GOOG

Prezzo Alphabet-C

GOOG
$338,91
+$5,41(+1,62%)

*Data last updated: 2026-04-17 18:43 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-04-17 18:43, Alphabet-C (GOOG) is priced at $338,91, with a total market cap of $4,02T, a P/E ratio of 28,69, and a dividend yield of 0,24%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $332,50 and $339,84. The current price is 1,92% above the day's low and 0,27% below the day's high, with a trading volume of 13,82M. Over the past 52 weeks, GOOG has traded between $149,49 to $350,15, and the current price is -3,21% away from the 52-week high.

GOOG Key Stats

Yesterday's Close$334,47
Market Cap$4,02T
Volume13,82M
P/E Ratio28,69
Dividend Yield (TTM)0,24%
Dividend Amount$0,21
Diluted EPS (TTM)10,94
Net Income (FY)$132,17B
Revenue (FY)$402,96B
Earnings Date2026-04-29
EPS Estimate2,64
Revenue Estimate$106,77B
Shares Outstanding12,03B
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 $338,91, with a 24h change of +1,62%. The 52-week trading range is $149,49–$350,15.

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Alphabet-C (GOOG) Latest News

2026-02-18 08:17

段永平最新持仓披露:减持苹果加大AI布局,英伟达持仓增超1100%

BlockBeats 消息,2 月 18 日,知名投资人段永平旗下投资公司 H&H International Investment 在今晨提交 13F 文件披露截至 2025 年第四季度的美股持仓变动,期末总持仓市值约为 174.89 亿美元,环比 Q3 的 147 亿美元增长约 19%,持仓股票数量为 14 只,前十大持仓占比高达 99.66%,风格依然高度集中于价值股与 AI 相关机会。核心持仓排名前五为:苹果 (AAPL) 占比 50.30%,伯克希尔哈撒韦 B (BRK.B) 占比 20.63%,英伟达 (NVDA) 占比 7.72%,拼多多 (PDD) 占比 7.48%,谷歌 C (GOOG) 占比 3.33%。 其去年四季度主要持仓变动为大幅减持苹果并加大对 AI 产业链布局,其中: 苹果持仓减少约 7.09%,减持 247 万股; 英伟达持仓增超 1100%,从 Q3 约 60 万股暴增至 724 万股左右,持仓市值跃升至其投资组合第三大; 伯克希尔哈撒韦 B 持仓增超 38.24%,新增近 200 万股,作为防御性投资; 拼多多持仓增超约 34.55%,新增近 300 万股,在下跌时越跌越买,凸显其价值投资理念; 微软和台积电持仓分别大幅增加 207% 与 371%,两家均为 AI 产业链关键一环; 少量建仓 3 只 AI 相关股票试水,分别为云端 AI 算力租赁领军企业 CoreWeave (CRWV),占其持仓约 0.12%;数据中心互联解决方案 Credo Technology (CRDO),占其持仓约 0.12%;AI 辅助精准医疗 Tempus AI (TEM),占其持仓约 0.04%。 2025 年段永平继续坚守「大道无形我有型」的价值投资理念,继续重仓熟知公司且持仓依旧高度集中,前五大占超 89%,但明显加大了对 AI 全产业链配置,从核心芯片到基础设施乃至应用端均有涉及,2025 年 11 月段永平曾在雪球《方略》深度访谈中提及,「我觉得投一点看看吧,AI 这个东西我觉得至少掺和一下,不要错过了。完全错过了,好像有点不太合适。」 此外,段永平目前在 A 股港股的重仓标的为贵州茅台及腾讯控股,并于 1 月 21 日于 1400 元附近加仓 2 万股茅台,还持有少量煤炭股中国神华。

2025-11-24 15:15

Alphabet(GOOG)上涨触及317.75美元,创历史新高

BlockBeats 消息,11 月 24 日,据行情数据显示,美股谷歌母公司 Alphabet(GOOG)上涨触及 317.75 美元,创历史新高,日内上涨 5.63%。

