Google shareholders approve stock split co founders – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
Skip to main content

Google shareholders approve stock split leaving power with co-founders

Part of Google’s Q1 earnings statement last April was a letter expressing the company’s desire to split its stock, but in a way that is slightly unusual. Today at its annual shareholder meeting, Google stockholders approved the split

Part of Google’s Q1 earnings statement last April was a letter expressing the company’s desire to split its stock, but in a way that is slightly unusual. Today at its annual shareholder meeting, Google stockholders approved the split

Google logo
Google logo
Google logo

Included in Google’s Q1 earnings statement last April was a letter expressing the company’s desire to split its stock, but in a way that is slightly unusual. Today at its annual shareholder meeting, Google stockholders approved the split. Instead of a standard 2-for-1 split, the company wants to give existing shareholders one extra non-voting share instead of two regular, voting shares. This kind of stock split would ensure that current shareholders would maintain their current levels of voting power — and the majority of voting power sits with Larry Page and Sergey Brin, who combined control 56 percent.

In other words, it’s not a surprise at all that the motion passed. Last April, Page and Brin defended the move by saying that “this founder-led approach is in the best interests of Google, our shareholders and our users.” The AP reports that Google ins’t instituting the stock split right away, as there’s a lawsuit pending to block it. Speaking of Google CEO Larry Page, he didn’t attend the stockholder meeting and won’t attend Google I/O next week — apparently his voice has gone out. Get well soon, Larry, and maybe next time space out all those interviews a bit more.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.