What's Actually New Here

So Google just dropped a dedicated mobile app for Google Finance, and if you've been juggling browser tabs to check your portfolio, this one's for you. The app pulls together your watchlists, real-time market data, and live financial news into one place — no more bouncing between Search and a half-dozen finance sites.

The standout feature, though, is the AI-powered "Key Moments" tool. Basically, it explains why a stock is moving, not just that it moved. You know that feeling when a stock tanks 8% and you have no idea what happened? This is Google trying to close that gap.

Android Gets It First — iOS Has to Wait

Here's the catch: it's Android-only for now. Google says an iOS version is coming "in the coming months," which, let's be honest, could mean anything. They're also teasing more features down the line, including the ability to listen to live earnings calls right in the app. That one's actually pretty exciting if you're the type who likes hearing it straight from the source instead of reading a recap three hours later.

Why Google Is Doing This Right Now

Look, this isn't really about giving investors another place to glance at stock prices — there's no shortage of those already. It's more about Google planting a flag in a financial information space that's gotten increasingly crowded and competitive. And the timing makes that pretty clear: this move puts Google in direct competition with platforms like Yahoo Finance and trading apps like Robinhood.

That's a meaningful shift. Google's not just aggregating financial info anymore — it's building a destination people might actually live in.

The Web Experience Is Growing Up Too

Alongside the app launch, Google's AI-powered Google Finance web experience — the one that first showed up last year — is officially coming out of beta, and it's bringing some genuinely useful upgrades with it.

Portfolios Are Going Global

Google's rolling out portfolios worldwide within this revamped web experience, which means you get a single dashboard tracking all your holdings and how they're performing. If you already had a Google Finance portfolio set up, it just shows up automatically — no extra work needed. And if you're starting fresh, you can build a new portfolio either by uploading files or just describing your investments to the chatbot. That second option is a nice touch; not everyone wants to mess with spreadsheets.

Once your portfolio's live, there's an AI research tool you can actually talk to. Want to know what sectors you're underweight in? Just ask it something like "what sectors are currently underrepresented in my portfolio?" and it'll dig through your holdings and tell you.

AI Tasks That Work in the Background

This is maybe the most quietly useful piece of the update. Google added a feature that lets you set up tasks using plain, natural-language prompts — think regular briefings on market changes, or summaries of how your holdings are doing. You can point the AI assistant at your watchlist or portfolio so the insights are actually tailored to your money, not generic market noise.

And once a task's set up, it just runs in the background. You're not babysitting it.

What's Available Where

 

Feature

 

 

Web

 

 

App

 

 

Portfolios

 

 

Available now

 

 

Coming in the months ahead

 

 

AI task automation

 

 

Available now

 

 

Coming in the months ahead

 

 

Watchlists, live news, Key Moments

 

 

Available

 

 

Available now

 

Google's been pretty upfront that the portfolio and task features are starting on the web today, with plans to bring them into the app later. So if you're an app-only person, there's a bit of a waiting game ahead.