In This Article:
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Google is the world’s most essential utility.
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Management has not ruined what the founders built.
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GOOG stock has become a safe investment for long-term capital gains.
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I resisted buying Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG, GOOGL) stock for years because it’s the most conservative of the Cloud Czars. The company, managed by CEO Sundar Pichai and CFO Ruth Porat, mostly stays in its lane. Yet, GOOG stock is up around 40% in the past year and 245% in the past five years compared with a 14% one-year return and a 92% five-year return for the S&P 500.
Google dominates search. It continues to build new cloud data centers. It sells a lot of advertising. It sells cloud-based data services. In 2022, this is a business that’s easy to understand.
The result has been incredible growth and insane profits. Alphabet’s revenue grew 41% last year to $257.6 billion, more than twice that of General Motors (NYSE:GM). Its net income nearly doubled to $112.20 per share.
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The 20:1 stock split, announced with earnings, was overdue. It will take place on July 1. Should investors consider buying GOOG stock ahead of the split? Let’s take a closer look.
Alphabet | $2,865.00 |
Unmet Expectations
Alphabet co-founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page no longer work for the company. They’re enjoying life as centibillionaires. However, today’s company is based entirely on what they did.
The “Google Guys” created an intense focus on search, which Wall Street grossly underestimated. They pushed engineering solutions to the problems of scale, resulting in today’s cloud technology. They bought Doubleclick, which became Google Ads. They bought video-sharing site YouTube, one of the most profitable acquisitions any company has ever made.
Porat and Pichai have stripped the company down. Their main contribution has been Google Cloud. It managed to lose $890 million last year while rivals Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) Web Services and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) Azure were wildly profitable.
One result of their management has been declining loyalty among formerly coddled workers and even the rise of a labor union. The original mantra of “don’t be evil” has evolved into “don’t make waves.”
A Wall Street analyst might reply, “Not that there’s anything wrong with that.” There’s nothing an owner wants to see more than management keeping talent in line.
Too Much Bull
After years of hesitating over these issues, I finally put some Google shares into my retirement account in January. They’re up 7%.