£10,000 invested in Alphabet shares 1 year ago’s now worth…

Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) shares are on my watchlist. The stock’s fallen 11% over the past month and even more from its early February highs. Because of this dip, the stock’s one-year performance is now just 10%.
As such, £10,000 invested a year ago would now be worth just under £11,000. That’s also factoring in the fact that Alphabet shares are denominated in dollars and the pound has appreciated slightly over the past year.
Clearly, this isn’t a bad return. However, while Alphabet lacks the sparkle of some of its mega-cap, big tech peers, I’m starting to wonder if it’s a little overlooked.
What the data tells us
Let’s start with the boring but most important part. In terms of valuation, Alphabet’s forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is 18.3 times, which does represent a significant premium to the communication services sector average (13.3 times), but a discount to the information technology sector average (21.8 times).
It’s also the cheap ‘Magnificent Seven’ stock, based on the forward P/E ratio. The closest peer is Meta, at 23.5 times.

Alphabet’s price-to-earnings-to-growth (PEG) ratio is also a key sign of an undervalued stock. Currently, Alphabet’s PEG ratio stands at 1.10, which is lower than the communication service sector median of 1.27 and information technology sector 1.67. The metric’s achieved by dividing the forward P/E ratio (18.3) by the expected earnings growth rate. Interestingly, this is also the second-cheapest PEG ratio among the Magnificent Seven, with the exception of Nvidia.
This combination of a solid cash position, manageable debt, and attractive valuation is certainly appealing to me. Alphabet has $95.6bn in cash, though its recent purchase of Wiz might have slightly reduced this. Total debt current sits at $28.1bn.
Catalysts and risks
Alphabet’s a tech giant with its business strength coming from its dominant position in digital advertising. It controls more that 90% of the search market share, and continues to see growth is YouTube and Google Cloud. Collectively, its diversified revenue streams, including cloud services and hardware, provide stability amid sector shifts.
Catalysts include Waymo’s expansion, including key markets like Tokyo and Silicon Valley, marking its first international foray and scaling autonomous ride-hailing services. Partnerships with Uber and plans to increase rides from 200,000+ a week highlight near-term growth potential.
Long-term prospects include the business’s investments in quantum computing. Alphabet’s Willow processor recently demonstrated breakthroughs in error reduction and processing speed, though commercialisation remains years away. And while there are plenty of small competitors in this sector, I’m backing a mega-cap stock like Alphabet to be the first to commercialise the technology.
However, risks loom from regulatory scrutiny (antitrust cases), artificial intelligence (AI) competition and high capital expenditure, which could put pressure on profitability. What’s more, Google Cloud’s slower-than-expected growth and quantum computing’s unproven practicality add uncertainty as we look further into the future. Tesla will also be a major competitor in autonomous ride-hailing when it catches up.
Nonetheless, I’m still considering adding this stock to my portfolio. In addition to the above, the Relative Strength Index — a technical indicator that measures share price movements — suggests the stock’s close to ‘oversold’ territory.
The post £10,000 invested in Alphabet shares 1 year ago’s now worth… appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
But there are other promising opportunities in the stock market right now. In fact, here are:
5 stocks for trying to build wealth after 50
The cost of living crisis shows no signs of slowing… the conflict in the Middle East and Ukraine shows no sign of resolution, while the global economy could be teetering on the brink of recession.
Whether you’re a newbie investor or a seasoned pro, deciding which stocks to add to your shopping list can be a daunting prospect during such unprecedented times. Yet despite the stock market’s recent gains, we think many shares still trade at a discount to their true value.
Fortunately, The Motley Fool UK analyst team have short-listed five companies that they believe STILL boast significant long-term growth prospects despite the global upheaval…
We’re sharing the names in a special FREE investing report that you can download today. We believe these stocks could be a great fit for any well-diversified portfolio with the goal of building wealth in your 50’s.
More reading
- 5 S&P 500 ‘sell-off stocks’ Fools have added to their watchlist
- The Nasdaq Composite is in correction territory. 2 stocks to consider buying on the dip
- Stock-market crash: will the S&P 500 bubble burst or deflate?
Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool’s board of directors. Randi Zuckerberg, a former director of market development and spokeswoman for Facebook and sister to Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg, is a member of The Motley Fool’s board of directors. James Fox has positions in Nvidia. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Alphabet, Meta Platforms, Nvidia, Tesla, and Uber Technologies. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.