Google parent Alphabet reported first-quarter revenue and profit that exceeded analysts’ expectations, buoyed by continued strength in its search advertising business.
First-quarter sales, excluding partner payouts, were $76.5 billion (€67.4 billion), the company said in a statement. Analysts had expected $75.4 billion on average. Net income was $2.81 per share, compared with Wall Street’s estimate of $2.01.
The shares, which have declined 16 per cent so far this year, rose more than 5 per cent in extended trading following the report.
Alphabet needs to ensure momentum in its internet search advertising and cloud businesses in order to justify its heightened investment in the artificial intelligence race. Competition is prompting the company and its rivals to spend heavily on infrastructure, research and talent. While Google benefits from AI startups spending on its cloud and business tools, it’s also racing to present an answer to popular conversational AI chatbots, which consumers are beginning to think of as an alternative to using Google Search.
Revolut eyes slice of the Irish mortgage market
Price tag could make the case for Irish reunification less compelling in the South
Ireland’s hopes of a net-zero economy are floating in the wind
Shane Jennings outlines his homecare vision: ‘People want to remain at home and it is cheaper for the taxpayer’
Google’s beginning of the answer to that threat — its “AI Overviews” and “AI Mode” in search, in which summarized responses are drafted by generative AI and highlighted ahead of Google’s web links — have seen mixed success. Meanwhile, Google’s AI changes to search have decimated traffic to independent websites across the open web.
The company’s first-quarter earnings included an $8 billion “unrealized gain on our non-marketable equity securities related to our investment in a private company,” according to a filing. The private company, which Alphabet didn’t name in its report, is Elon Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named disclosing nonpublic information. Google has been an investor in SpaceX since at least 2015.
Google Cloud brought in operating profit of $2.18 billion, beating analysts’ estimates for $1.94 billion despite slightly missing expectations on sales. The results indicate that Google may be eking out more profits from Cloud even as sales slow.
The cloud unit is so far the clearest indicator of how the AI boom is contributing to the company’s sales, as startups that require more computing power for their work become customers. Though Google Cloud still lags in third place behind Amazon and Microsoft’s offerings, it’s one of Alphabet’s most important growth areas. For a second quarter in a row, the company had more customer demand than it had data center capacity for, according to chief financial officer Anat Ashkenazi.
That’s why Alphabet remains heavily invested in AI, boosting its spending on servers and data centers. Capital expenditures were $17.2 billion in the first quarter, slightly higher than analysts’ expectations for $17.1 billion.
Search advertising generated $50.7 billion in sales. That compared with the average analyst projection for $50.3 billion. The unit remains the core engine of Google’s wider advertising business, and saw traction with the insurance, retail, health care and travel industries, executives said on a call with investors after the earnings report.
“I half expected to see some dip in retailer advertiser spend due to economic uncertainty, but clearly it remained pretty solid,” Yory Wurmser, an analyst with Emarketer, said in an email.
That business is under threat of a breakup after federal judges ruled that the company is maintaining illegal monopolies in both search and some ad technology. On Monday in Washington, Judge Amit Mehta began overseeing a three-week hearing to determine remedies for restoring competition in online search.
Google’s video-streaming site YouTube, which turned 20 years old in February, posted $8.92 billion in revenue, a slight miss compared to analysts’ estimates of $8.94 billion. The unit, which has made a big push into podcasting, recently announced that a billion people a month watch podcasts on its platform – outpacing both Spotify and Apple in the category. YouTube, which gets most of its revenue from advertising, also saw growth in subscriptions, executives said on the earnings call.
Alphabet’s upbeat report sets a high bar for its digital-advertising peers, including Meta Platforms and Amazon, which are scheduled to disclose earnings next week. Investors are watching big internet companies for signs of volatility in the advertising market or business disruptions caused by geopolitical and trade tensions.
Alphabet’s board authorized a $70 billion share buyback and boosted its dividend by 5 per cent, to 21 cents a share. -- Bloomberg