Google faces loss of Chrome as Perplexity bid adds drama to looming breakup decision
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Sundar Pichai, chief executive officer of Alphabet Inc., during a visit to the Google for Startups campus in Warsaw, Poland, on Thursday, Feb. 13, 2025. The EU has established a reputation globally for its aggressive regulation of major technology companies, including the likes of Apple and Google over antitrust concerns. Photographer: Damian Lemanski/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Damian Lemanski | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Perplexity AI’s bid on Tuesday to buy Google’s Chrome browser for $34.5 billion represents a dramatic moment for the internet search giant, a week before it celebrates the 20th anniversary of its IPO.
Even if analysts aren’t taking the offer very seriously, Perplexity’s move marks a turning point. It’s the first time an outside party has made such a public and specific effort to strip out a key piece of Google, which is currently awaiting a judge’s decision on whether it must take significant divestiture steps following a ruling last year that the company has held a monopoly in its core search market.
The ruling was widely viewed as the most important antitrust decision in the tech industry since the case against Microsoft more than two decades ago. The U.S. Department of Justice, which filed the landmark case against Google in 2020, indicated after its victory in court that it was considering a possible breakup of Google as an antitrust remedy.
Soon after that, the DOJ explicitly called for Google to divest Chrome to create a more equal playing field for search competitors. As is, Google bundles search and other services into Chrome and preinstalls the browser on Chromebooks. Google Legal Chief Kent Walker said in response to the DOJ that its “approach would result in unprecedented government overreach” and would harm the country’s effort to maintain economic and tech leadership.
With the remedies decision expected this month, investors have a lot to consider regarding the future value of Google and parent Alphabet. The company is shelling out tens of billions of dollars a year on artificial intelligence infrastructure and AI services while facing the risk that consumers will be spending a lot less time on traditional search as ChatGPT and other AI-powered alternatives provide new ways to access information.
But while Alphabet still counts on search-related ads for the majority of its revenue, the company has been diversifying over the past decade. October will mark 10 years since the creation of Alphabet as a holding company, with Google as its prime subsidiary.
“This new structure will allow us to keep tremendous focus on the extraordinary opportunities we have inside of Google,” co-founder Larry Page said in a blog post at the time.
Page moved from CEO of Google to become chief executive of Alphabet, promoting Sundar Pichai, who had been a senior vice president in charge of internet businesses, to run Google. Four years later, Pichai replaced Page as Alphabet CEO.
On Pichai’s watch, Alphabet’s market cap has jumped more than 150% to $2.5 trillion. With an increasingly dominant position on the internet, Pichai and team have had to continue looking for growth areas, particularly in AI, while simultaneously fending off an aggressive set of regulators in the U.S. and Europe.
Analysts have taken the opportunity to place estimated values on Alphabet’s various businesses, partly in the event that the company is ever forced into drastic measures. Some have even suggested it could be a good thing for shareholders.
“We believe the only way forward for Alphabet is a complete breakup that would allow investors to own the business they actually want,” analysts at D.A. Davidson have written in a series of notes this year.
Alphabet didn’t respond to a request for comment.
Here’s a breakdown of how some analysts value Alphabet’s top non-search assets:
Chrome

The browser is key to Alphabet’s ad business, which uses data from Chrome to help with targeted advertisements. Google originally launched Chrome in 2008 as an effort to “add value for users and, at the same time, help drive innovation on the web.”
Perplexity’s offer doesn’t stack up to analyst estimates, but it’s still much higher than Perplexity’s own valuation, which reached $18 billion in July. Perplexity, which is best known for its AI-powered search engine that gives users simple answers to inquiries, said investors are on board to foot the bill. However, the company didn’t name the prospective backers.
Barclays analysts called the possibility of a Chrome divestiture a “black swan” risk, warning of a potential 15% to 25% drop in Alphabet’s stock should it occur. They estimate that Chrome drives around 35% of Google’s search revenue.
If a deal for Chrome is on the table, analysts at Raymond James value the browser at $50 billion, based on 2.25 billion users and Google’s revenue share agreements with phone manufacturers that preinstall Chrome on devices.
That’s inline with where Gabriel Weinberg, CEO of rival search company DuckDuckGo, values Chrome. Weinberg, who testified in the antitrust trial, said in April that Chrome could be sold for up to $50 billion if a spinout was required. Weinberg said his estimate was based on “back-of-the-envelope” math, looking at Chrome’s user base.
