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Verily headquarters in San Bruno, California.

Courtesy: Verily

Verily is selling its stop-loss insurance subsidiary, Granular Insurance Company, to the insurance provider Elevance Health, the Alphabet health tech company confirmed to CNBC on Thursday.

Verily is one of Google’s sister companies and operates within Alphabet’s “Other Bets” category. The Granular sale is the latest in a series of sweeping changes at the precision health company, which has slashed its workforce, restructured its business and overhauled its executive leadership in recent years.

The terms of the deal were not disclosed. 

Verily launched Granular, initially called Coefficient Insurance Company, in 2020 with financial backing from the commercial insurance unit of the Swiss Re Group. The business offered self-funded employers and captives medical stop-loss, fronting reinsurance and fronting solutions that used “proprietary technology,” Verily said.

Alphabet’s health company has raised more than $1 billion, and it has attracted big-name talent. Apple’s former head of health strategic initiatives, Myoung Cha, joined Verily as chief product officer last year, and Andrew Trister, Verily’s chief medical and scientific officer, was a founding member of Apple’s health team. Amy Abernethy, who served as principal deputy commissioner at the U.S. Food and Drug administration, joined the company in 2021 before departing in late 2023. 

But Verily has struggled to find and stick to a winning niche in health care. 

The company started as a moonshot in 2015 within Alphabet’s innovation lab X, formerly Google X, where it developed hardware like continuous glucose monitors. Verily pivoted to pandemic response when Covid-19 broke out in 2020, and it switched directions again to focus on precision medicine in 2022.

Verily introduced a new artificial intelligence-powered chronic care solution in June called Lightpath. The first offering is metabolic health focused, and it will support patients taking the blockbuster weight loss medications called GLP-1s, using continuous glucose monitors or other interventions, according to a release.

And now, the company is getting out of the insurance business.

Elevance Health did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment. The deal was first reported by Business Insider.

Watch: Alphabet shares sink after mixed Q4 results

Alphabet shares sink after mixed Q4 results

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Waymo crosses 450,000 weekly paid rides as Alphabet robotaxi unit widens lead on Tesla

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Waymo crosses 450,000 weekly paid rides as Alphabet robotaxi unit widens lead on Tesla

Waymo driverless taxi parks in lower Manhattan in New York City, U.S., Nov. 26, 2025.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Waymo, the robotaxi unit owned by Alphabet, has crossed 450,000 weekly paid rides, according to a letter from investor Tiger Global viewed by CNBC.

That’s almost double the milestone it hit in April, when Waymo reported 250,000 paid robotaxi rides a week in the U.S.

“Waymo is the clear leader in autonomous driving, recently surpassing 450k trips per week with a product that is 10x safer than human drivers,” Tiger Global wrote in a letter to investors announcing the launch of a new fund.

Tiger’s 450,000-ride estimate is based on publicly available data. Waymo is one of the largest positions in Tiger’s 2024 fund.

Waymo declined to comment.

Watch: Waymo launches paid robotaxi rides on freeways

This year, Waymo has also announced a slew of expansions, including its debut on freeways in three cities, and autonomous driving in cities including Miami, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and Orlando.

The latest milestone is also another sign that Waymo is continuing to push ahead of aspiring self-driving competitor Tesla, which has run limited pilots in Austin and operates a ride-hailing service in the Bay Area.

Tesla vehicles include human drivers or safety supervisors on board and are not driverless like Waymo’s fleet vehicles.

According to Tesla’s latest earnings call, executives said the company hit a quarter of a million miles with its fleet in Austin, and more than one million in the Bay Area. In July, Waymo announced 100 million total fully autonomous miles.

Read more CNBC tech news

CNBC’s Lora Kolodny contributed to this article.

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Apple’s chip boss squashes exit rumors, says he’s not leaving the company

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Apple's chip boss squashes exit rumors, says he's not leaving the company

Johny Srouji, senior vice president of hardware technologies at Apple Inc., speaks during the Peek Performance virtual event in New York, U.S., on Tuesday, March 8, 2022.

