Is Google the Cheapest "Magnificent Seven" Stock You Can Buy Today?

Key Points

Wall Street's least favorite "Magnificent Seven" stock may be Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) right now if its price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is any indicator. The large technology company -- and parent of Google -- is leaping forward into the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution with open arms, growing revenue at a double-digit rate, and seeing an earnings inflection at its cloud division. And yet, it trades at the cheapest P/E ratio of all of its large-cap technology stocks brethren.

Let's dive in and analyze the parent company of Google, Gemini, YouTube, and Google Cloud and see whether this discounted earnings ratio makes the stock a buy right now.

Strong fundamental growth

There is a huge narrative around Alphabet and Google losing in AI to the likes of OpenAI. So far, this has not shown up in Alphabet's financial performance. Last quarter, Alphabet's revenue grew 14% year over year in constant currency to $90.2 billion, with 10% growth from Google Search revenue that is supposedly being disrupted by AI start-ups. So far, that hasn't been the case with Alphabet.

With a plethora of new AI products hitting the market including Gemini language upgrades, video tools, and a host of productivity and consumer shopping functions, Alphabet is staying on the cutting edge while still generating tons of revenue from Google Search. Over the last 12 months, Alphabet's revenue was $360 billion, up 117% cumulatively in the last five years.

This is not just from Google Search, either. YouTube advertising, subscriptions, and Google Cloud each generate around $10 billion in quarterly revenue and are growing revenue at a double-digit rate. This diversification of revenue should help Alphabet maintain its financial momentum even if Google Search does get disrupted as some investors fear.

Is Google the Cheapest "Magnificent Seven" Stock You Can Buy Today?

Earnings help from Google Cloud

The crown jewel of Alphabet's business right now is Google Cloud. Growing revenue at 28% year over year, the division is benefiting greatly from the rising demand from AI start-ups to host their computing in the cloud. A leader in the space, Google Cloud is closing in on $50 billion in annual recurring revenue with a long runway to grow.

For years, Google Cloud had negative operating earnings. Now, it is seeing a huge profit inflection that will be meaningful to Alphabet's consolidated bottom line. Google Cloud's operating income was $2.2 billion in the first quarter of 2025, giving it a profit margin of 18%. If cloud revenue can hit $100 billion annually within a few years while profit margins expand to 25%, that will equate to $25 billion in annual operating income from the division for Alphabet.

OK