Bob O’Donnell of market research firm TECHnalysis Research, cautioned that Chrome is “not directly monetizable,” because it serves as a gateway and that it’s “not clear how you measure that from a pure revenue-generating perspective.”
Google Cloud
A person takes a photo of the Google Cloud logo, during the 2025 Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona, Spain, March 4, 2025.
Albert Gea | Reuters
Google’s cloud unit, which is third in the cloud infrastructure market behind Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, is one of Alphabet’s key growth engines and its biggest business outside of digital advertising.
Google began its big push into the market about a decade ago, even though it officially launched what was called the Google Cloud Platform (GCP) in 2011. The unit was rebranded as just Google Cloud in 2016.
Like AWS and Azure, Google Cloud generates revenue from businesses ranging from startups to large enterprises that run workloads on the company’s servers. Additionally, customers pay for products like Google Workspace, the company’s suite of productivity apps and collaboration tools.
In 2020, Google began breaking out its cloud business in financial statements, starting with revenue. In the fourth quarter of 2020, the first time Google included profit metrics for the unit, it recorded an operating loss of $1.24 billion.
The business turned profitable in 2023, and is now generating healthy margins. In the second quarter of 2025, Google reported an operating profit for the cloud business of $2.8 billion on revenue of $13.6 billion. Demand is so high that the company’s cloud services now have a backlog, a measure of future committed revenue, of $106 billion, CFO Anat Ashkenazi said on the earnings call.
In March, Google agreed to acquire cloud security vendor Wiz for $32 billion, the company’s largest deal ever.
Analysts at Wedbush Securities value Google’s cloud at $602 billion, while TD Cowen in May put the number at about $549 billion. For Raymond James, the valuation is $579 billion.
D.A. Davidson analysts, who have the highest ascribed valuation at $682 billion, and TD Cowen analysts note that while Google still trails AWS and Azure, it’s growing faster than Amazon’s cloud business and has the potential for a premium valuation. That’s based on its AI infrastructure, strong data analytics stack, and ability to capture more enterprise business.
It would be “one of the best standalone software stocks,” D.A. Davidson analysts wrote in July.
YouTube
A Youtube podcast microphone is seen at the Variety Podcasting Brunch Presented By YouTube at Austin Proper Hotel in Austin, Texas, on March 8, 2025.
Mat Hayward | Variety | Getty Images
Google’s $1.65 billion purchase of YouTube in 2006 is generally viewed as one of the best acquisitions ever by an internet company, alongside Facebook’s $1 billion deal for Instagram in 2012.
YouTube is the largest video site on the web and a big part of Google’s ad business. In the second quarter, YouTube ad revenue increased 13% to $9.8 billion, accounting for 14% of Google’s total ad sales.
Valuation estimates vary tremendously.
Dubbing it the “new king of all media,” MoffettNathanson values YouTube at between $475 billion and $550 billion, arguing that it’s larger and more powerful than any other player in Hollywood. At the top end of that range, YouTube would be worth about 22% of all of Alphabet.
YouTube recently overtook Netflix, which has a market cap of $515 billion, as the top streaming platform in terms of audience engagement.
TD Cowen analysts ascribe a much lower valuation at $271 billion. The firm notes that it’s one of six Google products with more than 2 billion monthly users, along with search, Google Maps, Gmail, Android and Chrome. Raymond James says YouTube is worth $306 billion.
For 2024, YouTube was the second-largest media company by revenue at $54.2 billion, trailing only Disney. The platform earns revenue from advertising and subscriptions.
The TD Cowen analysts said in May that they expect ad revenue to climb about 14% this year, and they expect the unit to maintain a double-digit growth rate. There’s also a fast-growing subscription side that includes YouTube TV, music and NFL Sunday ticket.
Waymo

Alphabet’s self-driving car company, Waymo, is by far its most high-profile success so far outside of Google.
Waymo currently operates the largest commercial autonomous ride-hailing fleet in the U.S., with more than 1,500 cars and over 100 million fully driverless miles logged. Rivals like Tesla and Amazon’s Zoox are still mostly at the testing phase in limited markets.
When Alphabet was formed as Google’s parent company, it created an “Other Bets” category to include businesses that it liked to call “moonshots,” a term that had already made its way into Google lexicon.
