GOOG

Alphabet-C Price

GOOG
$304,62
+$7,18(+%2,41)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-07 21:25 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-07 21:25, Alphabet-C (GOOG) is priced at $304,62, with a total market cap of $3,61T, a P/E ratio of 28,69, and a dividend yield of %0,27. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $295,41 and $304,99. The current price is %3,11 above the day's low and %0,12 below the day's high, with a trading volume of 5,27M. Over the past 52 weeks, GOOG has traded between $149,49 to $350,15, and the current price is -%13,00 away from the 52-week high.

GOOG Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$297,66
Market Cap$3,61T
Volume5,27M
P/E Ratio28,69
Dividend Yield (TTM)%0,27
Dividend Amount$0,21
Diluted EPS (TTM)10,94
Net Income (FY)$132,17B
Revenue (FY)$402,96B
Earnings Date2026-04-23
EPS Estimate2,60
Revenue Estimate$106,66B
Shares Outstanding12,13B
Beta (1Y)1.128
Ex-Dividend Date2026-03-09
Dividend Payment Date2026-03-16

About GOOG

Alphabet Inc. offers various products and platforms in the United States, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, the Asia-Pacific, Canada, and Latin America. It operates through Google Services, Google Cloud, and Other Bets segments. The Google Services segment provides products and services, including ads, Android, Chrome, devices, Gmail, Google Drive, Google Maps, Google Photos, Google Play, Search, and YouTube. It is also involved in the sale of apps and in-app purchases and digital content in the Google Play and YouTube; and devices, as well as in the provision of YouTube consumer subscription services. The Google Cloud segment offers infrastructure, cybersecurity, databases, analytics, AI, and other services; Google Workspace that include cloud-based communication and collaboration tools for enterprises, such as Gmail, Docs, Drive, Calendar, and Meet; and other services for enterprise customers. The Other Bets segment sells healthcare-related and internet services. The company was incorporated in 1998 and is headquartered in Mountain View, California.
SectorCommunication Services
IndustryInternet Content & Information
CEOSundar Pichai
HeadquartersMountain View,CA,US
Official Websitehttps://abc.xyz
Employees (FY)190,82K
Average Revenue (1Y)$2,11M
Net Income per Employee$692,64K

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Alphabet-C (GOOG) is currently trading at $304,62, with a 24h change of +%2,41. The 52-week trading range is $149,49–$350,15.

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Hot Posts About Alphabet-C (GOOG)

