Google Lost Two AI Giants in 3 Days — and $250B in Market Cap

The Google DeepMind AI talent exodus 2026 began with two names: Noam Shazeer and John Jumper. In the span of three days, Google lost the co-author of the Transformer architecture to OpenAI and its Nobel Prize–winning protein scientist to Anthropic — twin defections that erased roughly $250 billion from Alphabet’s market cap and raised serious questions about whether Google DeepMind can stay at the front of the AI race.

The two departures arrived in rapid sequence on June 18 and 19, 2026. Noam Shazeer — a co-author of the landmark 2017 paper “Attention Is All You Need” and co-lead of Google’s flagship Gemini models — announced he is joining OpenAI. A day later, John Jumper — 2024 Nobel laureate in chemistry and the lead researcher behind AlphaFold2 — confirmed he is leaving Google DeepMind for Anthropic after nearly nine years. Alphabet shares slid roughly 7% on Monday, June 22, their worst single-day loss in over a year.

Who Just Walked Out the Door

Noam Shazeer is not merely a senior engineer. He is one of the eight original authors of the Transformer paper — the architectural foundation of virtually every major language model in production today, from GPT-5 to Claude to Gemini itself. Google previously spent more than $2 billion to acquire Shazeer and part of his Character.ai team in a structured deal. Now he’s at OpenAI.

John Jumper’s exit is equally staggering in its symbolism. Jumper was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2024 for co-creating AlphaFold2, the AI system that solved protein structure prediction — one of the most consequential scientific breakthroughs in decades. His move to Anthropic brings one of the most credentialed researchers in science to the company currently filing confidentially for a nearly trillion-dollar IPO.

Why Google Keeps Losing Its Best People

Alphabet’s loss isn’t random. According to Fortune and Axios, researchers who have left cite the same structural complaints: layers of bureaucracy, product fragmentation across multiple AI teams, and a lack of the startup-like urgency that OpenAI and Anthropic offer. Google’s size — which should be an advantage in compute and talent retention — has become a friction point in an industry that rewards speed.

There’s also an equity dimension. OpenAI and Anthropic can offer stakes in companies that the market views as among the most valuable startups in history. Alphabet equity remains tethered to a diversified conglomerate with advertising risks, antitrust overhang, and a stock that just dropped 7% in a day.

The departures compound an existing pattern. Google’s internal AI talent retention problem has been documented for years, but the pace appears to be accelerating in 2026 as OpenAI and Anthropic close the gap on compute resources and offer cleaner research mandates. The ongoing wave of AI-driven restructuring across the tech industry has paradoxically created a hot market for the most senior AI researchers, who can now name their terms.

What It Actually Means for Google’s AI Ambitions

Google still has formidable advantages: the largest proprietary TPU fleet in the world, a direct distribution channel via Search and Android for 3+ billion users, and a deep bench of researchers across DeepMind and Google Brain. Shazeer and Jumper leaving doesn’t hollow out Google’s AI capability overnight.

But the departures carry an information cost beyond headcount. Both men understand how Google’s most advanced models are built, what approaches failed internally, and where the real architectural bets are being placed. That institutional knowledge now sits at OpenAI and Anthropic. Even without violating NDAs, the direction of their future work will be informed by what they learned at Google — and Google’s competitors will benefit.

The market’s 7% reaction reflects investor anxiety about a specific scenario: that Google, despite being the birthplace of the Transformer, fails to translate that foundational advantage into a durable AI product lead. The same anxiety surfaced when Google was slow to ship a ChatGPT competitor in early 2023. Three years later, the underlying concern hasn’t gone away. For more on how Google is betting on AI browser standards, see our coverage of WebMCP and Google’s browser AI standard.

💡 Our Take: The Transformer paper has eight authors. Google has now lost one of them to its main rival in the span of a week. This is not a personnel problem — it’s a cultural and strategic signal. OpenAI and Anthropic are winning the talent war at the very top of the field, and no amount of compute budget compensates for losing the people who know how to use it. Alphabet’s 7% drop is the market saying what internal memos won’t.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is Noam Shazeer and why does his departure matter?

Noam Shazeer is a co-author of the 2017 “Attention Is All You Need” paper that introduced the Transformer architecture — the foundational technology behind virtually every major AI model today. He was also co-lead of Google’s Gemini models. His move to OpenAI is one of the most significant talent shifts in AI history.

Who is John Jumper and why did he leave Google?

John Jumper was a VP and engineering fellow at Google DeepMind, best known for leading the AlphaFold2 project — an AI system that predicts protein structures with atomic accuracy, earning the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He left for Anthropic after nearly nine years at Google, reportedly citing the startup-like research environment at Anthropic.

How much did Alphabet’s stock drop after the departures?

Alphabet shares fell roughly 7% on June 22, 2026 — the company’s worst single-day trading loss in over a year. The back-to-back departures of Shazeer and Jumper erased an estimated $250 billion in Alphabet market cap as investors reassessed Google’s ability to retain top AI talent.

Why are researchers leaving Google for OpenAI and Anthropic?

Former Google researchers consistently cite bureaucratic friction, product fragmentation across multiple AI teams, and a lack of startup-urgency as root causes. OpenAI and Anthropic can also offer equity in companies valued near or above $1 trillion, which Alphabet equity — tied to a diversified conglomerate — can’t match in the current AI boom.

Does Google still have a competitive advantage in AI after these departures?

Google retains significant structural advantages: the largest TPU fleet in the world, 3+ billion users across its consumer surfaces, and a large research base across DeepMind and Google Brain. But the departures raise legitimate questions about whether that infrastructure advantage can offset ongoing talent drain at the highest levels of the field.

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I am a software engineer, I have a passion for working with cutting-edge technologies and staying up-to-date with the latest developments in the field. In my articles, I share my knowledge and insights on a range of topics, including business software, how to set up tools, and the latest trends in the tech industry.

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