“We won’t become complacent, relying solely on small tweaks as the years wear on,” the company wrote in its 2014 annual report, describing its moonshot projects.
Waymo was spun out of Google in 2016 to join Other Bets, which on the whole is still losing billions of dollars a year. In the second quarter, Alphabet recorded a loss for the category of $1.2 billion on $373 million in revenue.
In its most recent funding round in November, Waymo was valued at $45 billion. The transaction included outside investors Andreessen Horowitz, Tiger Global, Silver Lake, Fidelity and T. Rowe Price.
Some analysts see the unit worth many multiples of that now. D.A. Davidson analysts estimated the valuation at $200 billion or more earlier this month. Oppenheimer assigned a base case valuation of $300 billion, on the assumption that it generates $102 billion in adjusted earnings by 2040.
Raymond James values Waymo at $150 billion, with a prediction that rides per week will reach 1.4 million in 2027 and climb to 5.8 million by 2030. TD Cowen estimated Waymo’s enterprise mid-point value at $60 billion.
Waymo says it now conducts more than 250,000 paid weekly trips in the markets where it operates commercially, including Atlanta, Austin, Los Angeles, Phoenix and San Francisco. The company said it would be expanding to Philadelphia, Dallas and elsewhere.
WATCH: Alphabet’s 10-year anniversary comes as DOJ decision looms

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Technology
From Llamas to Avocados: Meta’s shifting AI strategy is causing internal confusion
Published
3 hours agoon
December 9, 2025By
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Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg makes a keynote speech at the Meta Connect annual event at the company’s headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif., on Sept. 25, 2024.
Manuel Orbegozo | Reuters
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg was so optimistic last year about his company’s Llama family of artificial intelligence models that he predicted they would become the “most advanced in the industry” and “bring the benefits of AI to everyone.”
But after including a whole section on Llama in his opening remarks during Meta’s earnings call in January of this year, he mentioned the brand name only once on the latest call in October. The company’s obsession with its open-source large language model has given way to a very different approach to AI, one focused around a multibillion-dollar hiring spree to bring in top industry talent that could help Meta take on the likes of OpenAI, Google and Anthropic.
As 2025 comes to a close, Meta’s strategy remains scattershot, according to insiders and industry experts, feeding the perception that the company has fallen further behind its top AI rivals, whose models are rapidly gaining adoption in the consumer and enterprise markets.
Meta is pursuing a new Llama successor and frontier AI model, codenamed Avocado, CNBC has learned. People with knowledge of the matter said many within the company were expecting the model to be released before the end of this year, but that the plan now is for that to happen in the first quarter of 2026. The model is wrestling with various training-related performance testing intended to ensure the system is well received when it eventually debuts, said the people, who asked not to be named because they weren’t authorized to speak on the matter.
“Our model training efforts are going according to plan and have had no meaningful timing changes,” a Meta spokesperson said in a statement.
With its stock underperforming the broader tech sector this year and badly trailing Google parent Alphabet, Wall Street is looking for a sense of direction and a path to a return on investment after Meta spent $14.3 billion in June to hire Scale AI founder Alexandr Wang and a handful of his top engineers and researchers. Four months after that announcement, which included Meta purchasing a big stake in Scale, the social media company raised its 2025 guidance for capital expenditures to between $70 billion and $72 billion from a prior range of $66 billion to $72 billion.
“In many ways, Meta has been the opposite of Alphabet, where it entered the year as an AI winner and now faces more questions around investment levels and ROI,” analysts at KeyBanc Capital Markets wrote in a November note to clients. The firm recommends buying both stocks.

At the heart of Meta’s challenge is the sustained dominance of its core business: digital advertising.
Even with annual sales in excess of $160 billion, Meta’s ad targeting business, driven by massive improvements in AI and the popularity of Instagram, is growing revenue north of 20% a year. Investors have lauded the company for using AI to bolster the strength of its cash cow and to make the organization more efficient and less bloated.
But Zuckerberg has much grander ambitions, and the new guard he’s brought in to push the future vision of AI has no background in online ads. The 41-year-old founder, with a net worth of more than $230 billion, has suggested that if Meta doesn’t take big swings, it risks becoming an afterthought in a world that’s poised to be defined by AI.
