major tech gatekeepers, and criticized the company’s response as “simply not strong enough.” According to Reuters, the DMA allows fines reaching as much as 10% of a firm’s worldwide yearly revenue. Reuters

Then there’s the spending bill. According to Reuters, Alphabet sold at least 3 billion euros in bonds last week, while bumping up its 2026 capex forecast to somewhere between $180 billion and $190 billion—a hefty range, with another sizable jump on deck for 2027. That sets up the bear case heading into the week: if investors decide the AI opportunity is real, but prohibitively costly, Google shares could face headwinds, even if product updates impress.

Alphabet’s standing as a top AI monetization play among megacaps is holding, at least for now. The real test hits in the next few days, when updates across Android, YouTube, and cloud land. Whether those hold up the bull case is the question—especially with Brussels still turning up the heat on Google’s main search business.

Stock Market Today

  • Sensex and Nifty Slide Amid Global Market Weakness and Foreign Fund Outflows
    June 4, 2026, 3:40 AM EDT. Indian stock markets, including the Sensex and Nifty, fell in early trade on Thursday, pressured by weak global peers and significant foreign institutional investor (FII) outflows valued at Rs 5,616.56 crore. Key Sensex losers were Trent, Infosys, HDFC Bank, Bajaj Finserv, Kotak Mahindra Bank, and Tata Steel, while Eternal, Titan, Adani Ports, and Tech Mahindra gained. Persistent geopolitical uncertainty in West Asia, especially between the US and Iran, continues to weigh on market sentiment. Brent crude prices declined to USD 96.86 a barrel, reflecting subdued energy markets. Asian indices such as Japan's Nikkei and South Korea's Kospi also traded lower. Experts warn that ongoing foreign fund selling and geopolitical risks pose strong headwinds against any near-term market gains.

Latest articles

Dow Falls 620 Points After Broadcom’s After-Hours Move Shakes AI Stocks

Dow Falls 620 Points After Broadcom’s After-Hours Move Shakes AI Stocks

4 June 2026
Broadcom plunged 13.7% after hours to $413.62 as second-quarter revenue missed Wall Street estimates and its AI-chip sales forecast stayed unchanged, erasing one of the market’s last AI-linked supports just as the Dow fell 621 points and oil neared $100, stoking inflation and Fed risk concerns.
PVH Shares Drop After Results, But Quarter Wasn’t the Issue

PVH Shares Drop After Results, But Quarter Wasn’t the Issue

4 June 2026
PVH shares plunged 18.7% to $79.00 after hours as the Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger owner slashed its full-year revenue outlook to roughly flat, citing ongoing pressure in Europe, the Middle East and Africa, overshadowing a first-quarter profit beat and signaling weaker second-quarter sales.
Nu Holdings Shares Fall After Analyst Downgrades and CFO Change

Nu Holdings Shares Fall After Analyst Downgrades and CFO Change

4 June 2026
Nu Holdings sank 2.43% to $11.64 after a second analyst downgrade in two days, as Susquehanna and BofA cited falling margins, rising credit risk, and uncertainty from an upcoming CFO change; credit loss allowances jumped 33% last quarter, while risk-adjusted net interest margin fell to 9.5%, raising concerns about Nu’s growth premium amid broader weakness in Brazilian bank stocks.
Intel shares snap losing streak as Wall Street eyes CPU rebound

Intel shares snap losing streak as Wall Street eyes CPU rebound

4 June 2026
Intel soared 4.43% to $112.71, snapping a five-day losing streak, after unveiling new Xeon 6+ CPUs and rack-scale AI infrastructure at Computex, positioning CPUs as central to AI buildouts and sparking renewed investor interest despite ongoing risks from rivals and rising chip costs.
Five Below Drops After Strong Quarter as Traders React

Five Below Drops After Strong Quarter as Traders React

4 June 2026
Five Below stock plunged 12.6% after hours to $194.87 despite first-quarter sales and profit beating estimates and raised full-year guidance, as investors focused on management’s warnings about rising fuel costs, sticky inflation, and a tougher consumer backdrop that could threaten the chain’s strong sales momentum.
Microsoft Stock Week Ahead: MSFT Faces a Fresh AI Test After Big Investor Cut
Previous Story

Microsoft Stock Week Ahead: MSFT Faces a Fresh AI Test After Big Investor Cut

Air Canada Cuts Four U.S. Summer Routes Early as Jet-Fuel Shock Hits Travelers
Next Story

Air Canada Cuts Four U.S. Summer Routes Early as Jet-Fuel Shock Hits Travelers

Go toTop