MENA Newswire, SAN FRANCISCO: Shares of Alphabet Inc. rose sharply on Monday, lifting the Google parent’s market capitalization above $4 trillion for the first time and placing it among a small group of companies to reach that valuation threshold. The milestone was achieved during intraday trading as Alphabet’s Class A and Class C shares touched record highs before paring some gains later in the session.

Alphabet’s advance reflects sustained strength in its core advertising business and continued growth in its cloud computing division, which together account for the majority of the company’s revenue. The company’s valuation had been approaching the $4 trillion level in recent months as technology stocks broadly gained, but Monday’s move marked the first confirmed instance of Alphabet crossing the mark, according to market data tracked by major exchanges.
With the move, Alphabet joined an elite group of U.S. companies whose market capitalizations have exceeded $4 trillion. That group includes Apple, Microsoft, and Nvidia. Nvidia remains the most valuable publicly traded company by market value, while Alphabet’s rise briefly placed it ahead of Apple in global rankings before fluctuations in share prices adjusted positions later in the trading day.
Alphabet, founded in 2015 as a holding company for Google and its related businesses, derives most of its revenue from digital advertising linked to search, YouTube, and affiliated platforms. Advertising sales have continued to expand alongside steady global demand for online services, even as marketers reassess spending allocations across traditional and digital media. Alphabet’s scale in search advertising remains unmatched, with Google maintaining the dominant share of the global search engine market.
The company’s cloud unit, Google Cloud, has also contributed to investor interest as enterprise demand for data storage, analytics, and computing services has increased. Alphabet reports cloud results as a separate segment, and the division has posted year over year revenue growth while narrowing operating losses compared with earlier periods. The cloud business is smaller than rivals operated by Microsoft and Amazon but has expanded its customer base across multiple industries.
Alphabet crosses historic market capitalization threshold
Alphabet’s market capitalization milestone comes amid a broader rally in large technology stocks, which have been supported by strong earnings, balance sheet resilience, and continued capital investment. Major U.S. equity indexes were mixed on Monday, but shares of several technology companies outperformed the broader market, reflecting ongoing concentration of investor interest in the sector’s largest firms. Trading volumes in Alphabet shares were higher than recent averages as the stock approached and crossed the $4 trillion level.
The company employs more than 180,000 people globally and operates offices and data centers across North America, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. In addition to Google, Alphabet’s portfolio includes businesses focused on mobile operating systems, online video, mapping, hardware, and experimental projects housed under its Other Bets segment. While Other Bets generate limited revenue compared with advertising and cloud operations, they remain part of Alphabet’s long term corporate structure.
Alphabet shares trade near record highs
Alphabet reports financial results quarterly and is scheduled to release its next earnings update later this month. Investors typically assess performance based on advertising trends, cloud revenue growth, and operating margins, along with capital expenditures tied to infrastructure and product development. As of Monday’s close, Alphabet’s shares remained near record levels, underscoring the scale the company has achieved more than two decades after Google’s founding.
The $4 trillion valuation milestone underscores Alphabet’s position as one of the world’s largest and most influential technology companies by market value. While intraday market capitalizations can fluctuate with share prices, crossing the threshold places Alphabet among a small number of firms whose size reflects both sustained revenue generation and long term investor confidence in their established businesses.
