ValueLens Investability Score

56
Mixed Signals
Valuation 16
35% weight
Financial Health 75
25% weight
Earnings Power 95
20% weight
Competitive Moat 74
15% weight
Shareholder Alignment 35
5% weight
Holding it back: Premium to intrinsic value (Valuation), Market-implied growth high (Valuation), Insider transactions (Shareholder Alignment)

Overview

$369.58
$372.19
$4467.17B
34.06x
0.23%
Media
NASDAQ NMS - GLOBAL MARKET
US

Alphabet Inc. is an American multinational technology conglomerate holding company headquartered in Mountain View, California. It was created through a restructuring of Google on October 2, 2015, and became the parent holding company of Google and several former Google subsidiaries. Alphabet is listed on the large-cap section of the Nasdaq under the ticker symbols GOOGL and GOOG; both classes of stock are components of major stock market indices such as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100. Alphabet has been described as a Big Tech company.

Ben Graham Analysis

WEAK (2/7)

Stock passes only 2 of 7 Graham criteria. Limited margin of safety. Requires deep conviction or special situation rationale.

✗ Expensive (> 25)
34.06
Graham preferred P/E below 15 for defensive investors
✗ Risky
Earnings Yield: 2.94%
AAA Bond Yield: 5.49%
Gap: -2.55%
Safe if earnings yield exceeds bond yield by 25%+
✗ Trading above by 276.3%
Graham Number: $98.22
Current Price: $369.58
Book Value/Share: 39.51
Margin: -276.3%
Graham Number = √(22.5 × EPS × Book Value). Buy when price is well below this number.
~ Modest dividend
0.23%
Graham favored dividend-paying stocks for stability
✗ Trading Above NCAV
NCAV: $26.0B
NCAV per Share: $2.15
Market Cap / NCAV: 171.67x
Premium to NCAV: 17066.9%
NCAV = Current Assets − Total Liabilities. Graham's most conservative measure: buy when Market Cap < 2/3 of NCAV.
~ Adequate (1.5–2.0)
1.92x
Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities. Graham required ≥ 2.0 for defensive investors — ensures the company can comfortably cover short-term obligations.
✓ Conservative (< 0.5)
0.16x
Total Debt ÷ Total Equity. Graham favored companies with low leverage. Below 0.5 is conservative; above 2.0 signals significant risk.
✓ Positive growth & earnings
TTM EPS: $13.11
5-Year EPS Growth: 29.82%
Graham required 10+ consecutive years of positive earnings. Consistent, growing earnings signal durable competitive advantage.

⚠ Risk Factors

  • Earnings yield not sufficiently above bond yield
  • Stock price exceeds Graham Number — may be overvalued
  • High P/E ratio suggests premium valuation
  • Market cap exceeds Net Current Asset Value

About this analysis: Based on Benjamin Graham's margin of safety principles from The Intelligent Investor and Security Analysis. A positive margin of safety indicates the stock may be trading below its estimated intrinsic value.

Financial Health & Signals

Piotroski F-Score, Owner Earnings, Earnings Quality, and Shareholder Yield

Piotroski F-Score

5/8

Moderate financial health — several warning signs present.

Positive ROA ROA = 22.2%
Positive Operating Cash Flow OCF = $164.7B
ROA Improving 22.2% → 22.2%
Cash Flow > Net Income Quality earnings — cash flow backs up reported profits
Leverage Decreasing LT Debt: 0 → $46.5B
Current Ratio Improving 1.84x → 2.01x
No Share Dilution Data not available
Gross Margin Improving 58.2% → 59.7%
Asset Turnover Improving 0.78x → 0.68x
Joseph Piotroski's 9-point scoring system for financial strength. Scores of 8–9 signal strong fundamentals; 0–3 suggest weakness.

Owner Earnings (2025)

$51.6B
Net Income $132.2B + D&A $21.1B − CapEx $91.4B
Buffett's preferred measure: Net Income + Depreciation − CapEx. More honest than reported earnings for capital-intensive businesses.

Earnings Quality (2025)

1.25x OCF / Net Income

Cash flow meaningfully exceeds reported earnings — high quality.

Shareholder Yield (2025)

1.25%
Dividends $10.0B Buybacks $45.7B

Moderate — some capital return.

Dividends + net buybacks as % of market cap — the total cash return to shareholders.

Historical Valuation

Where the current valuation sits within its own 5-year range

P/E 28.1x
19.1x 95th percentile 28.6x
P/B 7.3x
4.5x 60th percentile 9.1x

How to read this: These gauges show where the current P/E and P/B ratios fall within their own -year range. A low percentile suggests the stock is historically cheap on that metric; a high percentile suggests it's historically expensive. Compare with the company's growth trajectory to determine if the valuation is justified.