MrDecoder

MrDecoder

04-06 02:22
It is hard to find two companies that have benefited more from the artificial intelligence (AI) boom than **Nvidia** (NVDA +0.87%) and **Alphabet** (GOOG 0.15%)(GOOGL 0.55%). And both tech giants have delivered incredible returns over the last few years as investors clamor for exposure to the next era of computing. But can both stocks keep winning over the long haul? And, more importantly, is one of these two AI stocks a better buy? Nvidia is the ultimate picks-and-shovels play, selling the hardware that makes artificial intelligence possible. Alphabet, on the other hand, is embedding that technology into an already dominant and diversified ecosystem of software, search, streaming, and cloud computing. ![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-506cc09d3d-447878042a-8b7abd-badf29) Image source: Getty Images. Nvidia: unmatched momentum, but cyclical hardware risks ------------------------------------------------------- Nvidia's fundamental performance over the past year has been nothing short of extraordinary. In the company's fiscal 2026 fourth quarter, revenue skyrocketed 73% year over year to $68.1 billion. Unsurprisingly, its data center segment remains the primary engine, generating $62.3 billion of that total as cloud providers continue to buy AI-capable graphics processing units (GPUs) at a staggering pace. Expand ![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-43be8eef8e-581c25c39b-8b7abd-badf29) NASDAQ: NVDA ------------ Nvidia Today's Change (0.87%) $1.53 Current Price $177.28 ### Key Data Points Market Cap $4.3T Day's Range $171.38 - $177.48 52wk Range $86.62 - $212.19 Volume 4.9M Avg Vol 181M Gross Margin 71.07% Dividend Yield 0.02% Noting the insatiable appetite for the company's chips in the latest earnings call, Nvidia chief financial officer Colette Kress explained the supply dynamics. "With Nvidia infrastructure in high demand, even Hopper and much of the six-year-old Ampere-based products are sold out in the cloud," Kress said. But this is where things get more complicated for the stock. Nvidia's business is largely tied to the massive capital expenditure cycles of its biggest customers. If those cloud infrastructure budgets eventually normalize, or if large tech companies successfully deploy more of their own custom silicon to save money, Nvidia could see both prices and revenue growth rates take a hit at the same time. At a price-to-earnings ratio of roughly 36 as of this writing, Nvidia stock leaves little room for error. The valuation arguably assumes not just continued rapid growth and strong pricing power, but also that the chipmaker will not face a cyclical hardware downturn anytime soon. Alphabet: a durable, AI-powered ecosystem ----------------------------------------- Alphabet's growth profile looks slower, but more durable. The Google parent's fourth-quarter revenue rose 18% year over year to $113.8 billion. While the company's advertising business accounted for 72% of this revenue and grew at a robust year-over-year rate of 14%, the company's cloud computing business -- Google Cloud -- is arguably the central element to the bull case for Alphabet stock. Expand ![](https://img-cdn.gateio.im/social/moments-bdfd58dc61-3901f16cbe-8b7abd-badf29) NASDAQ: GOOGL ------------- Alphabet Today's Change (-0.55%) $-1.62 Current Price $295.77 ### Key Data Points Market Cap $3.6T Day's Range $289.45 - $298.08 52wk Range $140.53 - $349.00 Volume 22M Avg Vol 34M Gross Margin 59.68% Dividend Yield 0.28% Google Cloud's revenue surged 48% year over year to $17.7 billion in Q4. And as the cloud unit scales, it is becoming a significant profit driver for the overall business. Google Cloud's operating margin improved dramatically to 30.1% in the quarter -- up from just 17.5% in the year-ago period. And demand trends suggest there's more incredible growth to come for this segment. Alphabet is "signing larger customer commitments," Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai noted during the company's fourth-quarter earnings call when talking about its business momentum in Google Cloud. "The number of deals in 2025 over a billion dollars surpassed the previous three years combined." Alphabet's total Google Cloud backlog? It sits at $240 billion, up 55% sequentially. "The increase in backlog was driven by strong demand for our Cloud products, led by our enterprise AI offerings from multiple customers," explained Alphabet chief financial officer Anat Ashkenazi in the company's fourth-quarter earnings call. And because Alphabet generates substantial free cash flow -- $73.3 billion in 2025 -- primarily from its core search advertising business while simultaneously growing a high-margin enterprise cloud division, the company is not overly reliant on a single hardware cycle. Therefore, if AI infrastructure spending cools off, Alphabet still has billions of users actively engaging with YouTube and Google Search to fall back on. Which stock is the better buy? ------------------------------ Deciding between the two stocks boils down to predictability and durability. The reality is that both companies' valuations look fair given their underlying growth rates. Alphabet trades at 27 times earnings while Nvidia commands a price-to-earnings ratio of 36. But Nvidia, of course, is growing far faster than Alphabet. The issue comes down to what investors expect to happen over the long term. With Nvidia, there's arguably more uncertainty. While the company may continue to beat expectations in the near term, buying a cyclical hardware business at a premium multiple introduces significant risk if industry capacity catches up to demand or if competition gains significant market share as the current investment cycle matures. Both of these companies are exceptional operators with bright futures. But for investors putting fresh capital to work today, Alphabet is arguably the better buy. The search giant's diversified revenue streams, its accelerating cloud business, and its less cyclical business model make it a safer long-term bet. Of course, Alphabet has risks, too. For instance, the company plans to spend about $175 billion to $185 billion on capital expenditures this year -- largely on investments related to AI compute capacity and cloud demand. Investors will have to keep an eye on management's comments on how the return on investment on such significant spending is paying off. Ultimately, Nvidia is certainly worth watching, but Alphabet is the stock I would rather own right now.
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MrDecoder

