What was GOOG's official closing price on 2025-09-25 according to Nasdaq historical data?
Executive summary
Nasdaq’s official GOOG historical-data pages are the primary source named by the request and do contain daily closing prices, but the specific closing price for 2025‑09‑25 is not visible in the provided search snippets; the available materials point users to Nasdaq’s historical-data interface for GOOG [1] [2]. Other data vendors that routinely publish daily closes—Seeking Alpha, Yahoo Finance and Investing.com—are present in the reporting and can be used to cross-check Nasdaq’s figure if needed [3] [4] [5].
1. Why the question singles out Nasdaq and what that means
Asking for “according to Nasdaq historical data” elevates Nasdaq’s record as the authoritative source for a Nasdaq‑listed security’s official market activity; Nasdaq’s GOOG historical-data pages explicitly advertise historical prices in daily, monthly and yearly formats, making them the correct primary reference to answer the question [1] [2]. Independent aggregators offer useful corroboration, but the phrasing of the query requires pulling the close from Nasdaq’s own historical interface rather than a secondary aggregator [3] [4] [5].
2. What the reporting supplied actually contains
The search results returned the Nasdaq GOOG historical-data landing page and related Nasdaq quote pages that advertise the ability to “View historical data in a monthly, bi‑annual, or yearly format” [1] [2], plus multiple third‑party historical‑price publishers—Seeking Alpha [3], Yahoo Finance [4], Investing.com [5], StockAnalysis [6] and others—each of which documents daily opens, highs, lows and closes in their historical tables [3] [6] [4] [5]. None of the provided snippets, however, include a text line explicitly stating GOOG’s September 25, 2025 closing price, so the precise numeric answer is not present in these excerpts (p1_s1–p1_s6).
3. How to obtain Nasdaq’s official closing price for 2025‑09‑25
Navigate to Nasdaq’s GOOG historical-data page (the search results point to https://www.nasdaq.com/market-activity/stocks/goog/historical) and select the daily view or specify the date range that includes 2025‑09‑25; the page is designed to display each day’s closing price and offers download options for the table [1]. If the Nasdaq interface shows adjusted or split‑adjusted data, Nasdaq’s page labels and metadata explain the adjustment methodology on the same site; corroborate the row for 2025‑09‑25 against another reputable publisher to catch any data‑feed anomalies [1] [2].
4. Cross‑checking and corroboration with independent services
Because data‑feeds occasionally differ for reasons ranging from late trade reports to post‑close adjustments, it is normal journalistic practice to verify Nasdaq’s reported close with at least one other reputable source; the provided material includes Seeking Alpha, Yahoo Finance and Investing.com, all of which maintain daily historical tables suitable for cross‑reference [3] [4] [5]. Use a direct date filter on those sites for 2025‑09‑25 and compare the reported closing price and currency (USD) against Nasdaq’s row to ensure consistency [3] [4] [5].
5. Limitations in the supplied reporting and next steps
The documentation furnished in the search snippets confirms where Nasdaq’s historical data lives and shows multiple third‑party repositories for the same data, but it does not include the actual numeric close for GOOG on 2025‑09‑25 in the excerpts provided here, so this analysis cannot assert the closing price itself without directly querying Nasdaq’s historical page or one of the corroborating vendors [1] [3] [4] [5]. The next step to produce the single definitive number requested is to open Nasdaq’s GOOG historical page and read the 2025‑09‑25 row, or to pull a CSV export from that interface and cite the exact figure back to Nasdaq’s page [1] [2].