Alphabet Record High, Apple Plans AI Search Engine, Salesforce Falls
whatshot 5 snips
Sep 3, 2025
Alphabet's shares soar after a major antitrust ruling protects it from a forced breakup. The court's decision reflects the changing landscape shaped by AI technologies, setting significant implications for Google’s future. Meanwhile, Apple is ramping up its competition with plans to launch an AI-driven web search tool next year, named World Knowledge Answers. Salesforce's latest earnings report adds to the conversation around how AI is influencing market performance in the tech sector.
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insights INSIGHT
Record Highs After Narrowed Remedies
Alphabet avoided the most severe breakup proposals and saw shares hit record highs.
The decision represents a setback for the US government's push for harsh remedies against Big Tech.
insights INSIGHT
GenAI Altered Antitrust Remedies
Judge Amit Mehta said generative AI changed the course of the Google antitrust remedy assessment.
The ruling reduced the severity of fixes like forcing a Chrome sale despite prior monopoly findings.
insights INSIGHT
Concessions Without Dismantling
The judge still required concessions like sharing search data and ending exclusive distribution contracts.
Those fixes acknowledge harm while stopping short of dismantling Google's core assets.
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- Alphabet (GOOGL) shares hit a record high after Google avoided a breakup after a US judge ruled against the government’s most onerous proposals, including a forced sale of its Chrome browser, another court victory for Big Tech in the biggest antitrust case in three decades. AI models represent a long-term threat to the search industry as chatbots and other generative AI technologies become more advanced and behave more like search engines, Judge Amit Mehta said on Tuesday. Still, the Alphabet Inc. company will have to make some concessions, including sharing online search data with rivals and ending exclusive contracts for distribution. “The emergence of GenAI changed the course of this case,” Mehta wrote in the judgment. The ruling represents a setback for the US government in its bid to curb the power of the biggest US tech companies, falling far short of the most severe remedies sought by antitrust enforcers. The finding follows the Washington-based judge’s ruling last year that Google illegally monopolized the markets for online search and search advertising. Mehta held a three-week hearing in April to determine a fix.
- Apple (APPL) shares are up today. The iPhone maker announced that they are planning to launch its own artificial intelligence-powered web search tool next year, stepping up competition with OpenAI and Perplexity AI Inc. The company is working on a new system — dubbed internally as World Knowledge Answers — that will be integrated into the Siri voice assistant, according to people with knowledge of the matter. Apple has discussed also eventually adding the technology to its Safari web browser and Spotlight, which is used to search from the iPhone home screen. Apple is aiming to release the service, described by some executives as an “answer engine,” in the spring as part of a long-delayed overhaul to Siri, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the plans haven’t been announced. The idea is to make Siri and Apple’s operating systems a place where users can look up information from across the internet — in a similar fashion to ChatGPT, AI Overviews in Google Search and a crop of new apps. The approach will rely on large language models, or LLMs, a key technology underpinning generative AI.
- Salesforce (CRM) shares fell after the company projected lackluster quarterly sales growth, suggesting its artificial intelligence product isn’t yet paying off as quickly as hoped amid competition from emerging AI companies. Revenue will be $10.2 billion to $10.3 billion in the period ending in October, the company said Wednesday in a statement. Analysts, on average, estimated $10.3 billion. Current remaining performance obligations, a measure of bookings, will increase “slightly above” 10%, in line with analysts’ average projections. Investors have been increasingly anxious that incumbent software makers will be outshined by new AI-based vendors. Companies like Salesforce, which make applications that are charged per user, have faced the steepest skepticism because of the view that AI will take over some of the tasks they provide and reduce the workforce of their customers.