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Alphabet (GOOGL) 2025 — Grade A, Cleanest Big Tech Balance Sheet

GOOGL·2025·English

Grade: A — No Red Flags, One Watch Item

Framework: Tang Chao screening + Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (filed February 4, 2026) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: Ernst & Young LLP — Unqualified opinion (auditor since 1999)

One-line verdict: Alphabet should not be flagged for elimination. Zero red flags across 18 checks, M-Score of -2.64, CFFO/NI consistently above 1.0x, and $126.8B in cash against $59.3B in debt. The sole watch item is CapEx surging 74% to $91.4B for AI infrastructure. The 10-K discloses $15.6B in accrued legal liabilities from antitrust fines and $58.5B in uncommenced lease commitments for future data centers -- real obligations, but manageable against $164.7B in annual operating cash flow.

MetricResult
Red Flags**0**
Watch Items**1** (CapEx growth 74% vs revenue growth 15%)
Checks Completed**18/18**
Beneish M-Score**-2.64** (clean)
Altman Z-Score**7.14** (safe zone)
F-Score Probability**0.35%** (low manipulation risk)
Report PeriodFY2025 (ended December 31, 2025)

Auditor Opinion and Critical Audit Matter

Ernst & Young LLP issued an unqualified opinion on February 4, 2026. The 10-K states:

"In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Company at December 31, 2024 and 2025, and the results of its operations and its cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2025, in conformity with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles."

EY also issued an unqualified opinion on internal controls. There were no material weaknesses.

The single critical audit matter: Loss Contingencies. EY flagged the difficulty of auditing Alphabet's legal accruals:

"Auditing management's accounting for and disclosure of loss contingencies from these matters involved challenging and subjective auditor judgment in assessing the Company's evaluation of the probability of a loss, and the estimated amount or range of loss."

This is significant because Alphabet carries $15.6 billion in short-term accrued legal and regulatory fines as of December 31, 2025. The 10-K discloses this "primarily included EC fines, in addition to accruals related to other legal matters and regulatory fines and settlements." Multiple antitrust cases have outcomes that "we cannot estimate a possible loss" -- meaning the actual legal exposure could be materially higher.

Profitability: Income Statement from the 10-K

Directly from the Consolidated Statements of Income (in millions):

Line Item202320242025
Revenues$307,394$350,018$402,836
Cost of revenues$133,332$146,306$162,535
R&D$45,427$49,326$61,087
Sales & marketing$27,917$27,808$28,693
G&A$16,425$14,188$21,482
**Operating income****$84,293****$112,390****$129,039**
OI&E$1,424$7,425$29,787
Net income$73,795$100,118$132,170
Diluted EPS$5.80$8.04$10.81

Key observations from the 10-K:

Revenue by segment: Google Search & other grew from $198.1B to $224.5B (+13.3%). YouTube ads grew from $36.1B to $40.4B (+11.7%). Google Cloud grew from $43.2B to $58.7B (+35.8%). The 10-K attributes Search growth to "increases in search queries resulting from growth in user adoption and usage on mobile devices; growth in advertiser spending; and improvements we have made in ad formats and delivery."

G&A exploded +51% from $14.2B to $21.5B. The 10-K explains: "primarily driven by an increase in expenses related to legal and other matters of $6.2 billion, largely the result of the $3.5 billion EC fine accrued in the third quarter of 2025 and a $1.4 billion legal accrual made in the second quarter of 2025." Strip out these one-time legal charges, and G&A is flat.

R&D jumped +24% to $61.1B. The 10-K attributes this to "increases in employee compensation expenses of $6.9 billion and depreciation expense of $2.4 billion. The increase in employee compensation expenses was primarily driven by an increase in SBC expenses of $4.2 billion, which included an increase in a valuation-based compensation charge related to Waymo."

OI&E surged to $29.8B -- 20x the 2023 level. The 10-K discloses this included "net gains on equity securities of $24.1 billion, primarily related to unrealized gains on our non-marketable equity securities." This is volatile and non-recurring. Excluding OI&E, operating income grew 15% -- exactly in line with revenue growth.

Margin2022202320242025Trend
Gross Margin55.4%56.6%58.2%59.7%Rising 4 consecutive years
Net Margin21.2%24.0%28.6%32.8%Rising, but 2025 inflated by OI&E
Operating Margin--27.4%32.1%32.0%Flat YoY at operating level

The operating margin being flat at 32% while net margin jumped from 28.6% to 32.8% tells you the net income growth is partly driven by the $24.1B unrealized equity gains, not operating improvement. A forensic screen cares about operating earnings quality, and there operating performance is solid but not accelerating.

