For the first time in 7 years, Apple is worth less than Alphabet/Google; is the AI delay weighing on investors?

A historic overtaking, at least by the recent dynamics on Wall Street, took place at the close of Wednesday’s trading session.

Alphabet, the holding company that controls Google, reached a market capitalization of $3.88 trillion, narrowly surpassing $3.84 trillion of Apple.

According to data reported by CNBC, this is the first time such an event has occurred since 2019.

Google surpasses Apple on the stock market, is the AI bet paying off?

Gemini 3
Credits: Gemini 3

Although financial markets are not a ring where companies physically fight and trading does not function like a popularity poll among pop celebrities, the timing of this shift carries with it a symbolic power that is hard to ignore, signaling a potential change in investors’ sentiment.

Apple is in the midst of a period that analysts define as predictable. Cupertino is on the cusp of launching a new wave of iPhones, highlighted by a particularly awaited device: iPhone Fold. Leaked information suggests that this device will not only meet expectations, but could even exceed the years of anticipation and hype that preceded it.

However, for those seeking genuine technological surprises, 2026 may not be the ideal year to look at Apple.

The Californian giant seems focused on iteration and refinement of its domestic ecosystem and accessories, with the expected update of the smart home hub, named HomePad, and the arrival of the AirTag 2. These are solid products that confirm Apple’s ability to create familiar physical objects that people are willing to buy, often at high prices.

Yet, in this particular economic climate, this solidity appears to investors as less exciting than the bolder bets of competitors.

Alphabet’s Audacity

While Apple refines its hardware, Alphabet has been engaged in much more aggressive maneuvers. The company has gained ground by openly challenging OpenAI in the race to AI models, achieving unexpectedly positive results that have shaken the sector.

Meanwhile, on the transportation front, the Waymo division has been much talked about. Alphabet’s strategy has led to filling the streets of San Francisco with its robotaxi. Although this caused disruptions, with disabled vehicles blocking city traffic, the visibility gained was enormous.

In a sense, the old adage seems to hold: there is no bad publicity — Alphabet is proving to be at the forefront of radical innovation, even at the cost of some public hiccups.

A New Dichotomy for Investors

We do not want to create a simplistic dichotomy where Apple represents the ‘bad’ and Google the ‘good’; technology companies of this size always inspire a certain reverential fear from various perspectives.

However, the current business environment is outlining a paradoxical situation. Apple, famous for selling tangible and familiar products, begins to look almost disadvantaged compared with Google.

Currently, Alphabet is perceived as the company that heavily invests in speculative and risky technologies, sectors toward which the general public, in broad terms, still does not have unconditional enthusiasm.

Not surprisingly, therefore, to see investors favor the speculative bet over industrial certainty, but it is a signal that does not necessarily offer comfort on the long-term stability of the tech market. Wall Street seems to have decided, at least for now, that the risk of AI is worth more than the security of the iPhone.