# Google Finance 推出首款独立 Android 应用，iOS 版计划今年晚些时候上线

- 来源：Ars Technica：AI（RSS）
- 作者：Ryan Whitwam
- 发布时间：2026-06-26 02:38
- AIHOT 分数：61
- AIHOT 链接：https://aihot.virxact.com/items/cmqtv4xj7075qsl0elgzpjx6s
- 原文链接：https://arstechnica.com/google/2026/06/google-finance-finally-gets-a-mobile-app-as-ai-powered-overhaul-leaves-beta

## AI 摘要

Google Finance 推出首款独立移动应用，目前仅限 Android 平台，全球 Play Store 可用。应用内置生成式 AI，股价图表旁由 AI 生成“关键时刻”解释数字变动，底部“Ask”按钮可让用户与金融调优的聊天机器人对话查询股票。同步更新的 Finance 网站也离开 beta，AI 成为核心体验，支持上传 CSV 或 PDF 建立投资组合并获取 AI 洞察与建议，AI 研究工具还可发送定期简报（如每日盘前加密货币动向），完成后通过移动应用通知用户。

## 正文

Story text

* Subscribers only
Learn more

Google Finance is not a new product—it has been around for 20 years, long enough that it initially relied on Flash to display charts and graphs. The website has gotten a few major updates over the years, but it has never had a mobile app until now. Google has released the first standalone app for Google Finance, which is currently exclusive to Android, with iOS planned for later this year.

The app is available globally in the Play Store, but that’s not the only update to Google’s financial tracker. The AI-powered makeover for the Finance website is also leaving beta, making Google’s chatbot a core part of the experience. Naturally, the mobile app includes a heaping helping of generative AI that aims to make sense of irrational financial markets.

If you’ve checked out the new Finance web experience, you’ll see a lot of familiar features in the app. You can create watchlists, monitor real-time market data, and keep up with financial news in one place. While perusing graphs of stock performance, Finance will use AI to generate “key moments” that can explain why the numbers changed. This feature initially launched in the Finance web interface in May.

Google Finance on Android

The mobile app also gets Google’s new AI research tool, accessible via the “Ask” button floating at the bottom of the UI. This allows users to converse with Google’s money-tuned bot about stocks. The bottom bar also includes a History section where you can easily access your past chats.

Google says that the current Android app is just a starting point. It plans to adapt more features from the new website to the app over time. Consequently, the updated website has a few features you won’t find in the app. While you can build a watchlist in the app by searching for stock symbols, the website has an expansive portfolio feature. Portfolios from the old Finance will port over, gaining new AI insights and suggestions. You can also upload a CSV or PDF to build a trackable portfolio in Google Finance. The chatbot has access to your portfolio data and can answer questions taking that into account.

The Finance website is also gaining a new AI-powered research tool that can send you periodic updates. Google suggests something like: “Send me a daily pre-market briefing analyzing significant overnight moves across major cryptocurrencies.”

Whatever you’re interested in, be that crypto or something marginally less sketchy, you’ll get notifications through the mobile app when your research reports are ready. They will also be viewable in the web version’s research panel.

Portfolios in the new Google Finance

Few industries have adopted generative AI as readily as finance. Many of the investments and market trends that lead to numbers going up or down are driven by AI models. So maybe a hallucinatory robot is what you need to make sense of the nonsense. Google has you covered there.

Ryan Whitwam Senior Technology Reporter

Ryan Whitwam is a senior technology reporter at Ars Technica, covering the ways Google, AI, and mobile technology continue to change the world. Over his 20-year career, he's written for Android Police, ExtremeTech, Wirecutter, NY Times, and more. He has reviewed more phones than most people will ever own. You can follow him on Bluesky, where you will see photos of his dozens of mechanical keyboards.

Prev story

1. Underpromise, overdeliver? Hands-on with the $24,950 Slate auto.

2. 13 years and $500 million for a stage adapter? Report justifies NASA cancellations.

3. FCC plans ID mandate that could block anonymous use of prepaid burner phones

4. Feds deny Polestar authorization to sell cars in US from model year 2027

5. IBM claims world’s first sub-1 nanometer chip technology