Segment Profitability

From the 10-K segment disclosures (in millions):

Segment2024 Revenue2025 Revenue2024 Op Income2025 Op Income
Google Services$304,930$342,721$121,263$139,404
Google Cloud$43,229$58,705$6,112$13,910
Other Bets$1,648$1,537$(4,444)$(7,515)
Alphabet-level----$(10,541)$(16,760)
**Total****$350,018****$402,836****$112,390****$129,039**

Google Cloud more than doubled its operating income from $6.1B to $13.9B. Cloud operating margin improved from ~14% to ~24%.

Other Bets lost $7.5B, up from $4.4B. The 10-K explains: "The increase in operating loss was primarily driven by an increase in employee compensation expenses largely due to an increase in a valuation-based compensation charge related to Waymo." Waymo alone drove a $2.1B compensation charge in Q4. In February 2026, "Waymo announced an investment round of $16.0 billion, the significant majority of which was funded by Alphabet."

Alphabet-level activities (shared AI R&D) cost $16.8B, up from $10.5B. This is where Gemini and frontier model development costs sit.

Cash Flow: Every Dollar of Profit Is Backed by Cash

From the Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows (in millions):

Item202320242025
Net income$73,795$100,118$132,170
Depreciation$11,946$15,311$21,136
SBC expense$22,460$22,785$24,953
Deferred income taxes$(7,763)$(5,257)$8,348
(Gain)/loss on securities$823$(2,671)$(24,620)
**Operating cash flow****$101,746****$125,299****$164,713**
CapEx$(32,251)$(52,535)$(91,447)
**Free cash flow****$69,495****$72,764****$73,266**
Cash Quality Metric2022202320242025
CFFO / Net Income1.531.381.251.25
FCF / Net Income--0.940.730.55
Accruals Ratio-------5.5%

CFFO/NI at 1.25x for two consecutive years confirms earnings are cash-backed. For every $1 of reported profit, $1.25 in actual cash entered the business.

Critical adjustment in 2025 cash flow: The 10-K discloses "Changes to U.S. tax law enacted on July 4, 2025, allow, among other things, for immediate expensing of domestic research and experimentation costs and accelerated depreciation on eligible capital expenditures, the effects of which are included in operating cash flows." This tax law change is a one-time tailwind to operating cash flow. The deferred tax line swung from -$5.3B to +$8.3B -- a $13.6B swing that boosted CFFO. Without this, CFFO/NI would be closer to 1.15x. Still healthy, but the 1.25x ratio is partly a tax-law artifact.

The Cash Fortress

ItemAmount
Cash + Marketable Securities$126.8B
Total Debt (carrying value)$48.5B senior notes + other
**Cash / Total Debt****~2.1x**
Debt / EBITDA0.3x
Interest Coverage175.3x

The 10-K details the 2025 debt issuance: Alphabet issued "$22.5 billion of US dollar-denominated senior unsecured notes and 13.25 billion of euro-denominated senior unsecured notes for general corporate purposes." The May 2025 USD notes carry a "weighted-average coupon rate of 4.89%" with ~24-year maturity. The November 2025 tranche: "$17.0 billion of US dollar-denominated fixed-rate senior unsecured notes with a weighted-average coupon rate of 4.92% and a weighted-average maturity of approximately 20 years."

Alphabet also has "$10.0 billion of revolving credit facilities" and "a commercial paper program of up to $25.0 billion" -- neither drawn. This is an unlevered balance sheet despite aggressive debt issuance to fund AI capex.

The 18-Point Screening

A. Revenue Quality: Is the Revenue Real?

#CheckResultDetail
A1DSO ChangePASSDSO 57 days, +2 days YoY. Normal fluctuation
A2AR vs Revenue GrowthPASSAR growth 20.1% vs revenue growth 15.1%. Gap exists but within tolerance
A3Revenue vs CFFO DivergencePASSRevenue +15.1%, CFFO +31.5%. Cash growth outpaces revenue

AR grew faster than revenue by 5 percentage points. The balance sheet shows accounts receivable went from $52.3B to $62.9B. In isolation, AR outpacing revenue can signal channel stuffing or loosened credit terms. However, DSO only moved 2 days (from 55 to 57), and the 10-K's revenue recognition policy states revenues are recognized "when control of the promised goods or services is transferred to our customers, and the collectibility of an amount that we expect in exchange for those goods or services is probable." The Beneish DSRI component at 1.044 confirms no material receivable manipulation signal.

