Google’s AI Comeback: From ‘Falling Behind’ to Trillion-Dollar Rally
Alphabet, Google’s parent company, has staged a massive AI comeback, adding nearly $1 trillion in market value and silencing critics who predicted its decline. The surge follows the launch of its Gemini 3 AI model and major chip partnerships, putting the company on track for a potential $4 trillion valuation.
Key Takeaways
- Alphabet’s market cap surged nearly $1 trillion, heading towards $4 trillion.
- Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway invested $4.9 billion in the company.
- Google’s ‘full-stack’ AI strategy and custom chips are key differentiators.
- Gemini 3 is seen as a major threat to OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
Wall Street’s Vote of Confidence
The rally gained momentum with a massive vote of confidence from Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, which took a $4.9 billion stake in Alphabet. Meanwhile, the shifting landscape has impacted rivals—SoftBank Group, a major OpenAI backer, saw its shares hit a two-month low.
Nvidia Corporation, the dominant AI hardware supplier, lost $243 billion in market value as investors recognized Google’s proprietary chips as a viable alternative to Nvidia’s equipment.
The Hardware Advantage Paying Off
“Google has arguably always been the dark horse in this AI race,” Neil Shah, an analyst and co-founder at Counterpoint Research, told Bloomberg. “[It’s] a sleeping giant that is now fully awake.”
Google’s resurgence stems from what CEO Sundar Pichai calls a “full-stack approach.” Unlike OpenAI, which depends on external suppliers, Google controls its entire AI ecosystem—from applications and data from Search and YouTube to cloud infrastructure and custom silicon.
“We’ve taken a full, deep, full-stack approach to AI,” Pichai told investors last quarter. “And that really plays out.” This vertical integration is now generating significant returns in hardware.
After developing Tensor Processing Units (TPUs) for over a decade for internal use, Google is now offering this hardware to others. Anthropic PBC announced a deal potentially worth tens of billions to use up to 1 million Google TPUs.
The Information reported that Meta is negotiating to use Google’s chips in its data centers by 2027. While Google hasn’t confirmed specific plans, a spokesperson noted “accelerating demand” for its custom silicon in the cloud business.
Gemini 3: A Formidable ChatGPT Challenger
Google’s Gemini 3 AI model represents a significant advancement, with improved capabilities for software development, email organization, and business document analysis. It can also integrate graphics and text in responses for travel planning, historical inquiries, and art-related questions.
“We’re in a situation where—because of Google’s size and space and their first-mover advantage in search—Gemini could take market share and cause OpenAI and others to fall behind,” Mike O’Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading, told New York Times. He warned this shift could create ripple effects across the market, raising questions for Oracle and Microsoft, which have committed billions to OpenAI for computing resources.



