Alphabet (GOOGL) made its official entrance into the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Monday, and investors responded enthusiastically. Shares advanced 3.7% to reach $350.24 during its debut session as a Dow constituent.
Alphabet Inc., GOOGL
S&P Dow Jones Indices publicly disclosed the index modification on June 23. Alphabet secured the position formerly occupied by Verizon Communications, which ranked among the index’s least impactful members.
Given the Dow’s price-weighted methodology, Alphabet instantly assumes significant influence within the 30-company benchmark. Its premium share valuation grants it substantially greater weight than Verizon commanded.
This development elevates the Magnificent Seven representation in the Dow to five companies. Alphabet now joins Nvidia, Amazon, Apple, and Microsoft within this prestigious index.
The previous restructuring occurred in November 2024, when Nvidia and Sherwin-Williams displaced Intel and Dow Inc.
Passive funds that replicate the Dow must acquire GOOGL shares to maintain proper index tracking. Approximately $115 billion in assets were indexed or benchmarked to the Dow as of December 31, 2024—considerably less than the roughly $20 trillion following the S&P 500, where Alphabet already maintains membership.
Consequently, mandatory purchasing activity stemming from this index revision remains modest compared to potential S&P 500 inclusion.
Monday’s upward movement extended beyond mere index mechanics. The broader Magnificent Seven cohort experienced a robust recovery. Meta, Amazon, and Tesla each advanced over 3%. Nvidia and Microsoft recorded gains exceeding 1%. Apple trailed with a modest 0.1% increase.
The Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF had declined 13% throughout June leading up to Friday—tracking toward its steepest monthly decline since its April 2023 inception. Monday provided welcome respite.
Additional developments contributed momentum to Alphabet’s rally. The Financial Times disclosed that Google has been throttling Meta Platforms’ access to its Gemini AI infrastructure, alongside certain smaller customers, citing overwhelming demand for computational resources.
Neither Google nor Meta provided immediate commentary on the matter.
While restricting client access might superficially suggest revenue constraints, it actually underscores extraordinary demand for Google’s artificial intelligence capabilities.
Alphabet’s cloud business delivered 63% revenue expansion in Q1 2026—representing the division’s most robust performance since the company initiated segment reporting in 2019.
TD Cowen analyst John Blackledge projects cloud revenue will compound at a 37% annual rate, escalating from approximately $100 billion this year to $480 billion by 2031.
Alphabet shares had appreciated roughly 11% year-to-date through the preceding Friday, positioning it among the strongest performers within the Magnificent Seven collective this year.
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