Google Cloud's High Growth Just Beginning! Morgan Stanley: Conservative Estimate Shows Over 50% Growth Possible Next Year

Deep News
Nov 06

Morgan Stanley believes that, through a breakdown of Alphabet's Google Cloud revenue structure, even under relatively conservative assumptions, Google Cloud's revenue growth rate in 2026 is highly likely to exceed 50%, a projection that is approximately 15% higher than the market consensus.

According to sources, Morgan Stanley stated in a November 5 report that the market's general consensus may be significantly underestimating Google Cloud's growth potential. By analyzing Google Cloud's revenue structure—specifically the synergistic growth between "Backlog" and "On-demand" businesses—Morgan Stanley argues that even under conservative assumptions, Google Cloud's revenue growth in 2026 could surpass 50%. The continued outperformance of its cloud business will serve as a key catalyst driving Alphabet's valuation multiple expansion and AI-fueled stock outperformance.

**The Path to 50% Growth** Morgan Stanley breaks down Google Cloud's growth drivers into two components: Backlog (signed but not yet recognized as revenue) and On-demand (customer usage-driven non-backlog business). Historical data shows that Backlog has consistently accounted for 45-50% of Google Cloud's revenue, with the remainder driven by On-demand business. This implies that Google Cloud's On-demand business achieved year-over-year growth of 29% and 37% in 2023 and 2024, respectively, with growth in 2025 so far at around 25%.

Morgan Stanley's sensitivity analysis suggests that, as long as net new Backlog in 2026 reaches over $50 billion (far below the projected $106 billion for 2025) and On-demand growth remains above 15%, Google Cloud's revenue growth could exceed 50%. Even if On-demand growth stays at 25% and new Backlog is only $20 billion, revenue growth could still surpass 50%.

Specifically, every additional $20 billion in net Backlog growth for 2026 would contribute roughly 340 basis points to Google Cloud's revenue growth. Similarly, every 10-percentage-point increase in On-demand revenue growth would add about 5 percentage points to overall Google Cloud revenue growth.

Morgan Stanley's analysis indicates that if 2026 growth exceeds 50%, Google Cloud's revenue would be more than 4% higher than Morgan Stanley's current forecast and over 15% above market consensus. In the most optimistic scenario ($100 billion in new Backlog and 25% On-demand growth), Google Cloud's 2026 revenue growth could reach 64%.

**Strategic Value in the AI Era** Morgan Stanley emphasizes that the sustainability of Google Cloud's growth will be a key driver in expanding Alphabet's valuation multiples and delivering AI-driven outperformance.

Looking at Backlog composition, as of Q3 2025, Google Cloud's Backlog stood at $158 billion, up $50 billion quarter-over-quarter from $108 billion in Q2 and $71 billion year-over-year. Morgan Stanley expects Q4 Backlog to further increase to $199 billion, with full-year net new Backlog reaching $106 billion. Entering 2026, while the pace of new Backlog is expected to slow, base effects and sustained On-demand growth will continue to support strong overall revenue expansion.

This analysis highlights Google Cloud's strategic value in the AI era and Alphabet's differentiated competitive advantage through its in-house TPU chips and Gemini models. For investors, Google Cloud's potential for outperformance is a critical pillar supporting Alphabet's current valuation and future upside.

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

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