2025-10-14 22:50

VolShares申请5倍杠杆单股及加密货币ETF

金色财经报道,ETF发行商VolShares提交多只5倍杠杆单股及加密货币ETF申请,涵盖COIN、CRCL、GOOG、MSTR、NVDA、PLTR、TSLA,以及比特币、以太坊、Solana、XRP等。值得注意的是,VolShares尚未获批任何3倍杠杆ETF,却直接尝试5倍杠杆。有分析认为,这可能是VolShares希望趁监管审批可能延迟时率先推出高杠杆ETF,但具体情况仍不明。

2023-01-06 08:18

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Hot Posts su Alphabet-C (GOOG)

SelfRugger

SelfRugger

2 ore fa
As Microsoft Bets on ‘True Self-Sufficiency,’ Should You Bet on MSFT Stock? =========================================================================== Oleksandr Pylypenko Wed, February 18, 2026 at 1:48 AM GMT+9 7 min read In this article: * StockStory Top Pick MSFT -1.14% Microsoft (MSFT) is entering a new chapter in its artificial intelligence (AI) strategy—one defined less by partnership and more by independence. After investing nearly $14 billion in OpenAI and tightly integrating its models into Azure, Microsoft 365 Copilot, GitHub, and other flagship products, the company is now openly pursuing what it calls “true self-sufficiency” in AI. That ambition goes beyond incremental diversification. It signals a structural shift toward developing in-house frontier models, expanding proprietary AI chips like the Maia accelerator, and reducing reliance on a single external supplier for its most critical technology layer. So as Microsoft doubles down on “true self-sufficiency,” the core question for investors becomes clear: Is this strategic shift a calculated step toward deeper competitive advantage and long-term value creation, or does it add another layer of risk to its growth story? And more importantly, should you be adding to your MSFT position now—or waiting for clearer evidence that the strategy will pay off? Let’s take a closer look! ### More News from Barchart * Calm Waters for Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) Stock Present a Tempting Options Trade * Amazon Put Options at Lower Strike Prices Have High Yields * Is GOOG Stock a Buy Amid the Software Selloff? * Tired of missing midday reversals? The FREE Barchart Brief newsletter keeps you in the know. Sign up now! About Microsoft Stock --------------------- Microsoft is a dominant force in the technology sector, boasting a diverse portfolio spanning software, cloud computing, AI, gaming, and hardware. Notably, the company is among the pioneers targeting the AI market through its partnership and substantial investments in OpenAI. MSFT has a market cap of $2.98 trillion, making it the fourth most valuable public company in the world. Shares of the tech giant have slumped 18% on a year-to-date (YTD) basis. There are two main drivers behind those losses: the company’s FQ2 earnings report and souring sentiment toward the software sector. MSFT stock took a hit in late January after the tech giant reported higher-than-expected spending and slower cloud sales growth, stoking investor fears that its AI investments may take longer than anticipated to pay off. The stock was also caught in a software sector sell-off amid concerns that AI could disrupt the industry. www.barchart.com Microsoft Moves Toward “True Self-Sufficiency” in AI ---------------------------------------------------- Microsoft’s AI chief, Mustafa Suleyman, told the _Financial Times_ last week that the tech giant is striving for “true self-sufficiency” in AI. That means developing its own powerful models and steadily reducing its dependence on OpenAI, even as the two companies maintain their partnership. Essentially, the company aims to move beyond the “powered by someone else” model. Story Continues Suleyman told the outlet that the strategic shift followed the restructuring of its partnership with OpenAI in October 2025. The deal converted Microsoft’s $13.75 billion investment into a 27% stake in OpenAI Group PBC, valued at roughly $135 billion. Under the pact, Microsoft’s intellectual property rights for both models and products were extended through 2032, including post-Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) models. In addition, _Bloomberg _reported that Microsoft will remain entitled to receive 20% of OpenAI’s revenue. Meanwhile, OpenAI gained the flexibility to source computing power beyond Azure and seek new investors, while Microsoft secured the right to independently pursue AGI, either on its own or with third-party partners. Microsoft’s flagship AI product is Microsoft 365 Copilot, serving as an “AI-first” productivity assistant integrated across the Microsoft 365 ecosystem. It combines large language models (LLMs) with organizational data from Microsoft Graph, including emails, chats, and documents, to provide context-aware assistance. Microsoft 365 Copilot is actively boosting the company’s top and bottom lines. In the most recent quarter, revenue in the Productivity and Business Processes segment rose 16% year-over-year (YoY) to $34.1 billion, fueled by growth in Microsoft 