The race for the title of world’s most valuable public company has a new front-runner warming up. Alphabet, Google’s parent company, is closing in on Nvidia with a market capitalization of approximately $4.8 trillion, sitting roughly $240 billion behind the chipmaker’s $4.79 trillion valuation.
The numbers behind the surge
Alphabet’s stock has climbed 24% year-to-date. Nvidia, by contrast, has managed just 7% over the same period.
Alphabet’s Q1 earnings report offered a compelling answer. The company reported a 22% year-over-year revenue increase to nearly $110 billion.
Wall Street noticed. The consensus rating on Alphabet sits at “Strong Buy” with a mean price target of $419.
The AI pivot is working
Perhaps most telling is Alphabet’s push to develop in-house AI chips, a direct move to lessen its dependence on Nvidia. Google’s Tensor Processing Units, or TPUs, have been around for years, but the company is investing heavily in next-generation custom silicon designed specifically for AI training and inference workloads.
That dynamic creates an interesting tension. Every dollar Alphabet saves by using its own chips is, theoretically, a dollar Nvidia doesn’t earn. As more hyperscalers follow this playbook, with Amazon and Microsoft pursuing similar strategies, Nvidia’s dominance in the data center GPU market faces a slow but real structural challenge.
What this means for investors
Alphabet sits at the intersection of AI development, distribution, and monetization. It has the models (Gemini), the distribution (Search, YouTube, Android, Chrome), the cloud infrastructure, and increasingly, the custom hardware.
The risk for Alphabet hasn’t disappeared, though. The Department of Justice’s antitrust case targeting Google’s search dominance could force structural changes to the company’s most profitable business.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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