Until recently, Meta’s unique position in AI was the open-source nature of its Llama models. Unlike other AI models, Meta’s technology was made freely available so third-party researchers and others could access the tools and ultimately improve them.
“Today, several tech companies are developing leading closed models,” Zuckerberg wrote in a blog post in July 2024. “But open source is quickly closing the gap.”
He’s since started changing his tune. Zuckerberg hinted over the summer that Meta was considering shaking up its approach to open source after the April release of Llama 4, which failed to captivate developers. Zuckerberg said in July that, “We’ll need to be rigorous about mitigating these risks and careful about what we choose to open source.”
Avocado, when it’s eventually made available, could be a proprietary model, according to people familiar with the matter. That means outside developers wouldn’t be able to freely download its so-called weights and related software components.
Some at Meta were upset that the R1 model released by Chinese AI lab DeepSeek earlier this year incorporated pieces of Llama’s architecture, the people said, further underscoring the risks of open source and hammering home the idea that the company should overhaul its strategy.
The company’s high-priced AI hires and leaders of the recently launched Meta Superintelligence Labs, or MSL, have also questioned the open-source AI strategy and favored creating a more powerful proprietary AI model, CNBC reported in July. A Meta spokesperson said at the time that the company’s “position on open source AI is unchanged.”
The Llama 4 flub was a significant catalyst in Zuckerberg’s pivot, the people said, and also led to a major internal shake-up. Chris Cox, Meta’s chief product officer and a 20-year company veteran who was hired as its 13th software engineer, no longer oversees the AI division, formally known as the GenAI unit, after the botched release, the people said.
Zuckerberg went on a spending spree to retool Meta’s AI leadership.
He landed on Wang, then Scale AI’s 28-year-old CEO, who was named Meta’s new chief AI officer and, in August, became the head of an elite unit called TBD Lab. Avocado is being developed inside TBD, people familiar with the matter said.
Alexandr Wang, CEO of ScaleAI speaks on CNBC’s Squawk Box outside the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 23, 2025.
Gerry Miller | CNBC
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said in June that Meta was trying to lure talent from his company with gigantic pay packages, including sky-high $100 million signing bonuses, which Meta said at the time was a misrepresentation.
Along with Wang came other tech bigwigs, including former GitHub CEO Nat Friedman, who heads the product and applied research arm of MSL, and Shengjia Zhao, who was a ChatGPT co-creator. They’ve brought with them modern methods that have become the standard for frontier AI development in Silicon Valley, and have upended the traditional software development process inside Meta, the people said.
Meta’s AI culture shift
Wang is now under pressure to deliver a top-tier AI model that helps the company regain momentum against rivals like OpenAI, Anthropic and Google, the people said.
That pressure has only increased as competitors stepped up their game. Google’s Gemini 3, unveiled last month, has drawn solid reviews from users and analysts. OpenAI recently announced new updates to its GPT-5 AI model, while Anthropic debuted its Claude Opus 4.5 model in November shortly after releasing two other major models.
Analysts previously told CNBC that there’s no clear leading AI model, because some perform better on certain tasks like conversations or coding. But the one constant is that all of the major model creators have to spend a lot of money on AI to maintain any competitive edge, they said.
A hefty dose of that spending lines the pockets of Nvidia, the leading developer of AI graphics processing units. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang laid out the state of play during his company’s earnings call in November, after the chipmaker reported 62% year-over-year revenue growth. He highlighted a number of model developers as big customers, including Elon Musk’s xAI.
“We run OpenAI. We run Anthropic. We run xAI because of our deep partnership with Elon and xAI,” Huang said. “We run Gemini. We run Thinking Machines. Let’s see, what else do we run? We run them all.”
At no point did Huang reference Llama, although elsewhere on the call he said Meta’s Gem, “a foundation model for ad recommendations trained on large-scale GPU clusters,” drove an improvement in ad conversions at Meta in the second quarter.
Wang isn’t the only Meta exec feeling the heat.
Friedman has also been tasked with producing a breakout AI product, the people said. He was responsible for Meta’s September launch of Vibes, a feed of AI-generated short videos, which is widely viewed as inferior to OpenAI’s Sora 2, they said. Former employees and creators told CNBC that the product was rushed to market and lacked key features, like the ability to generate realistic lip-synched audio.
Although Vibes has attracted more interest to the company’s stand-alone Meta AI app, it trails the Sora app as measured by downloads, according to data provided to CNBC by Appfigures.
