GOOG - Latest News
Alphabet Inc. (GOOG), operates in Communication Services / Internet Content & Information, trades on NASDAQ.
Market capitalization stands near $4.27T. Trailing twelve-month P/E ratio is 26.91. Beta to the broader market is 1.24.
The article list below shows the most recent GOOG headlines from major financial news vendors. For options traders, the most actionable items are earnings releases, analyst rating changes, M&A activity, and regulatory filings - each can drive a meaningful repricing of implied volatility and shift dealer hedging flow. Pair the news context with the implied-volatility skew and gamma exposure views to see whether the options market has already priced in the headline.
Recent GOOG Headlines
Alphabet: Buckle Up For What's Coming
seekingalpha.com - Jun 13, 2026
Alphabet demonstrates robust growth, with Q1 revenue up 21. 8% Y/Y and a $460B cloud backlog supporting aggressive AI-driven CapEx plans.
Alphabet Stock Is Up Nearly 100% Over the Past Year. Is It Still a Buy?
fool.com - Jun 13, 2026
Alphabet's legacy and growth business units are doing incredibly well. The market recognizes it, and the stock isn't as cheap as it once was.
Meet the 2 Newcomers Challenging the Cloud Computing Titans in Artificial Intelligence (AI)
fool.com - Jun 12, 2026
The hyperscalers' cloud businesses are minting cash, but neoclouds have been putting up jaw-dropping growth rates.
Google researchers introduce 'faithful uncertainty', allowing LLMs to offer best guesses instead of hallucinations
venturebeat.com - Jun 12, 2026
Large language models continue to struggle with hallucinations, presenting a major roadblock for real-world enterprise applications. Reducing these e
How to Hold the Next Nvidia Through the Noise
investorplace.com - Jun 12, 2026
Everyone wants to find the next Nvidia – legendary investor Louis Navellier thinks a better question might be: Can you hold it once you do? In today'
How News Affects GOOG Options Pricing
Headlines and scheduled events drive implied volatility in two distinct ways. Pre-event, IV typically inflates as uncertainty about the outcome rises; this is the implied-volatility expansion that creates the long-vol setup. Post-event, IV typically contracts sharply as uncertainty resolves; this is IV crush, which makes premium-selling structures profitable when they survive the underlying move. The size of the crush depends on how stretched pre-event IV is relative to the realized move. Track GOOG's implied vs realized volatility over the news cycle to size pre-event vs post-event positioning. For ticker-level dealer positioning context, the gamma exposure view shows whether dealers are positioned to amplify or dampen post-news moves.
Frequently asked GOOG news questions
- What is the latest GOOG news headline?
- The most recent GOOG headline (Jun 13, 2026) is "Alphabet: Buckle Up For What's Coming". The five most recent stories with summaries and publication times are listed above, sourced from major financial news vendors.
- How fresh is the GOOG news on this page?
- News rows refresh roughly every 30 minutes during the trading day. The five most recent headlines are listed in publication-time order. Press releases from the company itself typically appear within minutes of the wire release; third-party reporting may lag by 30-60 minutes depending on the source.
- What GOOG news moves options pricing?
- Three categories move single-name IV most aggressively: scheduled earnings releases (priced into pre-event IV, crushed post-event), unscheduled M&A or strategic announcements (rapid IV expansion, slower decay), and regulatory or legal events (drug-trial readouts, antitrust filings, FDA approvals). Routine news flow (analyst commentary, sector rotation) typically does not move IV meaningfully unless it triggers a cluster of rating changes.
- How can I track unusual GOOG options activity related to news?
- Unusual options activity often precedes news by hours to days; the canonical signals are volume substantially above the trailing average concentrated in a small number of strikes, atypical put/call skew, and aggressive execution (at-the-ask sweeps or block prints). Cross-reference the per-ticker gamma-exposure and volume-history pages with the news flow above to triangulate informed vs uninformed flow.