The CFFO/revenue divergence (cash growing faster than revenue) is the opposite of a warning signal. Note, however, that the $13.6B deferred tax tailwind (discussed above) inflates the CFFO growth rate.

B. Expense Quality: Are Costs Being Hidden?

#CheckResultDetail
B1Inventory vs COGSPASSNo material inventory (services/advertising business)
B2CapEx vs Revenue GrowthWATCH**CapEx +74.1% while revenue +15.1%. Nearly 5x the revenue growth rate**
B3SG&A RatioPASSSG&A / Gross Profit = 20.9%. Excellent cost control
B4Gross Margin TrendPASS59.7%, up 1.5pp YoY. Stable and improving

B2 is the sole watch item. CapEx went from $52.5B to $91.4B. The 10-K is explicit about where this money goes: "Capital expenditures, which primarily reflected investments in technical infrastructure, were $91.4 billion for the year ended December 31, 2025." The filing further states: "In 2026, we expect to significantly increase, relative to 2025, our investment in our technical infrastructure, including servers and network equipment, and data centers."

The concern in forensic screening: when CapEx grows dramatically faster than revenue, it can indicate (1) capitalization of operating expenses to inflate current earnings, or (2) assets that will require future impairments. The 10-K discloses the depreciation policy: "We depreciate servers and network equipment generally over a period of six years." This is an aggressive (i.e., conservative) useful life estimate -- shorter useful lives mean higher depreciation, which reduces the incentive to capitalize improperly.

The hidden obligation: Beyond the $91.4B in actual CapEx spent, the 10-K discloses leases "primarily related to data centers that have not yet commenced with short-term and long-term future lease payments of $5.8 billion and $52.7 billion, respectively. These leases will commence between 2026 and 2031." Plus a January 2026 power purchase agreement with "future payments depending on certain agreement terms of $9.9 billion between 2027 and 2047." Total off-balance-sheet infrastructure commitments: ~$68B+.

Gross margin improving despite massive spending: Cost of revenues as a percentage of revenues declined from 42% to 40%. The 10-K explains the TAC rate decreased from 20.7% to 20.3% "primarily due to a revenue mix shift from Google Network properties to Google Search & other properties." Search has higher margins than network properties -- so the revenue mix shift is a structural tailwind.

C. Cash Flow Quality: Do Profits Turn Into Cash?

#CheckResultDetail
C1CFFO vs Net IncomePASSCFFO/NI = 1.25. Real cash, not paper profits
C2FCF vs Net IncomePASSFCF $73.3B, FCF/NI = 0.55. Healthy despite massive CapEx
C3Accruals RatioPASS-5.5%. Negative accruals = earnings are cash-backed
C4Cash vs DebtPASS$126.8B cash vs $59.3B debt. 2.1x coverage

Accruals ratio of -5.5% is a strong signal. A negative accruals ratio means the company generates more cash than it reports in earnings -- the opposite of earnings inflation. The cash flow statement confirms: $21.1B in depreciation and $25.0B in SBC add back to net income, while the $24.6B gain on securities (non-cash) is subtracted. The working capital adjustments are modest relative to the company's scale.

FCF of $73.3B is essentially flat versus 2024 ($72.8B) despite net income growing 32%. CapEx consumed the incremental earnings entirely. This is not a quality concern -- it is a capital allocation decision. But it does mean Alphabet's free cash flow yield (relative to its market cap) is compressed by strategic spending, not operating weakness.

D. Balance Sheet: Is the Foundation Solid?

#CheckResultDetail
D1Goodwill + IntangiblesPASS$33.4B = 8.0% of equity. Manageable
D2LeveragePASSDebt/EBITDA = 0.3x, Interest coverage = 175.3x
D3Soft Asset GrowthPASSOther assets +9.2% vs revenue +15.1%. Normal
D4Asset ImpairmentPASSNo unusual write-offs

From the Consolidated Balance Sheet (in millions):

Item20242025Change
Total current assets$163,711$206,038+26%
Property and equipment, net$171,036$246,597+44%
Non-marketable securities$37,982$68,687+81%
Goodwill$31,885$33,380+5%
**Total assets****$450,256****$595,281****+32%**
Total current liabilities$89,122$102,745+15%
Long-term debt$10,883$46,547+328%
**Total liabilities****$125,172****$180,016****+44%**
**Total equity****$325,084****$415,265****+28%**

Total assets grew by $145B in a single year. The two largest drivers: PP&E (+$75.6B from AI data center construction) and non-marketable securities (+$30.7B from unrealized gains). This is not "soft asset" growth in the forensic sense -- PP&E is tangible and the securities gains are disclosed.