Pressure is being felt across Meta’s AI organizations, where 70-hour workweeks have become the norm, the people said, while teams have also been hit with layoffs and restructurings throughout the year.
In October, Meta cut 600 jobs in MSL to reduce layers and operate more quickly. Those layoffs impacted employees in areas like the Fundamental Artificial Intelligence Research unit, or FAIR, and played a key role in chief AI scientist Yann LeCun’s decision to leave the company to launch a startup, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
LeCun declined to comment.
Yann LeCun, Meta’s former chief AI scientist, says people move on.
Getty Images
Zuckerberg’s high-stakes decision to turn to outsiders like Wang and Friedman to lead the company’s AI efforts represented a major change for a company that’s historically promoted long-tenured workers to top posts, the people said.
In Wang and Friedman, Zuckerberg has handed the controls to experts in infrastructure and related systems, rather than consumer apps. The new leaders also brought a different management style and one that’s unfamiliar inside Meta.
In particular, insiders told CNBC that Wang and Friedman are more cloistered in their communications, a contrast to a historically open approach of sharing work and chatting on the company’s Workplace internal social network
Members of Wang’s TBD Lab, who work near Zuckerberg’s office, don’t use Workplace, people familiar said, adding that they’re not even on the network and that the group operates like a separate startup.
However, Zuckerberg isn’t giving the new AI leadership team complete autonomy. Aparna Ramani, engineering vice president, who has been with Meta for nearly a decade, has been put in charge of overseeing the distribution of computing resources for MSL, the people said.
And in October, Vishal Shah was moved from leading the company’s metaverse initiatives within Reality Labs, where he’d been for four years, to a new role as vice president of AI Products, working with Friedman. Shah is considered a loyal lieutenant who has helped act as a bridge between the company’s traditional social apps like Instagram and newer projects like Reality Labs, the people said.
Meta confirmed last week that it plans to cut resources to its virtual reality and related metaverse initiatives, shifting its attention to its popular AI-infused glasses developed with EssilorLuxottica.
‘Demo, don’t memo’
One of the biggest points of tension between the old and the new is in the realm of software development, people familiar with the matter said.
In creating products, Meta has traditionally sought input from numerous groups responsible for areas like front-end user interface, design, algorithmic feeds and privacy, the people said. The multistep process was intended to ensure some level of uniformity among the company’s apps that attract billions of users each day.
But the many internal tools built over the years to help coders create software and features weren’t developed to accommodate foundation models. Meta’s new AI leaders, notably Friedman, view them as bottlenecks slowing down what should be a rapid-fire development process, the people said.
Friedman has called for MSL to use newer tools that have been calibrated to incorporate multiple AI models and various kinds of coding automation software often called AI agents, the people said.
“They have this mantra now saying ‘Demo, don’t memo,'” Lovable CEO Anton Osika said in October at the Masters of Scale Summit in San Francisco, about Meta’s new development process.
Osika said Meta employees have been using Lovable’s tools to more quickly build internal apps, specifically referencing the company’s finance teams, which have turned to Lovable to create software for tracking head count and planning.
An illustration photo shows the event of Meta launching the Vibes platform, Suqian City, Jiangsu Province, China on September 26, 2025.
Cfoto | Future Publishing | Getty Images
While Meta continues retooling its app development methods and pushes toward releasing Avocado, the company has been experimenting with other AI models on its products. Vibes, for instance, relied on AI models from Black Forest Labs and Midjourney, a startup that counts Friedman as an advisor.
Meta is also altering its approach to infrastructure, and is increasingly turning to third-party cloud computing services like CoreWeave and Oracle for developing and testing AI features as it builds out its own massive data centers, the people said.
The social media giant announced in October that it signed a joint venture agreement with Blue Owl Capital as part of a $27 billion deal to help fund and develop the gargantuan Hyperion data center in Richland Parish, Louisiana. The company said at the time that the partnership provides the “the speed and flexibility” Meta needs to build the data center and support its “long-term AI ambitions.”
Despite the company’s challenges in 2025, Zuckerberg’s message to employees and investors is that he’s more committed than ever to winning. At the top of the company’s earnings call in October, Zuckerberg said MSL is “off to a strong start.”
“I think that we’ve already built the lab with the highest talent density in the industry,” Zuckerberg said. “We’re heads down developing our next generation of models and products and I’m looking forward to sharing more on that front over the coming months.”

