Alphabet delivers 82% earnings growth at 26x forward earnings while Intel burns $3.87 billion in free cash flow at 123x.
The 10-year Treasury yield hit 4.47% after the June 5 jobs print, punishing capital-intensive turnarounds and rewarding cash-generative AI leaders — a divergence that pits Alphabet Inc. against Intel Corp. in stark relief.
"Alphabet's AI investments and full stack approach are lighting up every part of the business," Chief Executive Officer Sundar Pichai said on the Q1 earnings call, citing Google Cloud revenue that grew 63% to $20.03 billion and a backlog that nearly doubled to $460 billion.
Alphabet posted Q1 FY26 earnings per share of $5.11, nearly double the $2.63 consensus estimate and its fourth consecutive beat. Revenue rose 21.8% year-over-year, operating margin hit 36.1%, and free cash flow reached $73.27 billion in fiscal 2025. Intel, by contrast, reported a GAAP net loss of $3.73 billion in Q1, burned $3.87 billion in free cash flow, and spent $4.96 billion on capex in a single quarter. Its foundry segment alone lost roughly $2.5 billion in operating income in Q4 2025.
The setup favors Alphabet's cash-generative model over Intel's capital-intensive rebuild while yields stay elevated. Alphabet trades at 26x forward earnings with a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.14 and interest coverage of 903x. Intel trades at 123x forward earnings with negative trailing EPS of $0.60. Analysts carry a consensus target of $89.32 for Intel, below its current $99.17, while 57 analysts rate Alphabet a buy with zero sells and a $431.19 target.
Google Cloud's $460B Backlog Shows AI Monetization at Scale
Gemini is processing 16 billion tokens per minute via its API, up 60% quarter-over-quarter. Paid subscriptions across Alphabet's services reached 350 million, and Waymo is logging more than 500,000 fully autonomous rides per week. The $80 billion equity and convertible preferred structure Alphabet recently deployed front-loads AI compute spending without straining its balance sheet. Return on equity stands at 38.9%, and management authorized a 5% dividend increase to $0.22 per share quarterly.
Intel's Foundry Losses Undermine the Turnaround Narrative
Intel's 168.75% year-to-date rally was fueled by a $5 billion equity injection from Nvidia Corp. and a U.S. government stake, but the underlying business continues to bleed. The company's foundry segment, central to its turnaround strategy, lost approximately $2.5 billion in operating income in the fourth quarter alone. Shares have already fallen 13.52% in the past week as the 10-year yield — now in the 93.5th percentile of its 12-month range — raises the cost of capital for a company that borrowed aggressively to fund its manufacturing buildout.
For investors weighing the two, Alphabet offers AI exposure with earnings growth at a market multiple, while Intel asks investors to pay turnaround-success prices for a company still mid-restructuring. The 10-year yield, Intel's foundry segment losses, and Google Cloud's backlog conversion rate will determine which thesis prevails. Alphabet's 57 buy ratings and zero sells reflect Wall Street's conviction; Intel's consensus target below its current price suggests the crowd may already be priced in.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.