Goodwill at $33.4B (8% of equity) is modest. For context, the 10-K discloses pending acquisitions of Wiz ($32.0B) and Intersect ($4.8B), both expected to close in 2026. If Wiz closes, goodwill could roughly double. This is a forward-looking risk, not a current balance sheet problem.

Non-marketable securities at $68.7B deserves attention. These are equity stakes in private companies, marked up by $24.1B in unrealized gains during 2025. The 10-K warns: "Gains and losses on non-marketable equity securities are recognized in other income (expense), net (OI&E), which increases the volatility of OI&E."

E. Acquisition Risk: Organic or Bought Growth?

#CheckResultDetail
E1Serial Acquirer FCFPASSFCF after acquisitions positive. Organic cash generation dominates
E2Goodwill SurgePASSGoodwill +4.7% YoY ($31.9B to $33.4B). Normal

Cash spent on acquisitions in 2025: $1.6B, down from $2.9B in 2024. Growth is overwhelmingly organic. However, the pending $32.0B Wiz acquisition and $4.8B Intersect acquisition will appear in 2026 financials if completed -- this is a material step-up in acquisition spending.

F. Manipulation Detection

#CheckResultDetail
F1Beneish M-ScorePASS**-2.64** (below -2.22 manipulation threshold)

M-Score Component Breakdown

VariableValueWhat It MeasuresAssessment
DSRI1.044Receivables vs revenue growthMinimal divergence
GMI0.976Gross margin deteriorationMargin is *improving*, not deteriorating
AQI0.946Asset quality (soft vs hard)Asset quality stable despite PP&E surge
SGI1.151Revenue growth rate15% growth -- normal, not suspicious
DEPI1.025Depreciation policy changeFlat -- no manipulation signal
SGAI1.038SG&A behaviorStable
TATA-0.055Total accruals to total assetsVery low -- earnings are cash-heavy
LVGI1.129Leverage changeSlight increase from new debt -- manageable

M-Score of -2.64 is comfortably clean. The TATA component at -0.055 is the strongest indicator: total accruals relative to total assets are negligible, meaning virtually all reported earnings are backed by real cash flows.

Additional Forensic Scores

ScoreValueInterpretation
Altman Z-Score7.14Safe zone (>2.99). Zero bankruptcy risk
F-Score Probability0.35%Very low probability of financial statement manipulation

Key Risks from the 10-K: Actual Disclosures

1. The $91.4B AI Capital Expenditure Program

The 10-K states CapEx was "$91.4 billion for the year ended December 31, 2025" and "In 2026, we expect to significantly increase, relative to 2025, our investment in our technical infrastructure."

The 10-K explicitly warns: "We have invested and expect to significantly expand our investment in property and equipment, including our technical infrastructure, and we expect these assets to benefit our business over their estimated useful lives. Changes in facts and circumstances such as changes to historical asset performance, expected technology advancements, and future network deployment plans could change the period over which we expect to benefit from the asset and impact our financial condition and operating results."

Beyond CapEx, the uncommenced data center leases total $58.5B ($5.8B short-term + $52.7B long-term), plus a $9.9B power purchase agreement signed in January 2026. The total infrastructure commitment including CapEx, uncommenced leases, and the power deal approaches $160B over the coming years.

2. Antitrust and Regulatory Exposure: $15.6B Accrued, More Unquantifiable

The 10-K discloses five major antitrust fronts:

DOJ Search case: "A final judgment was entered in December 2025, which, among other things, imposes restrictions on how Google distributes its services and requires Google to share certain search data with and offer syndication services to certain competitors." Alphabet appealed in January 2026. The structural remedy risk -- being forced to stop paying Apple and others for default search placement -- threatens a revenue distribution channel that enables billions in annual search revenue.

DOJ Ad Tech case: "In April 2025, the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia issued a mixed decision...ruling that neither Google's advertiser tools nor the DoubleClick and AdMeld acquisitions were anticompetitive, but that Google's publisher tools unfairly excluded rivals." The DOJ's proposed remedy "includes structural remedies that could have a material adverse effect on our business." Awaiting final judgment.

