What Could Push GOOGL Stock Higher From Here?
Google (GOOGL) Cloud’s backlog nearly doubled in a single quarter, reaching a scale of over $460 billion. This is not just incremental growth; it is a fundamental shift in the business. The segment’s revenue accelerated to 63% growth, becoming a primary engine for the entire company.
This explosive demand, driven by enterprise AI solutions, is why the upside case centers on revenue. The compounding effect of these massive, multi-year cloud deals is the core of the forward-looking story.
That’s the story. The question is whether it’s strong enough to deliver real upside from here, or whether today’s price has already absorbed most of the optimism. Yes, but with caveats. A conservative 3-year scenario points to roughly 40%. Revenue compounding does the work; the multiple barely moves. Here is the operational picture the math sits on top of:
| GOOGL | |
|---|---|
| Sector | Communication Services |
| Industry | Interactive Media & Services |
| P/E Ratio | 26.6 |
| P/E Ratio 3Y Avg | 23.3 |
| LTM* Revenue Growth | 17.5% |
| 3Y Avg Revenue Growth | 14.1% |
| LTM* Net Margin | 38% |
| 3Y Peak Net Margin | 38% |
| 3Y Avg Net Margin | 28% |
*LTM: Last Twelve Months

How Compounding Builds The Upside
Revenue compounds at 14.8% annually, taking the top line from $422.5B to $639.8B over three years. That is a step down from the LTM 17.5% pace, because today’s acceleration is unlikely to extrapolate cleanly over three years.
Margins ease from 38% to 35% as today’s LTM gives back a little to the longer-run average. Together, that takes earnings from $160.2B to roughly $224.4B, a 40% jump.
The multiple is asked to do nothing: it holds near today’s 26.6x. Apply that to the higher earnings and the stock lands near $493.84, a market cap of $6.0T against $4.3T today. That is roughly 40% above where the stock trades now.
Has revenue compounding been the lever driving GOOGL’s recent move? See the lever breakdown.
What Could Accelerate The Top Line
Beyond its cloud services, the company is opening a new hardware revenue stream. It will now deliver TPUs directly to a select group of customers for their own data centers. While a small amount of revenue will be recognized this year, management stated the vast majority of revenues will be realized in 2027.
What Could Slow It Down
The cost of meeting this demand remains an open question. Management projects that 2027 CapEx will significantly increase, but has not yet quantified the amount. This spending will continue to put pressure on the P&L through higher depreciation expense.
Is The Compounding Real?
For the case to play out, revenue has to keep compounding near 14.8%, a step down from today’s 17.5% but still firmly positive. The multiple is not asked to do anything dramatic, which is what makes the case defensible.
One quiet tailwind: GOOGL has retired roughly 5.3% of its share count over the past three years. Per-share earnings, therefore, rise faster than absolute earnings, giving the math a small but persistent assist independent of whatever the lever above does.
Direct TPU sales offer a tangible new revenue source, while unquantified CapEx and resulting depreciation create a known future drag.
Should You Invest In Alphabet?
For a different read on GOOGL, see our recent piece What Google Stock Was Telling You Before It Doubled.
A careful 3-year case on a single name is still a concentrated bet, as historical volatility across past market crises shows. Investors who build analyses like this on individual positions often want the same framework running across a diversified book, partly for discipline, partly because even the cleanest single-stock thesis can break for reasons the math does not capture.
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