MrDecoder

04-04 07:54
**Alphabet** (GOOG 0.15%) (GOOGL 0.57%) just dropped a bombshell that is sending waves through the stock market, especially in the memory chip sector. Before Alphabet's announcement, the assumption was that memory capacity for AI computing chips would be in a supply constraint for several years, leading to soaring memory prices. However, Alphabet's latest breakthrough may have changed that notion, which has triggered a sell-off in **Micron**'s (MU 0.49%) stock, one of the leading memory unit providers. The damage isn't just isolated to Micron; it has also affected **Sandisk **and **SK Hynix**, other leading memory providers. But is this reaction warranted? Or is there a real issue here? Image source: Getty Images. TurboQuant is reducing the amount of memory needed for generative AI -------------------------------------------------------------------- Generative AI requires a ton of memory capacity. As models are trained on more and more information, accessing some of the training data or previous conversations requires a ton of memory capacity. Google refers to this as a "needle in a haystack," which is a perfect description of the challenge these models face. However, Google may have solved part of this issue with its TurboQuant algorithm. This algorithm reduces the amount of memory needed by generative AI models by six times, which logically triggered a collapse in memory stocks. Since the paper was published on March 24, Micron's stock is down nearly 20%, matching the sell-off in its peer, Sandisk. The assumption is that the customers are going to need six times less memory than before, which would clear the memory bottleneck that AI hyperscalers are currently facing. Additionally, Google made this algorithm open-sourced, so everyone, including its competitors, has access to it. With every AI company needing potentially less memory and the ability to integrate this breakthrough overnight, there is a lot of fear in memory chip stocks. Expand NASDAQ: MU ---------- Micron Technology Today's Change (-0.49%) $-1.82 Current Price $366.03 ### Key Data Points Market Cap $413B Day's Range $340.50 - $366.90 52wk Range $61.54 - $471.34 Volume 2M Avg Vol 41M Gross Margin 58.54% Dividend Yield 0.14% However, I think that may be a bit too broad an assumption. The Jevons Paradox may be at work here -------------------------------------- One item that isn't discussed is how constrained AI models were before this breakthrough. Memory was a limiting factor, and with companies like Micron only being able to fulfill half to two-thirds of customer orders, there was no end in sight. Additionally, Micron projected the high-bandwidth memory market, the type primarily used for AI, would expand from $35 billion to $100 billion from 2025 to 2028 due to increased memory demand. Just because AI companies can be more efficient with memory doesn't mean prices will automatically fall. The Jevons Paradox notes that when something becomes cheaper or more efficient, demand can actually rise due to it becoming more accessible. That could happen with memory chips, as demand may rise because AI is becoming better at utilizing them. This would keep the status quo going for Micron, making the sell-off a potential buying opportunity. The market has been fairly bearish on Micron's stock since its latest earnings reports, and shares are down 30% since then, despite guiding for its revenue to rise to $33.5 billion, up from $23.9 billion in its latest quarter, and $13.6 billion the quarter before that. MU Revenue (Quarterly) data by YCharts I think investors don't need to rush and buy Micron's stock right now, as the TurboQuant news is still being digested. Investors should keep an eye on consumer memory prices (by looking at RAM stick prices) and see if they fall. If they do, then Micron's stock could be facing falling product prices, which would give investors a reason to steer clear. If prices stay elevated, then that's an indication that there is still a large memory supply constraint, and the Jevons Paradox is real and active for memory demand. Personally, I think the TurboQuant breakthrough is huge news. Still, AI companies are going to find a way to utilize all of the freed up memory capacity differently, leading to still-elevated memory chip demand, making Micron a smart buy now.
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