Free NewsletterPro Login
S&P 500 6,287 +0.42%
DOW 44,521 -0.18%
NASDAQ 21,103 +0.71%
S&P 500 +12.4%
Briefs Finance Fund +24.8%
JOIN THE FUND →

Options Traders Are Pricing Alphabet To Pass Nvidia By May 15

Published May 2, 2026
Share:
A brightly lit data center aisle with rows of server racks on both sides, illuminated by blue, green, and orange LED lights. The BriefsFinance logo is in the bottom right corner.
Summary:
  • Alphabet's market cap topped $4.6 trillion after a 10% surge on Thursday.
  • Nvidia's market cap is just under $4.9 trillion after a more than 6% slide in two days.
  • Options pricing implies a roughly 53% chance Alphabet briefly passes Nvidia by May 15.

Alphabet has not been the world's most valuable firm since 2016. It is about to be again. The options market is putting a date on it.

A 10% pop on Thursday brought Google's parent to a market cap above $4.6 trillion. Its one-year gain is now 140%. That puts Nvidia, the AI king of the last two years, in reach.

The pop came after Alphabet's latest print, which beat the Street on sales and showed cloud growth at a level Wall Street had been waiting to see. The numbers are now the case for the rerating.

The Math On The Crossover

Nvidia's market cap is just under $4.9 trillion after a more than 6% slide in two days. The drop came after a Wall Street Journal report that Nvidia partner OpenAI missed its internal sales and growth targets.

For Alphabet to match Nvidia, the stock needs to rally about 4% more. That gets it to roughly $401 per share. Based on what traders are paying for call options, which are bets on a stock going up, the market is pricing a 53% chance Alphabet touches that level at some point before May 15.

The odds of Alphabet closing above $400 on May 22, the Friday after Nvidia's next earnings report, sit at about 30%, per ThinkOrSwim.

Why The Trade Is Pricing This Way

Two things are pulling in the same path. The first is the print Alphabet just delivered. Sales beat the call, and Google Cloud cleared $20 billion in sales for the period.

After years of "is Alphabet falling behind in AI?" headlines, the cloud number was the answer. It is also the part of the firm Wall Street had been waiting to see at scale.

The second is the setup at Nvidia. The chip maker heads into earnings on May 20 with a wobble. The stock has fallen after four of its last five earnings prints, so a repeat would close the gap from both sides at once.

A Quick History Check

The last time Alphabet was the world's most valuable firm was 2016. It briefly nudged Apple from the top spot. The run did not last.

Nine years later, the setup is different. Alphabet is the AI buyer with the deepest pockets. Nvidia is the AI seller everyone in the trade depends on. A swap of the top two is now a real signal about how the Street is pricing the AI build-out.

What To Watch

Whether the lead changes hands depends on Nvidia's May 20 earnings and the reaction in the days that follow. If the stock dips again, options pricing says the crossover happens. If it rallies, the gap reopens.

The OpenAI report adds another swing factor. Nvidia's growth story leans heavily on AI data center spend, so any softness at its biggest customers feeds back into the stock. That is why a single news item moved the cap by hundreds of billions of dollars in two days.

The world's biggest AI buyer is closing in on the world's biggest AI seller. The pricing is that close.

For a stock like Alphabet to retake the top spot would also mark a clean shift in how the market is reading the AI trade right now.

Disclosure

Get Market Briefs delivered to your inbox every morning for free!

No fluff. No noise. No politics. Just finance news you can read in 5 minutes.

Blogs

June 18, 2026
What Is a Stop Loss Order? A Simple Guide
  • A stop loss order automatically sells a stock once it falls to a price you set.
  • It's a tool to cap losses or lock in gains without watching the market all day.
  • It works best for active strategies, and can backfire if used carelessly on long-term holdings.
Read More
June 18, 2026
Best S&P 500 Index Fund: How to Choose One
  • The best S&P 500 index fund for most investors is simply the cheapest, most established one that tracks the index well.
  • Funds like VOO, IVV, and SPY all hold the same 500 companies, so the biggest difference is the fee.
  • Pick one, automate your buys, and let time do the heavy lifting.
Read More
June 17, 2026
What Are Penny Stocks? Risks and Rewards Explained
  • Penny stocks are very low-priced shares of very small companies, often trading for just a few dollars or less.
  • They promise huge gains but carry huge risks: low liquidity, high failure rates, and wild price swings.
  • Most investors are better served by quality companies and funds than by chasing cheap shares.
Read More
June 17, 2026
Best Stocks for Beginners With Little Money
  • The best stocks for beginners with little money usually aren't individual stocks at all - they're low-cost index funds.
  • You can start with $100 or less and use small, regular investments to build wealth over time.
  • Focus on diversification and consistency, not on picking the next big winner.
Read More
June 16, 2026
Tech Stocks: A Simple Guide for New Investors
  • Tech stocks are companies in the information technology and related sectors, from software to chips to the internet giants.
  • They've driven much of the market's growth, but they can be volatile and richly valued.
  • The smart approach is to understand what you own and not let one sector run your whole portfolio.
Read More
June 16, 2026
What Is a Joint Stock Company? A Simple Guide
  • A joint stock company is a business owned by many people, each holding shares of stock that represent a slice of ownership.
  • It's the basic idea behind every public company you can buy on the stock market today.
  • Owning a share makes you a part-owner, entitled to a piece of the profits and growth.
Read More
June 16, 2026
Capital Gains Tax in California: A Simple Guide
  • Capital gains tax is what you owe when you sell an investment for more than you paid for it.
  • How long you held it matters: long-term gains are taxed more gently than short-term gains at the federal level.
  • Smart investors lower the bill with tools like tax-loss harvesting and holding for the long run.
Read More
June 15, 2026
Top Covered Call ETFs: How to Compare Them
  • Top covered call ETFs are income funds that own stocks and sell call options against them to generate steady cash.
  • The best one for you is the fund whose income, holdings, and fees fit your goals, not simply the one with the flashiest yield.
  • They all share one trade-off: more income today, less upside in a big rally.
Read More
June 15, 2026
What Are Stock Options? A Plain-English Guide
  • Stock options are contracts that give you the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell a stock at a set price by a set date.
  • There are two kinds: calls (the right to buy) and puts (the right to sell).
  • Options can multiply gains or wipe out your money fast, so they suit investors who already know the basics.
Read More
June 15, 2026
EBITDA Margin: What It Is and How to Calculate It
  • EBITDA margin measures how much core profit a company keeps from each dollar of sales, before interest, taxes, and accounting deductions.
  • The formula is EBITDA divided by revenue, shown as a percent.
  • A higher, steadier EBITDA margin usually signals a more efficient, more durable business.
Read More
1 2 3 23
Share via
Copy link