We recently compiled a list of the 10 Important AI News on Investor Radars. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOGL) stands against the other AI stocks. The Stakes of AI Infrastructure and Competition in 2025 In an interview at CNBC’s ‘Squawk Box,
Investors looking to buy into a company that will likely play a huge part in quantum computing's future need to look no further than Alphabet ( GOOGL -0.20%) ( GOOG -0.23%). Here are two reasons why it might be the best quantum computing stock to buy right now.
For her portfolio, Pelosi bought 50 call options of both Alphabet and Amazon at a $150 strike price expiring in January 2026. Each position would be valued at between $250,000 and $500,000. Should investors follow suit and buy the two stocks?
The US isn’t guaranteed to maintain a lead over China in the race to develop artificial intelligence, according to Alphabet Inc. President and Chief Investment Officer Ruth Porat.
The move has been met with a mixture of cautious optimism from tech leaders and apprehension from experts concerned about the lack of oversight.
An initiative from Google’s parent company that rushes the National Guard to climate disasters stands ready to review aerial images from the LA wildfires.
Samsung Electronics on Wednesday unveiled its newest Galaxy S25 smartphones, powered by Qualcomm's chips and Google's artificial-intelligence model, hoping its upgraded AI features can reinvigorate sales and fend off Apple and Chinese rivals.
The AI industry is moving at lightning pace. It's placing a massive strain on AI and machine learning researchers.
ChatGPT maker OpenAI's new Operator AI agent could have huge implications for Google Search, gig economy companies like Uber, and digital advertisers, according to analysts.
Wall Street is always musing about alternatives to Nvidia Corp. One analyst just suggested a big name that's not often in the conversation.
Stargate CEOs cite project’s promise of enabling cancer vaccines, though Musk joins critics in questioning partners’ financial strength and wisdom of the joint venture.
JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said this week that asset prices, including stocks, were "kind of inflated, by any measure," during a CNBC interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.