EC Ad Tech fine: "In September 2025, the EC announced its decision...imposed a 3.0 billion fine." Alphabet recognized "$3.5 billion in the third quarter of 2025."

EC Android fine: The 4.1 billion fine is being appealed to the European Court of Justice.

EU Digital Markets Act: "In March 2025, the EC issued preliminary findings of non-compliance in both investigations" regarding Google Play and Search. "Given the nature of this matter, we cannot estimate a possible loss."

The 10-K states: "As of December 31, 2025, we had short-term accrued legal and regulatory fines and settlements of $15.6 billion." Multiple pending cases have outcomes where Alphabet states "we cannot estimate a possible loss" -- meaning the actual exposure is materially higher than the accrual.

3. Advertising Concentration Risk

The 10-K discloses: "We generated more than 70% of total revenues from online advertising in 2025." And warns: "Many of our advertisers, companies that distribute our products and services, digital publishers, and content providers can terminate their contracts with us at any time."

Paid clicks grew 6% and cost-per-click grew 7% -- both positive. But Google Network revenues actually declined $567M, "primarily due to a decrease in AdSense revenues." The ad business is healthy but the network segment is shrinking.

4. AI Competition and Infrastructure Dependency

The 10-K warns: "AI technology and services are highly competitive, rapidly evolving, and require significant investment... Our ability to deploy certain AI technologies critical for our products and services and for our business strategy may depend on the availability and pricing of third-party equipment and other technical infrastructure operations costs, including network capacity, energy, and equipment costs."

And: "To meet the compute capacity demands of AI training and inference, as well as traditional cloud computing services, we are entering into significant leasing arrangements with third party operators, which may increase costs and operational complexity."

5. Other Bets: Waymo Is Expensive

Other Bets lost $7.5B in 2025, up from $4.4B. Waymo alone drove a "$2.1 billion employee compensation charge recognized in the fourth quarter." In February 2026, "Waymo announced an investment round of $16.0 billion, the significant majority of which was funded by Alphabet." This is a cash drain with no revenue offset -- Waymo generated negligible revenue.

6. Non-Marketable Securities Volatility

Non-marketable securities grew from $38.0B to $68.7B, with $24.1B in unrealized gains flowing through OI&E. The 10-K acknowledges this "increases the volatility of OI&E." These gains are non-cash, non-recurring, and could reverse. They are excluded from operating income but inflate net income and EPS.

Stock-Based Compensation: $25.0B in Non-Cash Expense

The cash flow statement shows SBC expense of $25.0B in 2025 (up from $22.8B in 2024). This is a real economic cost that dilutes shareholders. SBC is 6.2% of total revenue and 18.9% of net income. Alphabet repurchased $45.4B in stock during 2025, more than offsetting the dilution (total shares outstanding declined from 12.2B to 12.1B). The 10-K also notes Alphabet "increased the quarterly cash dividend by 5% to $0.21 per share" and total dividends were $10.0B.

Summary

Grade: A. Should not be flagged for elimination.

Alphabet's FY2025 10-K passes all 18 screening checks with zero red flags. The financial statements show $402.8B in revenue, $129.0B in operating income, and $164.7B in operating cash flow. M-Score of -2.64 confirms no earnings manipulation signal. The negative accruals ratio (-5.5%) means virtually all reported profits are cash-backed. Cash exceeds debt by 2.1x. Gross margins improved for the fourth consecutive year.

The sole watch item -- CapEx growth of 74% against 15% revenue growth -- reflects a disclosed strategic decision to build AI infrastructure, not hidden expense capitalization. The 10-K is transparent about the magnitude ($91.4B spent, $58.5B in uncommenced leases, plans to "significantly increase" spending in 2026).

The real risks are forward-looking and outside the screening framework: the DOJ antitrust judgment restricting search distribution, the EC's unquantifiable DMA exposure, the $15.6B in accrued legal fines with more to come, and the question of whether $91.4B+ per year in AI CapEx will generate returns. These are business risks, not accounting risks. The financial statements themselves are clean.

**Disclaimer**: This report applies a forensic screening framework to public financial data. This is NOT investment advice. Passing the screening means no obvious financial red flags were found -- it does not mean the stock is worth buying.

Sources: Alphabet Inc. Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2025, filed February 4, 2026 (SEC EDGAR). Financial data cross-referenced with Yahoo Finance.

This report is based on SEC 10-K filings and public financial data. Not investment advice.

Alphabet (GOOGL) 2025 — Grade A, Cleanest Big Tech Balance Sheet — EarningsGrade