Close Menu
  • Home
  • Market News
    • Crude Oil Prices
    • Brent vs WTI
    • Futures & Trading
    • OPEC Announcements
  • Company & Corporate
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Earnings Reports
    • Executive Moves
    • ESG & Sustainability
  • Geopolitical & Global
    • Middle East
    • North America
    • Europe & Russia
    • Asia & China
    • Latin America
  • Supply & Disruption
    • Pipeline Disruptions
    • Refinery Outages
    • Weather Events (hurricanes, floods)
    • Labor Strikes & Protest Movements
  • Policy & Regulation
    • U.S. Energy Policy
    • EU Carbon Targets
    • Emissions Regulations
    • International Trade & Sanctions
  • Tech
    • Energy Transition
    • Hydrogen & LNG
    • Carbon Capture
    • Battery / Storage Tech
  • ESG
    • Climate Commitments
    • Greenwashing News
    • Net-Zero Tracking
    • Institutional Divestments
  • Financial
    • Interest Rates Impact on Oil
    • Inflation + Demand
    • Oil & Stock Correlation
    • Investor Sentiment

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

What's Hot

Seatrium signs FLNG vessel upgrade contract with Golar

August 27, 2025

Elliott affiliate emerges as frontrunner in Citgo auction, filing says – Oil & Gas 360

August 27, 2025

EnerMech wins two-year cranes contract extension with Dubai Petroleum

August 27, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Threads
Oil Market Cap – Global Oil & Energy News, Data & Analysis
  • Home
  • Market News
    • Crude Oil Prices
    • Brent vs WTI
    • Futures & Trading
    • OPEC Announcements
  • Company & Corporate
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Earnings Reports
    • Executive Moves
    • ESG & Sustainability
  • Geopolitical & Global
    • Middle East
    • North America
    • Europe & Russia
    • Asia & China
    • Latin America
  • Supply & Disruption
    • Pipeline Disruptions
    • Refinery Outages
    • Weather Events (hurricanes, floods)
    • Labor Strikes & Protest Movements
  • Policy & Regulation
    • U.S. Energy Policy
    • EU Carbon Targets
    • Emissions Regulations
    • International Trade & Sanctions
  • Tech
    • Energy Transition
    • Hydrogen & LNG
    • Carbon Capture
    • Battery / Storage Tech
  • ESG
    • Climate Commitments
    • Greenwashing News
    • Net-Zero Tracking
    • Institutional Divestments
  • Financial
    • Interest Rates Impact on Oil
    • Inflation + Demand
    • Oil & Stock Correlation
    • Investor Sentiment
Oil Market Cap – Global Oil & Energy News, Data & Analysis
Home » Google might lose its $26 billion search deals in antitrust trial
Emissions Regulations

Google might lose its $26 billion search deals in antitrust trial

omc_adminBy omc_adminAugust 27, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Threads Bluesky Copy Link


Antitrust ruling could end Google’s $26 billion default deals, but experts see upside for AI

Any day now, a federal judge is expected to issue a landmark ruling that could upend some of the most lucrative deals in Silicon Valley: Google’s default search contracts.

At stake is more than $26 billion a year, $20 billion of which goes to Apple. That’s nearly a quarter of Alphabet’s operating income.

For decades, the Apple-Google pact has helped determine who controls the internet, which is exactly why it’s now in the crosshairs.

U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta ruled last year that Google held a monopoly in search and ads. He’s been weighing remedies since the final phase of the trial wrapped in May, with a separate case on Google’s ad business set to begin next month under a different judge.

While Google risks losing some search traffic and predictability, analysts say Apple could take a bigger financial hit. The impact will hinge on whether Apple lines up new deals and how broadly the ruling applies.

Jefferies analysts say the judge may block exclusive contracts but still allow some payments. Even so, Apple’s pre-tax profits could drop by as much as 7%.

Some economists and Wall Street analysts believe Google might come out ahead in the long run — freed from costly deals that no longer drive demand.

