Alphabet officially joined the Dow Jones Industrial Average on June 29, replacing Verizon Communications in what amounts to the index’s clearest acknowledgment yet that the old guard of American industry looks different than it did a decade ago.

The swap, announced by S&P Global on June 23, helped stabilize a tech sector that had been wobbling under the weight of AI-spending anxieties. Alphabet shares ticked higher on the news, and the broader technology cohort followed suit, pausing a slide that had rattled portfolios in recent sessions.

What the Dow reshuffle actually means

The Dow is a peculiar index. Unlike the S&P 500, which weights companies by market capitalization, the DJIA is price-weighted. That means a stock’s influence on the index depends on its per-share price, not its total market value.

Alphabet now becomes the fifth member of the so-called Magnificent 7 sitting inside the Dow, joining Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, and Nvidia. Meta and Tesla remain outside the blue-chip club.