Google's Parent Company Alphabet $1 Trillion Market Capitalization Milestone After Apple, Amazon and Microsoft

Alphabet, Google’s parent company, hits trillion-dollar market cap for first time

  • Alphabet hit the $1 trillion market capitalization, making it the fourth U.S. company to hit the milestone after Apple, Amazon and Microsoft.
  • Despite the company’s seemingly perpetual cultural clashes, Wall Street sees more dollar signs.

Google parent-company Alphabet has hit $1 trillion in market capitalization, making it the fourth U.S. company to hit the milestone.

Apple was the first to hit the market cap milestone in 2018. Then, Microsoft and Amazon followed. Apple and Microsoft are still valued at more than a trillion dollars while Amazon has since fallen below the mark.

Analysts are bullish on the company’s newly appointed CEO, Sundar Pichai. In a surprise announcement in December 2019, Alphabet founder Larry Page announced plans to step down as CEO, along with co-founder and president Sergey Brin.

  • Pichai had already been the CEO of Google, which includes all the company’s core businesses – including search, advertising, YouTube and Android – and generates substantially all its revenue and profits. But he reported to Page, who also oversaw other businesses making long-term bets on experimental technology like self-driving cars and package delivery drones. Now, he’s in charge of the whole conglomerate, although Page and Brin still have control over most of the company’s voting shares, giving them significant influence in major decisions.

With a roughly $620 billion valuation, Facebook appears to be the next likely trillion-dollar tech contender.

source: cnbc

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