Who would’ve expected Google to become anyone’s subsidiary? But that’s what happened Monday.
Google on Monday announced a new corporate operating structure, creating a new company, Alphabet, that will count the Internet giant as a subsidiary. Sundar Pichai, currently a senior vice president in charge of Internet businesses, will become CEO of Google. Current chief executive Larry Page will take the same post at Alphabet and run the company with co-founder Sergey Brin.
“This new structure will allow us to keep tremendous focus on the extraordinary opportunities we have inside of Google,” Page wrote in a blog post Monday.
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Alphabet will become the company’s publicly traded entity starting in the fourth quarter, breaking out Google unit earnings in quarterly results. All shares will convert into Alphabet stock, with the two classes continuing to trade under the tickers GOOGL and GOOG.
Google’s Class A shares jumped more than 5% on the news.
Jacob Pramuk









