Google's growth machine is back in gear, with the world's top search engine not only posting higher-than-expected third-quarter profits and revenues, but also confirming it was seeking major acquisitions.
"We're open for business in making strategic acquisitions, both large and small," Google chief executive Eric Schmidt told analysts on a conference call.
Google executives said large advertisers were more eager to spend on search ads in the third quarter and consumers shopped more online, helping the Internet company notch its strongest quarter-on-quarter revenue growth since 2007's final quarter, underscoring improving economic conditions.
Shares of Google, which have surged more than 80 per cent since mid-March, rose 3.2 per cent to $547.00 following the earnings report, after closing down 1 per cent at $529.91 on Nasdaq yesterday.
"It's a reflection of the fact that there's a lot more economic activity going on on the Internet," said Sanford Bernstein analyst Jeff Lindsay.
Google was widely expected to be one of the biggest, early beneficiaries of an economic recovery, thanks to its dominance of the online search market, whose growth has slowed as recession-hit companies cut back on advertising spending.
It said both the amount of money that advertisers pay for the text ads that appear alongside search results as well as the number of clicks on those ads by Web surfers increased quarter-over-quarter.
Google also made headway in some of its other business initiatives, although they have yet to pay off the way its search advertising business has.
Finance chief Patrick Pichette said the company was monetising more than 1 billion video views a week on YouTube, the popular video site that Google bought for $1.65 billion in 2006. He reiterated comments made last quarter that YouTube was on track to become profitable in the "not too distant future".
And executives said searches on mobile devices, like smartphones, increased 30 per cent quarter over quarter, though they declined to offer details about how mobile ad rates compared with rates for ads in the standard search engine.
Google's results come as Microsoft steps up efforts to challenge Google's search dominance with a revamped search engine, dubbed Bing, and a recently announced search deal with Yahoo that has yet to close.
But Brigantine Advisors analyst Colin Gillis said Google's third-quarter results showed that Google - whose share of the US search market is about 65 per cent, according to comScore - was not under any immediate threat. Yahoo is a distant second with an 18.8 per cent market share.
"Google has no competition. Yahoo is withering on the vine and Bing is too tiny now," said Colin Gillis, senior analyst at Brigantine Advisors.
Google's net revenue in the third quarter - excluding traffic acquisition costs, or the money that Google shares with partners - rose 8.5 per cent from a year earlier to $4.38 billion, beating the $4.24 billion expected by analysts.
Net revenue also grew quarter-on-quarter for the first time this year, after being roughly flat in the second quarter and falling for the first time ever in the first quarter.
Net income was $1.64 billion, or $5.13 a share, compared with $1.29 billion, or $4.06 per share, a year earlier, thanks in part to ongoing cost controls at the company.
Excluding special items, profit per share was $5.89, beating the $5.42 expected by analysts.
But some analysts sounded a note of caution about Google's spending going forward.
"The only thing making investors cautious is that Schmidt mentioned investing heavily on our future," said RBC Capital Markets analyst Ross Sandler.
Mr Schmidt had told Reuters in September that Google expects to buy one small company a month as it starts up its dealmaking machine again after a breather during the worst period of the financial crisis.
He said yesterday that any large deals would need to have a significant strategic rationale, such as accelerating revenue or providing access to a "major, major" pool of customers that Google cannot currently reach.
Besides acquisitions, Google plans to step up hiring of engineers and salespeople as well as invest in new projects as its business improves and worries about the economy recede.
"We are short key technology talent to achieve some of these broader initiatives," Mr Schmidt said.
Reuters