I’ve been running some reverse DCF numbers on Alphabet ($GOOGL) to see what the current price of \~$367 is actually implying about its future cash flows.
I wanted to share my breakdown, look at what the market is pricing in, and get your thoughts on the Capex dilemma.
Let’s look at the core trailing/forward metrics based on today's market cap of $4.5T (12.2B shares out):
* **P/S:** 10.6x
* **OCF Margin:** \~41.3% ($174B OCF on $422B Revenue)
* **FCF Margin (Normalized):** 28.8%
If you look at raw unadjusted Free Cash Flow ($64.4B), it looks terrible because Google is in an absolute arms race spending on infrastructure. But if you normalize Capex to a historically sustainable **12.5% of revenue** (\~$53B), your true **Normalized FCF lands at $121B**, giving us a starting P/FCF of **36.9x** (an FCF yield of 2.7%).
Using that $121B normalized FCF as a baseline, a 10-year holding period, a standard **12% target return (discount rate)**, and a terminal multiple of **20x FCF**, I ran the numbers to see what growth rate justifies a $367 share price.
* **The Market's Implied Growth Rate: 19.1% CAGR** for the next 10 years.
Let that sink in. To justify buying today and hitting a 12% return, Google has to compound its free cash flow at nearly 20% year-over-year for a decade.
If we model out three realistic macro scenarios, here is what the actual fair value looks like:
* **Bull Case (16% Growth):** Fair Value **$283** (Terminal FCF of $536B)
* **Base Case (12% Growth):** Fair Value **$199** (Terminal FCF of $377B)
* **Bear Case (8% Growth):** Fair Value **$138** (Terminal FCF of $262B)
If you assign an equal 33% weight to all three scenarios, the **weighted fair value is $207**. If you bake in a standard 15% margin of safety, your **strict buy price drops all the way to \~$176** (a \~52% drawdown from current levels).
Even if you are incredibly bullish on Google’s AI execution, paying $367 means you are paying up-front for flawless execution and near-20% cash flow compounding for a decade. The risk/reward asymmetry here feels incredibly skewed to the downside.
Are you guys looking at Google as a hold here, or are you waiting for a massive correction before building a position? How are you modeling their Capex over the next 5 years?
Curious to hear your thoughts.