Searching for competition

Barclays analysts said in an August 5 note that if Google were to unwind the payments and contracts, it would still be “nearly impossible” for smaller peers to compete.

Megacap rival Microsoft has poured $100 billion into Bing and hasn’t been able to catch Google’s Chrome.

Apple Senior Vice President of Services Eddy Cue testified during the antitrust trial that no price Microsoft could offer would be enough to justify switching to Bing, because Google delivered stronger results and a better monetization engine.

“I don’t believe there’s a price in the world that Microsoft could offer us. They offered to give us Bing for free. They could give us the whole company,” Cue said.

Apple executives contend that it’s easy for users to switch search engines. Currently, Apple allows Americans to switch to Yahoo, Bing, DuckDuckGo, or Ecosia as their default search engine, but few do.

“I think their search engine is the best,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said about Google in 2018.

Economist Lones Smith, who modeled how people decide which search engine to use, described the phenomenon as a natural monopoly, where scale breeds quality, and quality reinforces scale.

“I don’t understand this deal it has with Apple, because if they didn’t pay Apple $20 billion, do they think that people would really be using another search engine? I don’t see that,” Smith told CNBC.

Smith likened Google to a utility: Breaking it up makes little economic sense.

“How do we get our water, electrical, and all that? We have a regulated monopoly. We don’t go and break it up,” he said. “We understand that there’s an efficient outcome for society, and we just don’t want the water company to be exploiting us.”

Google search threat shifts to AI

From a pure economics perspective, some on Wall Street would argue that the payments look like unnecessary insurance and that Google’s dominance is sticky enough without them.

Data suggests users opt for Google even when there is a choice.

In Europe, where regulators forced users to pick their own default after a European Commission ruling against Google, the company’s market share barely budged.

StatCounter data showed its market share still hovers around 90%.

Dan Niles, founder of Niles Investment Management, told CNBC that while Europe proves Google can thrive without these payments, the U.S. market moves faster, and what’s next matters more than what’s lost.

“Google to me, quite honestly, once this is done … next year, if they continue down this path, it could be one of the best-performing stocks out there,” Niles said.

Even Google’s proposed remedy points in that direction, allowing shorter default contracts and multiple providers instead of blanket exclusivity, while warning that the bigger risk comes from the DOJ’s push for search data-sharing.

The decision

Former FTC Chair William Kovacic told CNBC that the Justice Department is essentially betting that limiting Google’s exclusivity deals will open the door for new competitors to emerge.

“In part, it’s an act of faith,” he said, though past cases have shown that once barriers are removed, innovation often follows in unexpected ways

Kovacic warned that a Chrome divestiture — one of the more extreme remedies floated — might be more symbolic than effective.

“The big breakup has always been antitrust fascination,” he said. “But you can wonder whether that distracts you from solutions that have more to do with solving the competitive problem that you’ve identified today.”

Kovacic called a possible Chrome divestiture “a flashy, shiny object” that may not solve the real problem.

Rebecca Allensworth, a scholar of antitrust and Big Tech, emphasized that it’s not a zero-sum game.

“You can have a very strong antitrust remedy … and then two, five, ten years later, that company is actually doing extremely well,” she said. “These are not existential threats to the company.”

Allensworth said the payments aren’t necessarily what keep people using Google and likened it to “innovation insurance,” freezing the ecosystem so that rivals don’t have a chance to compete.

“Google fought really, really hard to be able to make those payments,” said Allensworth, a law professor at Vanderbilt. “It makes the industry innovation-proof, in a way. Or at least, if there’s going to be innovation, it’s going to be by and for the benefit of Google.”

The DOJ, concerned that Google could repeat its playbook with its artificial intelligence platform Gemini, is pushing for restrictions on exclusive AI distribution deals — and even proposing data-sharing mandates.

These would force Google to give rivals access to anonymized data about what users search for and which results they click.

