Google’s rout yesterday highlights one way it’s the cheapest among the Mag 7
Yesterday, during Google’s antitrust case, Apple Senior Vice President of Services Eddy Cue testified that:
1) Google searches in Apple’s Safari web browser, where Google has paid roughly $20 billion a year to be the default, fell over the last two months as people choose AI alternatives like ChatGPT. “That has not happened in over 20 years,” he said.
2) Apple is considering adding AI-powered search, potentially including tools by OpenAI, Perplexity, or Anthropic, to Safari. Google’s CEO had previously said he wanted to add Google’s Gemini as an option as well.
In all, the comments sent Google parent Alphabet’s stock down 7.5% yesterday. It has recovered some premarket this morning, trading up 2.5% at 9 a.m.
The move also brought to our attention the fact that Google is the cheapest among its peers in the Magnificent 7 when measured by price to forward earnings.