Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL) just pulled off one of the most dramatic power moves in Big Tech this year. The company overtook Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) to become the world's third most valuable company, and the way it happened tells you everything about who's actually winning the artificial intelligence war.
In November alone, Alphabet's stock exploded 17% higher through Nov. 25, putting the company on track for its best month since July 2009. Microsoft, meanwhile, is down 11% over the same period—its worst performance since September 2022.
That 28-point spread is the biggest single-month performance gap between the two since April 2008. We're talking about two of the world's largest companies moving in opposite directions at a pace we haven't seen in nearly two decades.
Google Added More Than Tesla's Entire Market Cap in Three Months
Alphabet's market cap now sits just under $4 trillion, up from $2.5 trillion at the end of August. That's a staggering $1.5 trillion surge in under three months—more value than most companies will ever achieve in their entire existence.
November is on track to mark the eighth consecutive month of gains for Alphabet shares. Over that span, the stock is up 110%, its best eight-month return since September 2005.
Microsoft, on the other hand, has traveled in reverse. Since topping $4 trillion in market value in late October, it has shed more than $500 billion and now sits at $3.46 trillion.
The AI Narrative Is Shifting
So what changed? The AI narrative appears to be shifting in Alphabet's favor, and it's not just about stock momentum.
According to Martin Peers, co-executive editor at The Information, Alphabet's surge isn't solely tied to a court's favorable antitrust ruling in September.
"More people seem to be recognizing Google has figured out AI, after a rough start," Peers said.
That perception is expected to strengthen with the upcoming release of Google's new model, Gemini 3.
Several other factors underscore Google's progress in AI. The popularity of its internally designed Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) chip, accelerating growth in Google Cloud, and the integration of AI across its search engine and Chrome browser showcase the company's end-to-end AI ecosystem.
"While we in the news media breathlessly report on every step Sam Altman takes to make OpenAI a vertically integrated AI giant, Google is already there," Peers said.
And while OpenAI grabs headlines with ChatGPT, it's bleeding cash. Google, in contrast, is not.
Follow the Smart Money
With a rock-solid balance sheet and massive cash flow, Alphabet is in a much stronger position to invest in AI for the long haul. That matters when you're playing a game that requires billions in infrastructure spending.
The shift hasn't gone unnoticed by smart money. Earlier this month, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK) disclosed a $4.3 billion stake in Alphabet—a rare move into big tech that signals strong conviction in Google's long-term AI strategy.
When the world's most famous value investor makes a multi-billion dollar bet on your AI future, people pay attention. And when your stock surges 17% in a month while your biggest competitor drops 11%, the market is telling you something pretty clear: the race isn't over, but Google just took a commanding lead.