Artificial intelligence is poised to deliver transformative changes to many industries. That potent technological potential sparked fear of AI’s negative consequences on Wall Street.
Consequently, share prices fell for many excellent AI-related businesses in recent weeks, including Google parent Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL)(NASDAQ: GOOG) and AI robotics company Symbotic (NASDAQ: SYM).
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The situation creates an opportunity to buy the dip. Here’s a look into why Alphabet and Symbotic stocks are worth investing in.
Alphabet shares declined from the 52-week high of $349 reached on Feb. 3 after revealing that 2026 capital expenditures would total between $175 billion to $185 billion, a substantial increase over the $91.4 billion spent in 2025.
But that expenditure makes sense given the demand for Alphabet’s AI technology. Its Google Cloud service saw fourth-quarter sales soar a whopping 48% year over year to $17.7 billion. The company needs to build out more computing capacity to meet customer demand, hence the big capex increase.
In fact, the market for AI infrastructure is booming, with historically low levels of vacancies seen at data centers housing AI tech. This suggests the industry is not in a bubble, validating Alphabet’s capex plans.
AI is also powering growth in the company’s Google search engine. Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai stated: “Search saw more usage in Q4 than ever before.” This helped Google’s revenue reach $63.1 billion in Q4, up from 2024’s $54 billion. Since Google accounted for 55% of Alphabet’s $113.8 billion in Q4 revenue, its rising usage bodes well for the company’s future success.
Symbotic supplies robots managed by artificial intelligence to warehouses. Its stock has fallen substantially from the 52-week high of $87.88 reached last November. Yet the company is doing well.
In its fiscal first quarter ended Dec. 27, Symbotic’s sales hit $630 million, a strong 29% year-over-year increase. It anticipates ongoing revenue growth in the fiscal second quarter, forecasting sales between $650 million to $670 million, up from the previous year’s $550 million.
Symbotic’s major customer is Walmart, which is also an investor in the company. This gives a level of certainty to Symbotic’s income stream, since switching costs would be high for Walmart. The retailer can’t easily replace Symbotic’s robot workers and AI platform without affecting its supply chain operations. Symbotic plans to get its system into all 42 of Walmart’s regional distribution centers by 2029.

