Alphabet’s recent earnings call left investors hanging when it came to questions about its new AI deal with Apple. The company chose not to dive into details, even as curiosity grew about how this partnership might affect Google’s search business. This move highlights the tricky balance tech giants face as artificial intelligence changes the game for searches and ads.
During Alphabet’s 4th quarter earnings call this week, executives skipped over direct questions about the Apple AI partnership. Google CEO Sundar Pichai made only brief comments. He said that Google serves as Apple’s “preferred cloud provider” and is helping develop “the next generation of Apple foundation models.” Chief Business Officer Philipp Schindler repeated the same words, showing a careful company line.
Alphabet’s refusal to talk details points to bigger concerns. Firstly, the company may not have clear answers about long-term effects. AI Search, like Google’s AI Mode, shows answers in a chatbot style instead of listing ad links at the top. This could change how ads appear and make money.
Secondly, competition and rules play a role. The US Department of Justice already looks at Google’s search deals with Apple. Adding AI raises more questions about fair play. Other AI players like OpenAI watch closely, too.
Apple announced the multi-year deal with Google on 12 January 2026. It integrates Gemini into Siri and Apple Intelligence for better reasoning on iOS updates. Apple has tested OpenAI’s tech, but picked Google for reliable scale and privacy via Google Cloud.
This helps Apple catch up in AI after delays, while Google gets a spot in Apple’s huge user base. Pichai expressed pleasure about the tie-ups in other comments, calling Google Apple’s preferred partner.
For Google, the deal boosts its AI push after early stumbles with Bard and Gemini. It locks in cloud revenue and tests AI in real-world use. But search ads, Alphabet’s cash cow, face questions as AI-summarizing might cut clicks on ad links.
Apple gets time to build its own AI chips, planned for late 2026. The $1 billion payment is small next to search billions, but it secures top AI now. OpenAI takes a hit, losing Siri’s default status amid falling ChatGPT use.
This partnership shows us how giants team up to sustain themselves in the AI race. Google and Apple have shared search for years, dodging the need for their own search engines.
The earnings silence underscores caution. As Pichai noted being “pleased” with the partnership, Alphabet focuses on execution over talk. Investors await real results as AI reshapes tech in 2026.
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