Google rolls out AI Finance globally

Google announced a global launch of an AI‑powered Google Finance product that promises advanced market insights for professional users, expanding its finance tooling beyond existing consumer features. The launch was posted on Google's social channels over the last 48 hours (x.com).

Google has started rolling out its new artificial-intelligence-powered Google Finance to more than 100 countries, moving the product beyond its earlier United States and India footprint. (blog.google) Google said on April 8 that the expansion would happen “over the coming weeks” and include countries such as Australia, Brazil, Canada, Indonesia, Japan and Mexico, with local-language support. (blog.google) The product adds artificial intelligence answers to market questions, advanced charting, real-time price data, watchlist-based news and a “Deep Search” mode for longer research tasks inside Google Finance. (support.google.com) (blog.google) Google first began testing the new Finance product in August 2025, framing it as a way to ask complex investing questions in plain English instead of checking one stock page at a time. (blog.google) In November 2025, Google added Deep Search, live earnings tracking and prediction-markets data from Kalshi and Polymarket, and it made India the first market outside the United States to get the redesigned service. (blog.google) The global rollout pushes Google further into tools long associated with professional market terminals, even though Google Finance remains a web product tied to Search and public market data rather than a full brokerage or execution platform. (labs.google.com) (google.com) Google’s help page says the service pulls market news and updates from “various trusted sources,” and its charting tools let users work with historical data and technical indicators such as candlestick views. (support.google.com) (blog.google) The company has not said in its launch post that the product requires a separate paid subscription, and the public Search Labs page still describes it as an experiment users can join. (blog.google) (labs.google.com) For Google, the change turns a long-running consumer finance site into a broader research product: one that now answers questions, surfaces live earnings and follows markets in more than 100 countries. (google.com) (blog.google)

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