AI opportunity

Since 2003 — before the iPhone or Chrome existed — Google’s default search deals with Apple have helped shape the internet. In 2017, Pichai and Cook were spotted sipping red wine at Tamarine, an upscale Vietnamese restaurant in Palo Alto, while their teams finalized one of the most lucrative arrangements in tech: keeping Google the default on Apple devices.

Eight years later, the same two CEOs are still at the helm — but the dynamics have changed. A new era of search is emerging, driven not by contracts, but by generative AI.

Wall Street analysts have considered the upside if Google stopped writing Apple a $20 billion check and redirected that money into AI and cloud, lifting profits while keeping its dominance intact.

“Let’s then assume that Google is limited from paying for search distribution deals, and others can leverage Google’s search tech stack, then what other properties can Google prioritize that may fall outside the scope of these cases?” mused Bernstein analysts in April. “Gemini.”

Niles said that with Gemini the company has a chance to shift from being seen as lagging in AI to potentially offering the strongest product on the market, a change already showing up in benchmark tests

Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai said during the trial that he spoke to Cook about adding Gemini to Apple devices. In June, Apple announced the integration of OpenAI’s ChatGPT at WWDC.

Apple’s Cue testified that other AI services like Perplexity and Anthropic could also be added to Safari as options.

But neither can touch Google’s scale.

Perplexity reportedly handles 15 million queries per day, compared to Google’s 10 billion.

And Pichai said Google isn’t standing still, testifying in April that AI will “deeply transform” search.

WATCH: Alphabet hits intraday record high on $10B Meta cloud deal, Apple Gemini talks

Alphabet hits intraday record high on $10B Meta cloud deal, Apple Gemini talks



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest Bluesky Threads Tumblr Telegram Email
omc_admin
  • Website

Related Posts

Trump’s Cook firing will likely to end up in the Supreme Court’s hands

August 26, 2025

Orsted shares tumble as U.S. halts wind project construction

August 25, 2025

Solar executives say Trump attack on renewables will lead to power crunch

August 24, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

LPG sales grow 5.1% in FY25, 43.6 lakh new customers enrolled, ET EnergyWorld

May 16, 20255 Views

South Sudan on edge as Sudan’s war threatens vital oil industry | Sudan war News

May 21, 20254 Views

Trump’s 100 days, AI bubble, volatility: Market Takeaways

December 16, 20072 Views
Don't Miss

EnerMech wins two-year cranes contract extension with Dubai Petroleum

By omc_adminAugust 27, 2025

EnerMech has secured a two-year contract extension with Dubai Petroleum to continue providing the Middle…

Petrobras to re-enter Nigeria five years after halting JV operations

August 27, 2025

OPEC May Unwind 1.65MM Bpd of Cuts at Next Meeting, Analyst Warns

August 27, 2025

Equinor Makes New Oil and Gas Discovery Near Troll Field

August 27, 2025
Top Trending

When science meets music: Florida’s oyster decline is being told through jazz | Florida

By omc_adminAugust 27, 2025

Deforestation has killed half a million people in past 20 years, study finds | Deforestation

By omc_adminAugust 27, 2025

Aalo Raises $100 Million to Build Combo Advanced Nuclear Plant and Data Center

By omc_adminAugust 27, 2025
Most Popular

The Layoffs List of 2025: Meta, Microsoft, Block, and More

May 9, 20259 Views

Analysis: Reform-led councils threaten 6GW of solar and battery schemes across England

June 16, 20252 Views

Guest post: How ‘feedback loops’ and ‘non-linear thinking’ can inform climate policy

June 5, 20252 Views
Our Picks

Seatrium signs FLNG vessel upgrade contract with Golar

August 27, 2025

Petrobras to re-enter Nigeria five years after halting JV operations

August 27, 2025

Trump’s 50% Tariffs on Indian Imports Hits Jobs, Bilateral Ties

August 27, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest news

Subscribe my Newsletter for New Posts & tips Let's stay updated!

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2025 oilmarketcap. Designed by oilmarketcap.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.