Last year was full of panic for Alphabet (GOOGL). The market seriously feared that Google’s stranglehold on search would fall under attack by AI solutions from Microsoft (MSFT) and OpenAI, and that key customers like Apple (AAPL) would move away from the company. But reality put everything in its place. Google not only defended itself from the attacks of its competitors: it maintained the crown, demonstrating that its ecosystem is much stronger than the pessimists thought.
GOOGL stock prices responded logically. Today, the stock is trading at the level of $336 and the market capitalization has surpassed the $4 trillion mark. But that raises a reasonable question: If the fears are behind us and the business is running like clockwork, should investors expect the explosive rally to continue? That’s where Google faces a fundamental macroeconomic problem.
Let’s look at the concrete numbers. Alphabet showed surprising results for 2025. Annual revenue reached $402.8 billion, up 15% year-on-year, and net profit soared to $132.1 billion, up 32%. Currently, the trailing price-earnings (P/E) multiple is approximately 31 times. For a technology leader with such a pace of cash generation, this is an absolutely fair and appropriate valuation. The company has excellent cash flow, makes a lot of money, and there are no bubbles in this valuation.
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But here’s the trick: if you buy a stock right now, you’re counting on its biggest growth. And growing cap from $4 trillion requires completely different drivers than growing from $1 trillion to $2 trillion.
Google’s main problem today is its own phenomenal success and its achieved scale. A market capitalization of $4 trillion and annual revenue of more than $400 billion means the company can no longer grow in a vacuum. Google has become so big that it has become a substitute asset for the entire world economy. That’s where the technology giant collides with the physical limits of its expansion.
In essence, any money in the economy is the equivalent of materialized and “frozen” human labor. Alphabet’s revenue (most of which still comes from advertising and services) depends directly on how much of this “frozen labor” the end consumer has in the form of purchasing power. Google controls search traffic, dominates mobile operating systems with Android, and owns the largest video hosting site, YouTube. Masterfully levies a “digital tax” on global trade and consumption.
At the same time, behind this lies a hard ceiling: Google cannot separate itself from the foundations of global consumption. If the world economy stagnates or grows between a modest 2% and 3% annually, the incomes of end consumers do not increase. This means that advertisers have no reason to multiply their budgets, since the buyer will still not be able to purchase more products. Google has dominated virtually every niche it has access to and now its organic growth in these segments is rigidly limited by global GDP growth rates and demographics. There is simply nowhere else the company can expand because the Earth is finite and new continents with billions of untapped users won’t fall from the sky.
The bulls will object and ask, “What about artificial intelligence?” In fact, over the past two or three years, investors have watched as AI became the most powerful driver of company revaluation. The implementation of generative models gave a huge boost to Google Cloud’s business and allowed the company to successfully sell premium Gemini Advanced subscriptions.
However, in my opinion, this explosive period of integration has already passed. The novelty effect is wearing off. Corporations that wanted to transfer their capabilities to AI clouds have already done so or allocated their budgets. Users willing to pay for a smart assistant have already signed up. We have encountered a peculiar digital demographic barrier: the number of people and companies with the purchasing power to consume the current spectrum of AI services is finite. AI works excellently in maintaining Google’s dominant position and justifies the current $4 trillion valuation, but within the existing product line, it is no longer capable of generating the exponential growth that the market experienced in 2023 and 2024.
To grow further and outperform the global economy, Google must take on the role of an absolute visionary. Tactical successes, like expanding Waymo’s robotaxi fleet to new cities or implementing local AI features into services, are great. But for a giant of this size, these are local and niche stories. They are not able to create the large-scale cash flow that would add another trillion dollars of value to the company.
Alphabet needs to create fundamentally new markets with enormous capacity, markets measured in tens and hundreds of billions of dollars. The company needs to invent services and products that change human behavior and create new forms of consumption.
Here, the industry leader collides with the classic economic triad: what to produce, how to produce, and for whom to produce. The problem is that the answers to these questions have not yet been found in the new technological paradigm. How are trailers monetized beyond advertising and subscriptions? Who will pay for this? We currently cannot convert these future markets into financial models because they have not yet been invented. As a flagship, Google is forced to walk in the dark, feeling its way into these markets through colossal capital expenditures.
Today, Alphabet is a magnificent, high-margin business generating gigantic cash flow. The current valuation with a P/E of around 31 times is absolutely fair and represents the company’s leadership in the technology sector. The risk of competitors destroying Google Search did not materialize.
But investors need to change their perspective. Google is no longer a very large startup capable of doubling every two years. It is a heavyweight whose pulse beats to the rhythm of the world economy. Without inventing fundamentally new, currently non-existent methods of large-scale monetization, the company is doomed to calm and moderate growth along with the market. The thesis has been fulfilled and the leadership is protected. Now begins the long and difficult work of visionaries seeking new markets beyond the exhausted opportunities of planet Earth.
On the date of publication, Mikhail Fedorov had no (directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article are for informational purposes only. This article was originally published on Barchart.com