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Jan 12 (Reuters) – Alphabet hit a $4 trillion market valuation on Monday, as the Google parent’s sharpened artificial intelligence focus allayed doubts about its strategy ​and thrust it back to the forefront of the high-stakes race.

The tech giant ‌on Wednesday surpassed Apple in market capitalization for the first time since 2019, becoming the second most ‌valuable company in the world.

The milestones mark a remarkable change in investor sentiment for Alphabet, with its stock surging about 65% in 2025, outperforming its peers on Wall Street’s elite group of stocks, the so-called Magnificent Seven.

The stock has gained another 6% so far this ⁠year, and was last up ‌1.1%.

The shift was fueled by the company quelling concerns that it let an early AI advantage slip by turning a once-overlooked cloud unit ‍into a major growth engine and drawing a rare tech investment from Warren Buffett‘s Berkshire Hathaway.

Its new Gemini 3 model has also drawn strong reviews, intensifying pressure on OpenAI after GPT-5 left some ​users underwhelmed.

A Reuters report said that Samsung Electronics plans to double this year ‌the number of its mobile devices with AI features powered by Google’s Gemini.

Google Cloud’s revenue jumped 34% in the third quarter, with a backlog of non-recognized sales contracts rising to $155 billion.

Renting out Google’s self-developed AI chips that were reserved for internal use to outside customers has also enabled the unit’s breakneck pace of growth.

Indicating the rising demand, ⁠The Information reported that Meta Platforms was in talks ​to spend billions of dollars on Alphabet’s chips ​for use in its data centers starting from 2027.

Meanwhile, the company’s dominant revenue generator – the advertising business – has largely held steady in the face ‍of economic uncertainty and ⁠intense competition.

Alphabet is the fourth company to hit the $4 trillion milestone after Nvidia, Microsoft and Apple.

The stock has also benefited after a U.S. judge in September ⁠ruled against breaking up the company and allowing it to retain control of its Chrome browser and ‌Android mobile operating system.

(Reporting by Zaheer Kachwala, Shashwat Chauhan and Johann M ‌Cherian in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila)

 

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