This stock will be bigger than Nvidia by the end of 2026

Nvidia ( NVDA ) is currently valued at over $4.5 trillion, making it the world’s most valuable company on June 18, 2024, when its market capitalization exceeded $3.3 trillion. It later hit $4 trillion in 2025 and briefly hit $5 trillion last October. However, the stock has traded mostly sideways since last August around the current price of $189.

The reasons include investor concerns about increasing competition in artificial intelligence accelerators from players such as Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), geopolitical constraints such as restrictions on US exports to China, delays in the production of next-generation chips such as Blackwell, slowing revenue growth and valuation fatigue after years of rapid gains.

Traders at prediction market Polymarket believe there is a good chance Nvidia will be dethroned as the largest company by the end of the year, and Alphabet ( GOOG ) ( GOOGL ) will likely be the new king.

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Google’s parent Alphabet is headquartered in Mountain View, California, and operates a vast ecosystem including Google Search, YouTube, Android, Google Cloud, ad networks and hardware like Pixel devices. In recent years, Alphabet has made significant advances in artificial intelligence, launching Gemini 3 in 2025 as its most advanced model yet, requiring fewer requests and offering smarter responses.

Other advancements include the Ironwood AI chip (seventh generation TPU) for scaling large models, Gemma 3 for efficient open-source AI, SIMA 2 for AI agents in 3D worlds, and integrations like AI Mode in Search and Gemini Robotics for physical interactions. These innovations support their cloud and advertising businesses amid the AI ​​boom.

Alphabet shares are up 1% year-to-date (YTD), only slightly underperforming the S&P 500 ($SPX)’s 1.89% YTD gain, but over the past year, GOOGL is up 69%, far outpacing the index’s 15% return. Valuation figures show a trailing P/E of 30.65, a forward P/E of 29.64 and a price/sales of 9.93. Compared to its 10-year historical average P/E of 27.69, it currently trades 7% higher, suggesting a premium. Compared to peers (average P/E 31.5x), it is attractive but expensive compared to the interactive media industry average of 12x.

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