Nikulski Financial reduced its Alphabet holdings by 5.5% in the fourth quarter, selling 3,378 shares and leaving 57,788 shares worth about $18.1 million. Alphabet remains the firm’s second-largest holding at 4.3% of assets, signaling continued confidence in the stock despite a slight reduction.
Meanwhile, looking at the bigger picture, many asset managers actually increased their Alphabet holdings in the same quarter. One firm raised its stake by 26.1%, another by 15.4%, and a third by 10.3%. Others made smaller increases in the low single digits. This trend suggests that Nikulski Financial’s reduction was likely just a routine portfolio adjustment, not a sign of changing views on Alphabet’s long-term prospects.
Additionally, institutional investors now own about 40.03% of Alphabet’s shares, which is lower than what’s typical for other large tech companies. This means there’s still plenty of room for more institutional buying. Traders and market watchers are likely to keep an eye on this as Alphabet deals with share price swings, regulatory questions, and growing investment in AI. For a company as big as Alphabet, even small changes in institutional ownership can be important signals for the tech sector as a whole.