365 Commercial Cloud, which was driven in turn by Microsoft 365 E5 and Microsoft 365 Copilot. During the FQ2 earnings call, CEO Satya Nadella said that companies are now paying for 15 million Microsoft 365 Copilot subscriptions. The key point is that Microsoft 365 Copilot primarily relies on OpenAI’s advanced LLMs, hosted on Microsoft’s Azure OpenAI Service. And that dependence on a “single supplier” began to look like a vulnerability, potentially prompting the company to develop its most advanced technology in-house. Suleyman said, “We have to develop our own foundation models, which are at the absolute frontier, with gigawatt-scale compute and some of the very best AI training teams in the world.” The company is investing heavily in collecting and organizing the vast datasets needed to train advanced systems. “That’s our true self-sufficiency mission,” Suleyman added. He also said the company’s in-house models are expected to launch “sometime this year.” Microsoft’s AI chief noted that the company aims to capture a larger share of the enterprise market by developing “professional-grade AGI”—advanced AI tools capable of handling everyday tasks for knowledge workers. Meanwhile, the company seems to have begun its AI “self-sufficiency” push even before the restructuring of its partnership with OpenAI was announced. In August 2025, Microsoft AI unveiled MAI-1-preview, describing it as “an in-house mixture-of-experts model” that was “pre-trained and post-trained on ~15,000 NVIDIA H100 GPUs,” with plans to integrate it into select Copilot text applications. The company is also pushing for AI hardware “self-sufficiency,” having recently introduced its Maia 200 accelerator, the second generation of its in-house processors. Some of the first units were slated for Microsoft’s superintelligence team, where they would generate data to help improve the next generation of AI models. The chips will also power the Copilot assistant for businesses and AI models, including OpenAI’s latest, which the company rents to cloud customers. Beyond its core AI “self-sufficiency” push, Microsoft is also cutting back on its dependence on OpenAI in other ways. The company has expanded its AI supplier base, hosting models from xAI, Meta, Mistral, and Black Forest Labs in its data centers. It has also recently started using models from the startup Anthropic for coding and within its Microsoft 365 productivity suite. Should You Bet on MSFT Stock? ----------------------------- Microsoft’s pursuit of “true self-sufficiency” marks a major shift from being OpenAI’s primary distributor to becoming its direct competitor in the development of “frontier” AI models. This strategy aims to give Microsoft full-stack control over its AI ecosystem, from the chips and data centers to the underlying intelligence, eliminating the risk of being “powered by someone else.” The move is generally viewed as a strategic, long-term positive for MSFT stock. First, it allows Microsoft to control its own “AI destiny” while reducing reliance on a single external partner. Second, Microsoft can reduce the licensing fees it pays to OpenAI by deploying its own models, thereby improving its profit margins. Finally, in-house models can allow Microsoft to tailor AI solutions specifically for corporate clients, potentially increasing its market share in the enterprise AI market. However, there are also risks, as developing proprietary “frontier” models requires massive investment in infrastructure, meaning elevated capex—something that recently weighed on MSFT stock. Moreover, Microsoft has said it remains constrained by limited AI computing capacity, meaning it must allocate resources between its internal AI development initiatives and the numerous external customers relying on its cloud services for AI workloads. Microsoft CFO Amy Hood said that had the company allocated all of its newest GPU chips to Azure, the growth rate would have exceeded 40% in FQ2. Putting it all together, I believe the potential long-term benefits of Microsoft’s push for “true self-sufficiency” in AI outweigh the associated risks. And considering where MSFT stock is trading after the post-earnings selloff, it is a real gift for long-term investors. Wall Street analysts remain highly bullish on MSFT stock, as reflected in its consensus “Strong Buy” rating. Among the 50 analysts covering the stock, 41 rate it a “Strong Buy,” four assign a “Moderate Buy” rating, and the remaining five recommend holding. The average price target for MSFT stock is $595.60, representing 48.4% upside potential from Friday’s closing price. www.barchart.com _ On the date of publication, Oleksandr Pylypenko had a position in: MSFT. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Barchart.com _ Terms and Privacy Policy Privacy Dashboard More Info
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SelfRugger