Technology
Paramount’s hostile Warner Bros. bid, Meta’s AI course correction, McDonald’s value crackdown and more in Morning Squawk
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3 hours agoon
December 9, 2025By
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David Ellison, chairman and chief executive officer of Paramount Skydance Corp., center, outside the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Monday, Dec. 8, 2025.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images
This is CNBC’s Morning Squawk newsletter. Subscribe here to receive future editions in your inbox.
Here are five key things investors need to know to start the trading day:
1. One battle after another
Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison isn’t taking his loss to Netflix in the bidding war for Warner Bros. on the chin. Paramount announced yesterday that it’s going directly to WBD shareholders with a $30 per share, all-cash hostile bid, with Ellison telling CNBC that he wants “to finish what we started.”
Here’s what to know:
- Paramount’s offer is the same one that Warner Bros. Discovery executives passed over in favor of Netflix’s last week. But this time, the decision will rest in the hands of WBD stakeholders.
- President Donald Trump over the weekend said the Netflix-WBD deal “could be a problem,” citing the streamer’s potential market share should the deal go through. Trump also said he’d “be involved” in the approval process.
- Paramount’s hostile bid is backed by Jared Kushner — Trump’s son-in-law — according to a regulatory filling.
- Meanwhile, Comcast President Mike Cavanagh said he believed his company’s proposal was “light” on cash compared to the other two bids.
- Paramount shares surged 9% in yesterday’s session while shares of Warner Bros. Discovery jumped more than 4%. Netflix shares pulled back by more than 3%.
- Follow live market updates here.
Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal, which owns CNBC. Versant would become the new parent company of CNBC upon Comcast’s planned spinoff of Versant.
2. DC’s AI moves
Nvidia H200 chips in an eight-GPU Nvidia HGX system.
Nvidia
Trump announced yesterday that Nvidia will be allowed to ship its H200 artificial intelligence chips to “approved customers” in China and other countries. The caveat: Only if the U.S. gets a 25% cut.
The Department of Commerce is finalizing the details, Trump said in a social media post, adding that “the same approach will apply to AMD, Intel” and other U.S. firms. Shares of Nvidia, AMD and Intel all rose in overnight trading. Trump also said that Chinese President Xi Jinping “responded positively” to the plan.
Meanwhile, House Democrats are creating a commission on AI, hoping to position themselves as leaders on the issue. As CNBC’s Emily Wilkins notes, the move comes as the tech industry ramps up its presence in D.C. and its campaign spending.
3. From Llamas to Avocados
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg makes a keynote speech during the Meta Connect annual event, at the company’s headquarters in Menlo Park, California, on Sept. 25, 2024.
Manuel Orbegozo | Reuters
Meta has poured billions of dollars into overhauling its AI strategy. But as CNBC’s Jonathan Vanian reports, the shift has led to internal confusion and a haphazard strategy.
CEO Mark Zuckerberg began the year by touting Meta’s Llama family of AI models, which he said would become the “most advanced in the industry.” But CNBC has learned that Meta is now focused on a new AI model codenamed Avocado that could be proprietary instead of open source.
Elsewhere in Big Tech, Apple has seen significant churn among its top brass in recent days, including the departures of its head of AI and its top lawyer. The iPhone maker’s chip leader, Johny Srouji, reassured staff in a memo yesterday that he isn’t planning to leave “anytime soon,” following a report that he was considering departing.
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4. Farm aid
Dan Duffy uses a tractor to plant soybeans on land he farms with his brother on April 28, 2025 near Dwight, Illinois.
Scott Olson | Getty Images
Trump announced a $12 billion aid package for farmers impacted by tariffs yesterday, saying the funds would come from revenues generated by the tariffs.
A White House official told CNBC that up to $11 billion of that sum will go to the Agriculture Department’s new Farmer Bridge Assistance program to distribute one-time payments to row crop farmers. The other $1 billion will be held as the department evaluates the market, the official said.
Trump, meanwhile, suffered a blow in court yesterday. A federal judge overturned his ban on new wind power projects, saying it was “arbitrary and capricious and contrary to law.”
5. McDonald’s New Year’s resolution
A customer waits to order food at a McDonalds fast food restaurant on July 26, 2022 in Miami, Florida.
