Two stocks that turned $1,000 into $10,000 over a decade went in opposite directions this year, with Alphabet doubling while Ferrari fell 20 percent.
Alphabet Inc. and Ferrari NV both turned $1,000 into roughly $10,200 over the past decade, but their 2026 paths could not have diverged more sharply.
"Alphabet's cloud business is the real story — a $462 billion backlog that nearly doubled in a single quarter," said Doug Nathman, head of research at Trefis.
Alphabet shares surged 102 percent over the past year, driven by Google Cloud revenue that jumped 63 percent to $20 billion in the most recent quarter. Ferrari, by contrast, fell nearly 20 percent as shipments dipped to 3,436 units from 3,593 amid a model changeover and concerns about U.S. tariffs on European cars.
The divergence tests two competing investment theses: whether Alphabet's massive infrastructure bet — $180 billion to $190 billion in 2026 capital spending — will convert its $462 billion cloud backlog into durable revenue, or whether Ferrari's scarcity model can regain momentum once its new electric Luce model reaches full production.
Alphabet's Cloud Engine vs. Ferrari's Scarcity Premium
Alphabet's transformation from a search-ad monopoly into an AI and cloud powerhouse has reshaped its financial profile. Google Cloud revenue surpassed $20 billion for the first time, growing 63 percent year over year, while the Gemini app reached 900 million monthly active users. The company's remaining performance obligations — a measure of future contracted revenue — swelled to $462 billion, exceeding Alphabet's total revenue for the prior fiscal year.
Yet the growth comes with a cost. Management acknowledged the company is "compute constrained in the near term," meaning demand is outstripping its ability to supply. Alphabet plans to spend $180 billion to $190 billion on capital expenditures in 2026, with further increases expected in 2027. First-quarter free cash flow fell 46.63 percent year over year as the spending ramp accelerated.
Ferrari's playbook runs in the opposite direction. CEO Benedetto Vigna's value-over-volume strategy produced FY2025 revenue of 7.2 billion euros ($8.2 billion) and an EBIT margin of 29.5 percent, with the order book extending toward the end of 2027. The company's first full-electric car, the Ferrari Luce, premiered in Rome in 2026. But near-term headwinds — including a dip in quarterly shipments and tariff uncertainty — have weighed on the stock.
Valuation and the Verdict
At a forward P/E of 25 with a 38.9 percent return on equity, Alphabet trades at a discount to its growth trajectory. The consensus among 64 analysts is a Buy, with a mean price target of $443.85, implying 22.6 percent upside from current levels near $362.
Ferrari commands a forward P/E of 33, reflecting its brand premium and scarcity value. Fourteen analysts rate it a Buy, with a price target of $443.89, offering 15.3 percent upside from around $385. The narrower margin for error leaves less room for execution missteps.
The bear case for Alphabet centers on whether its capital spending surge will crush free cash flow or whether antitrust rulings could force structural changes. For Ferrari, the risks include tariff escalation and the uncertain reception of its electric vehicle transition.
For now, the numbers favor Alphabet. The cloud backlog provides a visible revenue pipeline, while Ferrari's premium valuation leaves it more exposed if growth disappoints.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.