If Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook wanted to, he could, in a sense, make the Windy City his new corporate headquarters—all of it.

Technology companies have grown so large that they’ve surpassed the economic values of major American cities, according to data from Bank of America–Merrill Lynch, which chose company market capitalizations and metropolitan gross domestic product as its comparative basis.

At current levels, Apple Inc’s AAPL, -3.17% market capitalization of about $803 billion is 38% larger than the real GDP of Chicago, $581 billion in 2016. Apple isn’t the only Silicon Valley notable to top Chicago (and all other U.S. cities save two), either. Google parent Alphabet GOOGL, -2.41% has a market capitalization of $657.9 billion, making its pockets about 13% deeper than the GDP of the home of deep-dish pizza.

While Alphabet’s market valuation is a ways from topping the GDP of either of the country’s other two biggest cities, Apple’s market cap is less than 4% away from surpassing the GDP of Los Angeles, which had a real GDP of $832 billion last year and was the second biggest city in the country by this metric.

The iPhone maker has its work cut out for it, however, if its market value is to exceed the GDP of New York City. Apple, in fact, would need to grow in market cap by about 85% for that figure to top the Big Apple‘s GDP, checking in last year at the eye-popping level of $1.483 trillion.

While some analysts speculate that Apple could surpass $1 trillion in market cap within 12 to 18 months—itself an unprecedented feat—the City That Never Sleeps can rest easy for a while. Even if you combine Apple’s and Alphabet’s market values, New York’s GDP figure would stand 2% above.

Still, the combined $1.54 trillion value of the two companies is bigger than the financial sectors in Japan and the eurozone, which total $1.31 trillion. B. of A. Merrill called this a “breathtaking valuation stat.” The table below, which doesn’t account for Monday’s market action—both Apple and Alphabet were higher on the day—shows how other companies stack up to U.S. cities in this market caps–vs.–municipal GDPs comparison.

Shares of Apple are up nearly 33% so far this year and are up 61.5% over the past 12 months. Alphabet is up 21% in 2017, and its value has grown by a third over the past year.