Gabby Jones | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Apple chip leader Johny Srouji addressed rumors of his impending exit in a memo to staff on Monday, saying he doesn’t plan on leaving the company anytime soon.

“I love my team, and I love my job at Apple, and I don’t plan on leaving anytime soon,” he wrote.

Bloomberg reported on Saturday that Srouji had told CEO Tim Cook that he was considering leaving, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

Srouji is seen as one of the most important executives at the company and he’s been in charge of the company’s hardware technologies team that includes chip development. At Apple since 2008, he has led teams that created the M-series chips used in Macs and the A-series chips at the heart of iPhones.

The memo confirming that he plans to stay at Apple comes as the company has seen several high-profile executive exits in the past weeks, raising questions about the stability of Apple’s top leadership.

In addition to developing the chips that enabled Apple to drop Intel from its laptops and desktops, in recent years Srouji’s teams have developed a cellular modem that will replace Qualcomm’s modems in most iPhones.

Srouji frequently presents at Apple product launches.

“I know you’ve been reading all kind of rumors and speculations about my future at Apple, and I feel that you need to hear from me directly,” Srouji wrote in the memo. “I am proud of the amazing Technologies we all build across Displays, Cameras, Sensors, Silicon, Batteries, and a very wide set of technologies, across all of Apple Products.”

Last week, Apple announced that its head of artificial intelligence, John Giannandrea, was stepping down.

Two days later, the company announced the departure of Alan Dye, the head of user interface design. Dye, who was behind the “Liquid Glass” redesign, is joining Meta.

A day after Dye’s departure, Apple announced the retirement of general counsel Kate Adams and vice president for environment, policy, and social initiatives Lisa Jackson. Both Adams and Jackson reported directly to Cook.

Apple’s chief operating officer, Jeff Williams, retired this fall.

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Tiger Global launches new fund eyeing $2.2 billion raise as it takes more disciplined approach

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Tiger Global launches new fund eyeing .2 billion raise as it takes more disciplined approach

Tiger Global launches new fund as it takes more disciplined approach

Tiger Global Management announced Monday the launch of its latest venture capital fund, Private Investment Partners 17, according to a letter to investors viewed by CNBC.

Tiger is targeting a raise of $2.2 billion for the fund, according to a person familiar with the firm’s strategy who declined to be named in order to discuss internal matters.

The hedge fund wrote that it’s expecting PIP 17 to be similar in “strategy, size and construction” to its earliest vintages and its most recent, PIP 16, which targeted $6 billion but ultimately closed at $2.2 billion.

The largest positions in PIP 16 are OpenAI and Waymo, stakes that have helped performance rebound. In a call with investors, Tiger said that PIP 16 is up 33% year-to-date, while PIP 15 is up 16%.

Compared to the megafunds of the early 2020s, the latest raise target signals a pivot to a more disciplined strategy for Tiger Global.

The firm was one of the biggest forces in the startup ecosystem over the last half-decade, but has seen heavy markdowns and slower deployment in the last few years.

In 2021, the heyday of its “spray and pray” approach, it led 212 rounds, according to Crunchbase data. This year, it made just nine new private investments.

Tiger first invested in OpenAI in 2021 at a valuation of less than $16 billion and in Waymo that same year at $39 billion.

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The Tiger Global letter and audio of the investor call obtained by CNBC also signal some concerns about the potential for a bubble in artificial intelligence.

“[V]aluations are elevated, and, in our view, at times unsupported by company fundamentals,” the firm wrote in the letter. “We also recognize the importance of approaching a technological shift of this magnitude with some humility.”

The strategy that founder Chase Coleman laid out is to prune aggressively and reinforce its biggest winners.

Tiger says it has sold more than 85 companies from PIP 15, generating over $1 billion in proceeds.

That money can now be recycled into follow-in investments for companies it considers winners.

Some of the names Tiger said it would concentrate on include Revolut, a digital banking startup, and ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok.

Other companies Tiger is focusing on include police tech company Flock Safety, EV company Harbinger, e-commerce startup Rokt, freight company Cargomatic, and stablecoin startup BVNK, the investor presentation showed.

The AI pressure cooker: OpenAI, Nvidia and Google all on the move

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