Launched in the U.S. in August and India in November, the AI-powered Google Finance will soon be rolled out in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Indonesia, Japan, Mexico and other countries, with full local language support, Google said in a Wednesday (April 8) blog post emailed to PYMNTS.
The new Google Finance offers AI-powered research that answers questions and provides links for additional information, new charting tools that let users toggle technical indicators such as moving average envelopes and candlestick charts, a revamped news feed, and expanded data for commodities and cryptocurrencies, according to the post.
In addition, for corporate earnings calls, the new Google Finance offers live audio, synchronized transcripts and AI-generated insights, per the post.
The latest availability of the new Google Finance can be checked at Google’s Help Center.
When Google announced in August that it was testing a new version of Google Finance in the U.S., the company said the new AI-powered features were joining the real-time market quotes, international exchanges, financial news and analytics already offered by the site.
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The company announced the expansion of the new Google Finance to India in November, saying it would launch there with English and Hindi support.
Google also said in November that it was updating Google Finance to include Deep Research that allows users to type open-ended financial questions and receive AI-generated responses that include citations and links; enhanced charting that offers technical indicators and historical overlays; and data from prediction markets Kalshi and Polymarket, which provide market-based probabilities for outcomes such as inflation rates, GDP growth and interest rate decisions.
Management at Google parent company Alphabet reported during a February earnings call that the company is seeing sustained demand for AI compute across its consumer products, enterprise platforms and cloud infrastructure.
The company said Gemini was processing more than 10 billion tokens per minute via direct application programming interfaces (APIs) in the fourth quarter, up from 7 billion in the previous quarter.