Renaissance Technologies trimmed its Alphabet position in Q4 of 2025 by a big margin.
The quantitative trading giant, founded by the late mathematician Jim Simons, slashed its Alphabet (GOOGL) stock stake by 88.6% in the fourth quarter of 2025, according to Tikr.com, selling down to just 296,470 shares worth roughly $93 million.
That means the firm unloaded a position that was once worth close to $800 million. For a stock that gained 65% in 2025, its best year since 2009, per CNBC, the timing is notable.
So what does this move mean for investors who still hold Alphabet? And is this a warning sign or just a routine rebalancing?
Alphabet reported stellar Q4 numbers
Let’s start with the numbers, because they were impressive.
- Alphabet posted fourth-quarter revenue of $113.83 billion, up nearly 18% year over year (YoY), CNBC reported.
- Earnings per share came in at $2.82, well above analyst estimates of $2.63, per CNBC.
- Net income hit $34.46 billion, a jump of nearly 30% from the same period a year earlier.
- Google Search continued to be the engine behind all of it. Search and other advertising revenues hit $63.1 billion for the quarter, up 17%, with retail leading all verticals.
- Google Cloud was the standout. Revenue surged 48% to $17.66 billion, smashing Wall Street‘s estimate of $16.18 billion.
- The cloud backlog, a forward-looking measure of committed customer spending, climbed 55% sequentially to $240 billion. That’s more than double where it stood a year ago.
YouTube advertising came in at $11.38 billion, up 9%, though it fell short of the $11.84 billion analysts had expected.
Related: Analyst reacts to Alphabet’s strong fourth quarter results: Interview
The company attributed part of the miss to lapping strong political ad spending from the 2024 election cycle.
Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai said the Gemini AI app now has more than 750 million monthly active users, up from 650 million the prior quarter. The company also noted it cut Gemini serving unit costs by 78% over 2025.
Alphabet stock dividend should grow
The tech behemoth is aggressively investing in capital expenditures to gain a first-mover advantage in the rapidly expanding AI vertical, suggesting dividend hikes would be steady rather than spectacular in the near term.
Alphabet recently raised its quarterly dividend to $0.21 per share, up from $0.20 per share.
Analysts tracking GOOGL stock forecast free cash flow to decline from $73.37 billion in 2025 to $21.1 billion in 2026.
More Dividend Stocks:
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- 84-year-old Dividend King tops $1 trillion valuation milestone
- Cisco stock resets dividend payout as AI moat widens
Comparatively, its annual dividend expense is around $10 billion, which indicates a payout ratio of less than 50% in 2026.
However, FCF is forecast to increase to $192 billion in 2030, while the annual dividend is projected to expand to $1.07 per share.
Key dividend metrics for GOOGL stock
- Annual dividend: $0.84 per share (paid quarterly at $0.21 per share).
- Dividend yield: Approximately 0.27% based on the recent share price.
- Dividend payout ratio: Roughly 50% and improving rapidly through 2030, leaving significant room for future increases.
- Dividend history: Alphabet initiated its dividend in 2024, marking its first-ever shareholder payout.
Alphabet’s yield is low by traditional dividend standards. But the company’s strong free cash flow and fortress balance sheet suggest the payout has room to grow meaningfully over time.
What the Renaissance exit tells us
Jim Simons founded Renaissance Technologies in 1978, hiring mathematicians over stock-pickers and pioneering data-driven investing.
His Medallion Fund averaged more than 60% annually for 30 years and gained 82% during the 2008 crash. Simons passed away in May 2024 at age 86, leaving a $31 billion fortune. Peter Brown now leads the firm.
Renaissance is a quantitative fund. Its buy-and-sell decisions are driven by computer models rather than traditional fundamental analysis. So reading too much into any single trade can be misleading.
Still, the scale of this exit, nearly $700 million worth of GOOGL stock out the door, is hard to ignore.
Part of this could simply reflect profit-taking after Alphabet’s massive 2025 run. The tech stock hit a low in April amid tariff fears, but it more than doubled from that trough by year-end.
That’s a significant gain, and large funds often trim positions after outperformance.
There’s also the matter of Alphabet’s 2026 capital expenditure plan.
The company said it expects to spend $175 billion to $185 billion on infrastructure this year, potentially more than double its 2025 spend of $91.4 billion.
That kind of investment ramps up depreciation and squeezes near-term margins.
The bigger picture for GOOGL stock investors
Alphabet’s artificial intelligence momentum is real. The Gemini app is gaining users fast, and AI Mode in Google Search is driving longer, more complex queries, which translate to better monetization opportunities over time.
During the Q4 earnings call, CEO Sundar Pichai offered more detail.
Notably, revenue from generative AI products on Google Cloud grew nearly 400% YoY in the fourth quarter.
GOOGL stock is up close to 800% over the past decade. Despite these outsized returns, it trades at a 21% discount to consensus price targets.
Renaissance’s exit may reflect nothing more than algorithmic profit-taking on a stock that has more than tripled over the past three years.
But with $175 billion-plus in spending commitments ahead and a dividend that’s still in its infancy, investors will want to keep a close eye on how efficiently Alphabet turns that investment into results.
The runway here looks long. The question is whether the market has already priced in too much of the good news.
Related: Billionaire George Soros buys $137M in AI chips, trims Alphabet