SelfRugger

3 ore fa
You May Never Have Heard of Corsair Gaming But Its Stock Just Jumped 50%. Should You Buy Shares Here? ===================================================================================================== Business chart with glowing arrows and world map by Golden Dayz via Shutterstock Nauman Khan Wed, February 18, 2026 at 1:35 AM GMT+9 4 min read In this article: CRSR -17.30% Gaming and PC hardware stocks don’t usually grab headlines the way AI megacaps do, but every so often, a forgotten name reminds investors how fast sentiment can change. After spending much of last year out of favor amid a choppy PC cycle, some niche tech stocks are suddenly back in play as demand pockets re-emerge and valuations reset to compelling levels. One such surprise winner is Corsair Gaming (CRSR). The little-known maker of PC gaming components and peripherals shocked the market last Friday when its stock surged roughly 50% in a single session following a blowout fourth-quarter earnings report and the announcement of its first-ever share buyback. ### More News from Barchart * Calm Waters for Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) Stock Present a Tempting Options Trade * Amazon Put Options at Lower Strike Prices Have High Yields * Is GOOG Stock a Buy Amid the Software Selloff? * Get exclusive insights with the FREE Barchart Brief newsletter. Subscribe now for quick, incisive midday market analysis you won't find anywhere else. With CRSR rebounding sharply from multi-year lows, investors are now asking an important question: Is this just a short-term momentum spike, or the start of a more durable turnaround worth buying into today? About CRSR Stock ---------------- Corsair Gaming designs and sells PC gaming and streaming hardware. Its “Components and Systems” division covers pre-built gaming PCs, power supplies, cases, liquid coolers, and performance memory, e.g., Vengeance RAM. Its “Peripherals” segment includes gaming keyboards, headsets, controllers, and Elgato streaming devices. Corsair sells to gamers and content creators worldwide. Corsair's shares have been volatile lately. Early last year, the stock climbed as PC hardware demand remained healthy, but it later drifted lower amid broader weakness across the technology sector. Over the past 52 weeks, shares have plunged about 50%. However, after a sharp 50% rally last week, the stock has been able to recover some of those losses and is now up roughly 5% year to date (YTD). Additionally, CRSR stock has been deeply out of favor with investors. On a trailing basis, the shares trade at roughly 13.9 times earnings and about 1.0 times book value, well below most technology peers, many of which command 20 to 30 times earnings and 2 to 4 times book, which shows Corsair looks inexpensive relative to its long-term growth potential. www.barchart.com Corsair Gaming Q4 Earnings Spark a Violent Rally ------------------------------------------------ The massive rally was sparked by Corsair Gaming’s Feb. 12 fourth-quarter earnings report, which handily beat analyst expectations and triggered aggressive buying. In after-hours trading, the stock jumped about 25% and extended those gains to roughly 48% soon after. The surge pushed Corsair’s market capitalization above $600 million, signaling renewed investor optimism and instantly shifting the stock from laggard to leader, though its higher valuation now faces closer scrutiny. The move followed strong results, including Q4 revenue of approximately $436.9 million, up 6% year-over-year (YoY); earnings of $0.43 per share; and the announcement of Corsair’s first-ever $50 million share-repurchase program. Story continues Beyond the headline numbers, the rally materially strengthened Corsair’s financial flexibility. A higher share price gives management added “dry powder” to invest in growth initiatives, weather industry downturns, and pursue future financing on more favorable terms. Management also pointed to improving fundamentals. Margins benefited from favorable memory pricing and continued cost reductions, with CEO Thi La citing “significant progress on the strategy.” For full-year 2025, revenue climbed 12% to $1.47 billion, while adjusted EBITDA surged 80% to $100 million. Cash generation remained strong, with Corsair adding $33 million in Q4, building inventory to meet demand, and paying down more than $50 million of debt during the year. By quarter-end, cash and cash equivalents exceeded $284 million, well above prior-year levels. Corsair Advances Strategy Amid Challenges ----------------------------------------- Corsair Gaming has also been executing strategically within its niche. The company recently named Michael Potter as CFO to push recurring revenue, opened its first retail store in Santa Clara, and lifted direct-to-consumer sales to 20% of revenue. Additionally, new product launches and profitable memory pricing helped results, though management warned of semiconductor constraints and a roughly $12 million tariff headwind in 2026. What Do Analysts Say About CRSR Stock? -------------------------------------- Wall Street’s views on Corsair had been lukewarm entering this quarter. Analysts generally saw Corsair as a turnaround play, with a consensus “Buy” rating with a mean price target of $8.31, which suggests a 37% upside potential. For example, B. Riley raised its 12-month target to $7 on the Q4 beat. Barclays maintained a “Buy” rating but cut its target to $8. By contrast, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have not covered Corsair recently. Before the quarter, analysts expected $423 million in revenue, so the results exceeded those hopes. In their notes, analysts emphasize the mix: Barclays noted the memory windfall but remains cautious about 2026 supply constraints. B. Riley pointed to the robust margin beat. Piper Sandler (Hold, $7 PT) and Jefferies (Buy, ~$12 PT) have differing views: some see upside if peripherals boom, others worry about cycles. Overall, the recent upbeat results have led a few to raise their targets and labels; e.g., _TipRanks_ noted a new “Buy” from Craig-Hallum with an $8 price target, but most are still waiting to see if new sales traction continues. www.barchart.com _ On the date of publication, Nauman Khan did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Barchart.com _ Terms and Privacy Policy Privacy Dashboard More Info
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DeFiGrayling

