Day: September 3, 2025
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
- Google avoided divesting Chrome in an antitrust ruling, boosting its stock 6.7% in after-hours trading.
- Analysts see the ruling as largely favorable for the search giant and raised Google’s stock targets.
- Analysts called the decision “benign” and said it removed a “significant overhang” on the stock.
The verdict on Google’s lengthy lawsuit is out, and analysts say the search giant left the room largely unscathed.
Nearly five years after the Department of Justice filed an antitrust suit against Google, a district judge on Tuesday ruled that Google won’t have to divest its Chrome or YouTube businesses.
Instead, District Judge Amit Mehta’s ruling said that Google will be barred from entering exclusive contracts with partners such as Apple to give its search engine priority, and it will be forced to share some data with rivals.
Google’s stock jumped 6.7% after hours following the decision.
In post-ruling reactions, analysts called the decision “benign” and said that it finally removed a “significant overhang” on Google’s stock.
“The judge’s decision largely surrounded opening up portions of Google’s search technology to competitors rather than trying to disrupt its distribution framework (ie divesting Chrome) which seemed like the more adverse risk to us,” RBC Capital analysts led by Brad Erickson wrote in a note on Tuesday.
“The path for compounding earnings growth along with multiple expansion hasn’t looked this clear in some time,” the RBC analysts added.
RBC raised its price target for the company from $220 to $260 on Tuesday.
Alphabet, Google’s parent company, closed at $212 on Tuesday.
Analysts at Wedbush titled their note, “Government Folds Like Cheap Suit” and wrote: “The outcome is broadly favorable for Google, in our view, with the court ruling against the most severe remedy proposals introduced by the DOJ.”
The Wedbush analysts led by Scott Devitt shared three reasons they are bullish on Google and think its stock is being punished compared to Big Tech peers like Meta.
First, they said that Tuesday’s decision removed “lingering risks” associated with the worst-case outcome for the company. Second, they said that the impact of generative AI rivals such as OpenAI and Perplexity is fading. Lastly, they added that Google’s leadership is “repositioning the business as a winner in the AI space, with strong demand trends and an acceleration in Cloud growth.”
Wedbush raised its stock price target from $225 to $245 on Tuesday.
Google’s stock has risen 11.3% year to date.
In today’s newsletter: The leftwing candidate crushed rivals Adrian Ramsay and Ellie Chowns. Will his leadership take the party to new heights – or risk alienating hard-won moderates?
Good morning. After a bruising leadership contest, Zack Polanski didn’t just win the Green party vote, he cleaned up. His “eco-populist” platform – which borrowed directly from Nigel Farage’s playbook – earned him 85% of votes.
Polanski defeated Adrian Ramsay and Ellie Chowns, winning 20,411 votes relative to their 3,705 in a ballot of party members. The contest exposed deeper questions about Green party identity and how it positions itself amid a rapidly shifting political landscape.
UK news | Britain’s long-term borrowing costs have hit their highest level in 27 years, intensifying the pressure on the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, before the autumn budget.
Spain | Europe and western countries’ double standards over the wars in Ukraine and Gaza threaten to undermine their global standing, the Spanish prime minister, Pedro Sánchez, has warned.
Brazil | Former Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro and seven of his allies, including four senior members of the military, have gone on trial for allegedly attempting to stage a coup.
China | Xi Jinping warned the world faced a choice between peace or war as he capped a week of diplomatic grandstanding with China’s largest-ever military parade, flanked by Russia’s Vladimir Putin and North Korea’s Kim Jong-un.
UK news | Esther Ghey, the mother of the murdered teenager Brianna Ghey, and the Oscar-winning actor Kate Winslet are calling on Keir Starmer to legally ban smartphones in schools.