Margin of Safety Target Price

Set your desired margin of safety to calculate a target buy price

$162.11
Normalized EPS $10.81 × 15x P/E
$369.58
128.0% above intrinsic
Adjust the slider below
0% Margin of Safety: 25% 50%
No margin 15% 25% 33% 50%
28.14x
15x
29.82%

How to use this: The intrinsic value is calculated as Normalized EPS × a fair P/E of 15 (Graham's benchmark for a conservatively valued company). Slide to apply your desired margin of safety — Graham recommended at least 25–33% — and the target buy price will update. Only consider buying when the market price falls to or below your target.

Reverse DCF Calculator

What growth rate is the market pricing in?

Market-Implied Growth Rate
27.18% AGGRESSIVE

The market is pricing in very high growth. This leaves little margin of safety — any slowdown could trigger a significant repricing.

$5.28
$63.8B
11.26%
5% 10% 15% 20%
3.0%
0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5%
10 years
3 5 10 15 20
Implied Growth Rate — Sensitivity to Discount Rate & Terminal Growth

How to read this: A reverse DCF works backwards from the current stock price to reveal what annual FCF growth rate the market is implicitly assuming. Compare this implied rate against the company's historical growth and your own expectations — if the market expects more growth than you think is realistic, the stock may be overvalued.

ROIC vs. WACC

Return on Invested Capital versus Weighted Average Cost of Capital

Value Creator — ROIC (28.34%) exceeds WACC (11.26%). The company earns more than its cost of capital, and has done so consistently over the past 5 years.
Beta1.24
Cost of Equity11.32%
Cost of Debt6.99%
Effective Tax Rate16.8%
Equity Weight99.0%
Debt Weight1.0%

How to read this: ROIC measures how efficiently a company turns invested capital into profits. WACC is the minimum return investors demand. When ROIC consistently exceeds WACC, management is creating value — a hallmark of a durable competitive advantage (moat). A declining ROIC trending toward WACC may signal moat erosion.

Capital Allocation

How the company has deployed its cash over 5 years

Dividends Share Buybacks Acquisitions CapEx

How to read this: This chart shows how the company allocated capital each fiscal year across four categories. Companies that consistently invest in CapEx and return cash via dividends often signal durable competitive advantages. Heavy share buybacks at elevated valuations can destroy shareholder value.

7 Powers Analysis

Hamilton Helmer's strategic moat framework applied to Alphabet Inc (Media)

🏰
Wide Moat (Quantitative Only)
4 of 5 measurable powers show strength. Multiple reinforcing competitive advantages detected.
📐 Scale Economies Moderate
📊 Quantitative Moderate

Operating margin moved from 30.6% to 32.0% over 5 years (+1.5pp).

🤖 Qualitative

Awaiting AI analysis

🌐 Network Effects N/A
📊 Quantitative N/A

Requires non-financial data (user counts, engagement metrics) not available in SEC filings.

🤖 Qualitative

Awaiting AI analysis

♟️ Counter-Positioning N/A
📊 Quantitative N/A

Requires identifying a specific incumbent competitor for comparison — a qualitative judgment.

🤖 Qualitative

Awaiting AI analysis

🔒 Switching Costs Strong
📊 Quantitative Strong

Gross margin volatility 1.4pp (avg 57.4%) with 17.1% 5Y revenue growth.

🤖 Qualitative

Awaiting AI analysis

👑 Branding Weak
📊 Quantitative Weak

Gross margin 59.6% vs peers median 80% (0.74x). Inventory turnover 65.7x — strong brand pull.

🤖 Qualitative

Awaiting AI analysis

💎 Cornered Resource Moderate
📊 Quantitative Moderate

Tangible ROA 23.5% vs peers median 14% (1.7x).

🤖 Qualitative

Awaiting AI analysis

⚙️ Process Power Strong
📊 Quantitative Strong

Avg ROIC 26.7% vs WACC 11.3% (alpha +15.4pp, σ 2.8pp).

🤖 Qualitative

Awaiting AI analysis

Loading AI qualitative analysis...

How to read this: The 7 Powers framework (Hamilton Helmer) identifies seven empirical sources of lasting business value. Each power shows both a quantitative score (from financial data) and a qualitative score (from AI analysis). The combined signal per power takes the more conservative of the two. Network Effects and Counter-Positioning can only be assessed qualitatively. When AI analysis is available, the overall moat signal reflects all 7 powers combined.

Insider Transactions

Open-market purchases and sales by company insiders (past 12 months)

Bearish — Insiders are net sellers — 6 seller(s) vs 0 buyer(s). (0 buys, 299 sells)
Date Insider Type Shares Price
2026-05-29 Frances Arnold Sell 102 $381.00
2026-05-15 John L. Hennessy Sell 31 $395.42
2026-05-15 John L. Hennessy Sell 32 $391.20
2026-05-15 John L. Hennessy Sell 138 $393.79
2026-05-15 John L. Hennessy Sell 199 $392.79

How to read this: Insider buying on the open market is one of the strongest bullish signals — executives are spending their own money because they believe the stock is undervalued. Selling alone is less informative (insiders sell for many reasons), but heavy selling by multiple insiders can signal caution.