Google, Waymo Officially Separated by Creation of XXVI Holdings Inc.

A Google autonomous car
Google Inc. via Bloomberg News

Alphabet Inc. is forming a new holding company designed to finalize its evolution from Google, the web search giant, into a corporate parent with distinct arms in far-flung fields like health care and self-driving cars.

The new entity, called XXVI Holdings Inc., will own the equity of each Alphabet company, including Google. The new structure legally separates Google from other units such as Waymo, its self-driving car business, and Verily, a medical device and health data firm.

Google co-founder Larry Page announced Alphabet two years ago to foster new businesses that operate independently from Google. Technically, however, those units, called the “Other Bets,” were still subsidiaries of Google. The new structure, unveiled Sept. 1, enables the Other Bets to become subsidiaries of Alphabet on the same legal footing as Google.

“We’re updating our corporate structure to implement the changes we announced with the creation of Alphabet in 2015,” Gina Weakley Johnson, an Alphabet spokeswoman, said. She called the process a legal formality that won’t affect ultimate shareholder control, operations, management or personnel at the 75,606 person company.



Google is also changing from a corporation to a limited liability company, or LLC. This won’t alter the way the business pays taxes, Johnson said. The switch is partly related to Google’s transformation from a listed public company into a business owned by a holding company.

Corporations are often formed to raise money from public investors who expect disclosures on financial performance, and Google did that in a 2004 initial public offering. Now, it’s owned by Alphabet, so it effectively has only one investor and no public disclosure obligations. An LLC structure is better suited to this situation. Waymo is also an LLC.

XXVI, the name of the new holding entity, is the number of letters in the alphabet expressed in Roman numerals. The sums of the company’s two most recent share buybacks were both derived from math equations involving the number 26.

“I still see amazing opportunities that just aren’t quite fully developed yet — and helping make them real is what I get excited about,” Page wrote in a letter last year about Alphabet. Google accounted for 99% of Alphabet revenue last quarter.

The new structures were disclosed in a filing Sept. 1 with the Federal Communications Commission. Businesses that hold FCC licenses, like Waymo and the Fiber internet service, are required to make such filings.

“As a result of the corporate reorganization, Alphabet and Google will be able to operate in a more efficient, economical, and transparent manner, allowing the companies to concentrate on their revenue-generating activities,” the company said in the filing.