Alphabet hits $4tn valuation on AI hopes

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Google’s parent company Alphabet has become the fourth Big Tech group to hit a $4tn market value, fuelled by investor optimism that its artificial intelligence models can compete with rivals such as OpenAI.

Alphabet shares rose 0.2 per cent in early trading in New York on Monday, capping a more than 6 per cent rise in the past month and catapulting the company over a threshold already surpassed by Nvidia, Apple and Microsoft.

At the start of last year, Alphabet’s shares had been lagging behind the broader AI-driven rally in Big Tech stocks, amid fears that its cash-cow search engine would be overshadowed by new apps such as ChatGPT and Perplexity.

Investors were also concerned that US regulators were seeking to break up the Silicon Valley-based company.

But the stock has more than doubled since April, as Demis Hassabis, co-founder of DeepMind, Google’s AI arm, led the group’s effort to make inroads on ChatGPT.

Last month, OpenAI chief Sam Altman declared a “code red” over the need to improve its products, after Google released its Gemini 3 model, which is considered to have leapfrogged rivals on industry benchmarks.

At the time, Koray Kavukcuoglu, Google’s AI architect and DeepMind’s chief technology officer, said the Big Tech group had “pushed our performance quite significantly” by training its AI models using Google’s own bespoke chips. The company also said it was integrating its latest AI models into products immediately.

Alphabet also showed investors that its advertising revenues were still growing strongly despite the threat from chatbot rivals.

The company’s quarterly revenues grew 16 per cent in the third quarter to surpass $100bn for the first time, it said in October, boosted by its booming cloud computing business and YouTube ads. Its Gemini app has grown rapidly to 650mn monthly users.

Investors have also become more bullish on the company’s prospects after US courts signalled that they were unwilling to break up the Big Tech group.

Last year, a US federal judge said that the Department of Justice’s request for Alphabet to spin off elements of its advertising business would not be “easily enforceable”, despite the court finding in April that the company had an illegal monopoly in digital ads.

Analysts at HSBC have said that Alphabet’s “full stack AI strategy [is] paying dividends”, thanks to Google developing and operating its own chips, data centres and consumer and workplace apps, in addition to the world’s most popular search engine.

By contrast, OpenAI and Anthropic are largely dependent on third parties for computing infrastructure and distribution.

Alphabet’s stock-price momentum has also allowed Google co-founder Larry Page to leapfrog Oracle’s executive chair Larry Ellison as the world’s second-richest person after Elon Musk.

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