Alphabet stock fell 5% on Monday to $349.56, the company’s steepest single-day drop in over a year. The move wiped out $225 billion in market value — the largest single-day market cap loss in Alphabet’s history, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
Alphabet Inc., GOOGL
The selloff was triggered by back-to-back departures of two high-profile AI researchers from Google DeepMind.
On Friday, John Jumper announced on X that he was leaving Google after nine years to join Anthropic. Jumper is a Nobel Prize winner and co-creator of AlphaFold, the AI system that has predicted over 200 million protein structures, cutting years off biological and medical research.
Alphabet confirmed the departure, saying it was “grateful for John’s contributions” and wished him well.
Just days earlier, Noam Shazeer — a vice president of engineering and co-lead of Google’s Gemini AI models — said he was leaving for OpenAI. Shazeer had only returned to Google in August 2024, as part of a partnership deal with Character.AI.
Two high-profile exits in the span of a few days was enough to rattle investors.
Luria also noted that while Google briefly held the state-of-the-art AI model title for a few weeks last year, it has “fallen off since,” and these exits could signal further slippage.
The concern isn’t just about the individuals leaving. It reflects a broader talent war where pay packages have stretched into the hundreds of millions and big-money acquisitions have become routine. Both Anthropic and OpenAI recently announced plans to go public, adding a new front in the competition for investor dollars.
The stock slide also came after a Sunday Wall Street Journal interview with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, who said the AI market was commoditized and called for less dependence on “AI Giants.”
That comment landed awkwardly for Alphabet, which has raised $141 billion in debt and equity since October to fund its AI push. If models become cheaper and more interchangeable, investors may question whether that spending is building a real advantage.
Google users also reported outages on Gmail and YouTube on Monday, adding to a difficult day for the company.
Alphabet stock was down more than 2% heading into Tuesday’s open, putting it on pace for a second consecutive decline. The stock is down 8.1% this month but remains up about 11.7% for the year.
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