DeFiGrayling

6 ore fa
Just noticed something interesting in the latest 13F filings. Billionaire Philippe Laffont of Coatue Management has been on a serious buying spree across three major trillion-dollar stocks, and the pattern tells you a lot about where smart money sees opportunity right now. Laffont oversees close to $40.8 billion in assets, and his track record of beating the S&P 500 makes his moves worth paying attention to. The guy clearly knows how to position a portfolio. Looking at his Q2 and Q3 2025 activity, there's a clear thesis emerging around AI infrastructure and established tech leaders. First up is Alphabet. This one's interesting because Laffont went all-in during Q3, opening a new position of over 2 million shares in GOOG while also cranking up his GOOGL holdings by 259%. The September antitrust ruling on Chrome probably cleared a lot of uncertainty that was hanging over the stock. But beyond that, you can see why he's attracted to it. Google's search dominance is still unmatched at roughly 90% global share, YouTube is absolutely massive, and their cloud division is accelerating past 30% growth thanks to AI integration. Plus, the balance sheet is pristine—$98.5 billion in cash and equivalents as of September. That kind of firepower lets them invest aggressively without breaking a sweat. Then there's Broadcom. Laffont bought this in every single quarter of 2025—45k shares in Q1, over 2 million in Q2, and another 120k in Q3. While everyone else is obsessing over Nvidia and GPUs, Laffont seems to favor the networking angle. Broadcom's data center solutions can connect tens of thousands of GPUs and optimize their performance. It's the unsexy but essential infrastructure play. Beyond AI, they've got solid positioning in wireless chips, smartphones, and IoT devices. Not just a one-trick pony. Microsoft is the third one, and it's actually his fund's second-largest holding. Added over 660k shares in Q2 and another 710k in Q3. Azure is right there as the number two cloud platform globally, growing nearly 40% year-over-year with all the AI momentum. But what's often overlooked is how those legacy segments—Windows, Office—still generate enormous cash flow. That cash engine funds all the growth bets. Microsoft ended September with $102 billion in cash and generated over $45 billion in operating cash flow. The valuation's also reasonable at around 25 times forward earnings, which is a 16% discount to their five-year average. What stands out is the consistency. Laffont isn't chasing hype. He's methodically building positions in companies with real competitive advantages, strong balance sheets, and exposure to the AI wave without being entirely dependent on it. The wealth and resources behind someone like Laffont matter because it lets them think long-term while others are trading on daily moves. These 13F filings show someone who's confident about where the market's heading over the next few years.
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