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Prediction: Alphabet Will Beat the Market. Here's Why.

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It’s amazing what a couple of grad students can cook up in their garage. I’ve been a fan (and heavy user) of Google since the search engine hit the internet in 1997 and a happy shareholder since 2007.

The company now known as Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) entered the stock market a couple of years before that, but I could never seem to stop writing about Google long enough to pick up any shares.

GOOGL Total Return Level Chart
GOOGL Total Return Level data by YCharts.

Those first few Alphabet shares, bought for a split-adjusted $11.68 per share, have gained 1,320% as of March 27, 2025. The S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) market index only rose 438% over the same period, with reinvested dividends along the way.

I have no intention of closing this Alphabet position because I expect the stock to continue outperforming the stock market for years to come. Here’s why.

Spoiler alert: I won’t talk about financial growth rates, margin targets, or other fiscal details in this overview. My investment thesis for Alphabet isn’t about specific numbers because there’s no way to predict what will happen over the next couple of decades. That’s the timeline here, and I don’t mind some bumps in that long road.

Sure, I’ll keep an eye on details like Alphabet’s revenue growth and free-cash-flow generation, but it will take much more than a temporary dip in these metrics to make me search for that “sell” button. Otherwise, I could have run for the exits during the market meltdown of 2008-2010 or the inflation crisis in 2022. These events brought drastic slowdowns to Alphabet’s sales growth and cash flow.

You can see price dips in Alphabet’s stock chart if you squint just right at those periods. I mean, the 2022 drop still looks painful on charts drawn in 2025.

It took more than a year to recover from that bump, which dropped Alphabet’s stock price as much as 44.3% lower. But future generations will just see another little squiggle on the long-term growth chart, just like the 65.3% price drop you already forgot happened in 2008. If anything, I hope you bought more shares while they were cheap.

The whole Alphabet structure is key to the company’s long-term survival. As a pure Google organization, the company would confuse everyone from investors and users to rivals and regulators if it strayed too far from its core operations. Online search and advertising still generate plenty of business, but that will surely change at some point. By then, Alphabet will have something else ready to pick up the money-making slack.

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