Alphabet (GOOGL) shares dipped 2.3% over the past five trading days, though they remain up more than 4% since January 1, 2026. Investors treated the pullback as modest and tied it to broader market moves rather than company-specific trouble.
The soft week followed headlines on trade and policy that pushed traders to sell the largest tech names first. Much of the selling reflected changing investor appetite for risk, not daily shifts in search or video performance.
Waymo, Alphabet’s autonomous driving unit, is a major growth catalyst discussed for 2026. Waymo began inside Google’s X initiative in 2009 and formally became Waymo in 2016 (Ed. note: Waymo’s expansion could materially affect Alphabet’s future revenue and market value).
Upcoming earnings from major tech firms, including Google, are expected to highlight AI spending trends amid ongoing market volatility. Analysts remain mixed on price targets, with Wedbush at $350 and Guggenheim at $375, while Rosenblatt and DA Davidson offer more conservative targets of $279 and $300, respectively.

