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Alphabet stock declines 2% as Wall Street flags near-term risks

Alphabet stock declines 2% as Wall Street flags near-term risks
Devesh Kumar
Feb 17, 2026, 08:36 AM
  • Alphabet slips as investors reassess near-term returns from AI spending.
  • Heavy 2026 capex shifts focus from growth to cash-flow timing.
  • Analysts stay cautious despite strong ad and cloud momentum.

Alphabet stock (NASDAQ: GOOGL) slipped about 2% in pre-market trading on Tuesday, a pullback that says more about near-term nerves than any sudden break in Google’s core business.

Investors have been re-pricing big-cap AI winners on some simple questions like how quickly does heavy spending translate into visible cash returns.

For Alphabet, that debate has sharpened after management sketched out a far bigger 2026 capital spending plan, prompting some Wall Street voices to argue the risk-reward looks less compelling in the short run.

Alphabet stock: Near-term concerns weigh

Alphabet was down roughly 2.5% at one point on Friday, trading around $323 after closing at $331.33 the prior session, with volume running well above average.

MarketBeat linked the sell-off primarily to management guidance that 2026 capital expenditures could reach about $175 billion to $185 billion, nearly double 2025 levels, which shifted the market’s focus from earnings momentum to payback timelines.​

That matters because capex, money spent on long-lived assets like data centers and servers, can weigh on free cash flow in the near term even if it strengthens the business over time.

In this setup, Alphabet stock doesn’t need a negative surprise to fall; it just needs investors to decide the next clear catalyst is further out than the stock price implies.​

Analyst caution has also become more explicit.

Monness analyst Brian White maintained a “Neutral” stance (a Hold rating), even while acknowledging strong operating trends, a sign that some on the Street see limited near-term upside at current valuation levels.

White cited a “challenging macroeconomic environment” and intense competition in AI and cloud services as key reasons the valuation looks demanding despite business momentum.​

Also Read: How ‘HALO’ trade is pushing hard-asset stocks ahead of Big Tech

Fundamentals still sound

The push-pull in Alphabet’s story is that the fundamentals have not suddenly deteriorated.

Alphabet reported fourth-quarter revenue of $113.83 billion and earnings per share of $2.82, beating consensus estimates, with revenue up 18% from a year earlier.

Google Cloud grew about 48% year-on-year in the quarter, and Alphabet’s backlog jumped to roughly $240 billion, according to MarketBeat’s summary of the results.​

Monness’s White also pointed to “robust trends in digital advertising,” solid momentum in Google Search, and a re-acceleration in Google Cloud revenue growth, alongside “considerable strides” in AI.

The issue is not whether Alphabet is investing in the right direction; it is whether the market is willing to fund that investment cycle at today’s multiple without clearer visibility on monetization timing.

MarketBeat also flagged additional overhangs that can amplify short-term volatility, including regulatory and policy risks tied to data-center expansion and operating costs.

Put together, Alphabet stock drop reads like a near-term reset: strong growth engines remain in place, but investors are demanding more proof, and may be less patient while the spending curve steepens.