Joe Raedle | Getty Images
McDonald’s is putting its franchisees under a more intense microscope in 2026. The fast-food titan said it will look at how their prices align with value goals as McDonald’s aims to woo more price-conscious consumers, according to a memo viewed by CNBC.
McDonald’s will update its standards for franchisees — who run about 95% of McDonald’s restaurants — and “holistically assess” their pricing, the memo shows. If franchise owners do not comply with the new standards, they could face penalties such as being barred from opening additional stores or having their agreements with the company terminated.
The Daily Dividend
IBM CEO Arvind Krishna joined CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” yesterday to discuss the company’s acquisition of data streaming platform Confluent in an $11 billion deal. Confluent shares soared 29% following the announcement.

— CNBC’s Alex Sherman, David Faber, Lillian Rizzo, Sean Conlon, Emily Wilkins, Dan Mangan, Kevin Breuninger, Jonathan Vanian, Kif Leswing, Chris Eudaily, Steve Kovach, Spencer Kimball and Amelia Lucas contributed to this report. Josephine Rozzelle edited this edition.
Technology
SF mayor’s downtown revival project has reeled in $60 million from Google, OpenAI and others
Published
4 hours agoon
December 9, 2025By
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San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie speaks during a press conference at San Francisco City Hall on Oct. 23, 2025 in San Francisco, California.
Justin Sullivan | Getty Images
San Francisco’s Downtown Development Corporation, launched in April by Mayor Daniel Lurie, said on Tuesday that it’s received over $60 million in early commitments from donors including Google and OpenAI to help revive the city’s center.
“I think people view this as a generational moment,” Shola Olatoye, CEO of the SFDDC, told CNBC in an interview. “San Francisco has captured the world’s, and the country’s, imagination as a global hub of innovation and industry. The folks who want to build businesses, raise their families here, and visit, recognize the important work that is underway and want to see it continue.”
In October, Lurie said the group, a nonprofit public benefit corporation, had raised $50 million for its efforts, up from $40 million at the time of its debut. When campaigning for mayor last year, Lurie touted his ability to fundraise, drawing on his past experience at the anti-poverty nonprofit Tipping Point Community, laying the groundwork for public-private partnerships to help revitalize San Francisco.
In addition to Google and OpenAI, SFDDC has raised money from backers including Visa, Thoma Bravo, Ripple, Salesforce, Amazon, Emerson Collective, Sixth Street and Gap. The funds will help support Lurie’s Heart of the City initiative, which prioritizes street safety and cleanliness, small business support and more.

Olatoye said some of the funding will also be deployed to fill vacant spaces in key retail spots such as along Powell and Stockton streets.
“We’re going to provide direct grants to these businesses to provide business support, marketing support and legal support,” Olatoye said. “And then actual below market capital from some of our lending partners to go in and actually fix up these spaces and get those businesses in there, get people spending money and generating economic activity for the city of San Francisco.”
Money will also be dedicated to a new Embarcadero Park, inspired by New York City’s Bryant Park. Lurie has often cited Michael Bloomberg’s efforts as mayor of New York as inspiration for his work, and the DDC is drawing on models used in New York as well as Detroit.
While a number of metrics show that San Francisco has bounced back dramatically from its pandemic lull, the city has a lot of work to do to prepare for an active 2026. Super Bowl LX is coming to the area in February, along with the Pro Bowl Games. In the summer, people will pack into the Bay Area for some of the FIFA World Cup.
“When downtown thrives, our residents, families and small business owners all benefit,” Lurie said in a statement. “By strengthening public safety, cutting red tape and leaning into our arts and culture, we are bringing people back to our streets.”
The first-term mayor notched a significant political win in October as President Donald Trump reversed his decision to deploy the National Guard in downtown San Francisco, saying Lurie was making “substantial progress” on crime in the city. Trump also said he was swayed by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff.
The city has been boosted over the last year by a surge in investment and activity related to artificial intelligence. CBRE data on venture funding show 2025 is expected to surpass the record reached in 2021, thanks in large part to AI investments in San Francisco and Silicon Valley.
In addition, crime rates are down 30% from 2024, with event bookings and tourism on the rise, and residential and commercial real estate heating up.
“There’s no doubt that there is a lot of attention on us and we are super focused on outcomes and using data to ensure we can hold ourselves accountable,” Olatoye said.

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