The Guardian (USA)

Google parent Alphabet hits $2tn valuation as it announces first dividend

- Dan Milmo Global technology editor

Google’s parent company has hit a stock market value of $2tn (£1.6tn) as investors reacted to a declaratio­n of its first ever dividend alongside strong results on Thursday.

Shares in Alphabet rose 10% in early Wall Street trading on Friday to give the tech group a stock market capitalisa­tion – a measure of a corporatio­n’s value – of more than $2tn. Alphabet last hit that level in intraday trading in 2021, but has yet to close above that benchmark after a day’s trading.

Alphabet’s shares rose after it posted results on Thursday that exceeded analyst’s expectatio­ns. Microsoft also reported strong figures on Thursday, amid heavy investment in artificial intelligen­ce, and investors pushed the company past the $3tn mark, a level it has already crossed this year.

Alphabet’s quarterly figures included better than expected results from its core Google search business as well as its YouTube platform, and strong figures from its cloud business, which has been boosted by the training and operation of artificial intelligen­ce models. The company also announced its first ever dividend.

Russ Mould, the investment director at AJ Bell, an investment platform, said Alphabet joining the ranks of dividend-paying tech company was a “sign of the times”.

“Big tech firms have enjoyed stellar growth over the past decade and while most remain highly innovative, their cashflows have become so strong that there’s oodles of money left over postreinve­stment in the business to reward shareholde­rs,” he added.

Alphabet joins a trio of US-listed companies with valuations of more than $2tn: Microsoft at more than $3tn; Apple at $2.6tn; and Nvidia, the leading chip supplier for AI products, at just more than $2tn. Apple also passed the $3tn mark last year.

 ?? Hilse/Reuters ?? Alphabet’s quarterly figures included better than expected results from its core Google search business. Photograph: Annegret
Hilse/Reuters Alphabet’s quarterly figures included better than expected results from its core Google search business. Photograph: Annegret

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