Growing investor confidence signals that Google’s custom AI semiconductors may become a major new revenue engine — and a powerful alternative to Nvidia
Alphabet Inc. (GOOG) is gaining renewed momentum on Wall Street as investors increasingly view the company’s custom tensor processing unit (TPU) chips as a transformative opportunity—one that could ultimately rival or even surpass the growth trajectory of Google Cloud. The optimism has helped push Alphabet’s shares up roughly 30% in the fourth quarter, making it one of the strongest performers in the S&P 500.
Originally developed to improve efficiency and speed inside Google’s sprawling data centers, TPUs have become a central asset in Alphabet’s AI ecosystem. Their prominence surged after Alphabet announced plans to supply tens of billions of dollars’ worth of chips to Anthropic, sparking a two-day rally in October. Shortly after, reports surfaced that Meta Platforms may spend billions for access to TPUs—fueling further enthusiasm.
Analysts now believe Alphabet is positioned to potentially sell TPUs to outside customers, turning a once internal tool into a major commercial product line. Gil Luria of DA Davidson estimates Alphabet could capture up to 20% of the AI semiconductor market—a business that could approach $900 billion in value over the coming years.
Unlike Nvidia’s flexible but expensive GPUs, TPUs are application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) tailored to accelerate machine learning workloads. Their lower cost and efficiency make them increasingly attractive as concerns mount over AI spending sustainability. With demand for compute skyrocketing, TPUs offer companies a viable path to diversify away from Nvidia’s supply constraints and high pricing.
The launch of Alphabet’s newest Gemini AI model—optimized specifically for TPUs—further validates the chips’ strategic importance. “Alphabet is the only company with leadership in every layer of AI,” said Mark Iong of Homestead Advisers.
Morgan Stanley analysts see signs of a developing TPU sales strategy, projecting millions of units shipped by 2027 and 2028. Even modest third-party sales could add billions to Alphabet’s revenue and boost earnings per share.
Still, risks remain. Expectations are rising, and Alphabet’s valuation—27 times forward earnings—is at its highest since 2021. But compared to peers like Microsoft, Apple, and Broadcom, it remains relatively inexpensive.
For many investors, the combination of AI leadership, accelerating chip demand, and attractive valuation make Alphabet a core long-term holding—one with substantial untapped upside if TPU commercialization takes off.
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