Regina Leader-Post

Alphabet third-quarter profit misses estimates

- PARESH DAVE

SAN FRANCISCO Google parent Alphabet Inc missed analysts’ estimates for quarterly profit on Monday as it reported its highest-ever quarterly expenses, sending shares down about 1.7 per cent even though revenue growth topped expectatio­ns.

Google provides limited product-level financial disclosure­s, leaving investors increasing­ly uncertain about how pressures including regulatory scrutiny, advertiser boycotts and global trade tensions are affecting operations.

Alphabet shares have underperfo­rmed relative to some peers, rising 17 per cent in the last 12 months entering Monday, compared with a 33-per-cent gain for Microsoft and 29 per cent for Facebook.

Alphabet shares fell 1.7 per cent in after-hours trade to US$1,267.60.

Google has tried to demonstrat­e that its cloud-computing business is roaring, disclosing last quarter about US$2 billion in revenue and saying that plans continued to hire thousands for that unit to stoke growth.

It also has tried to reassure investors that there is no weakness in its Youtube video unit, while expressing confidence in its business overall through share buybacks.

But cash continues to be spent on other businesses such as hardware and dealing with the clashes with regulators. Total expenses were US$31.3 billion, about 25-per-cent higher than a year ago and topping the previous high of US$31.1 billion in the 2018 fourth quarter.

Google in the third quarter acknowledg­ed investigat­ions by the U.S. Congress, Department of Justice and 48 states into the company’s competitiv­e practices. It settled a privacy investigat­ion by the Federal Trade Commission.

It also got an additional 90-day reprieve from an export ban that would restrict its relationsh­ip with Chinese smartphone maker Huawei, one of its top partners in distributi­ng mobile apps.

Google has said it is co-operating with the increased scrutiny, while saying that it has survived calls for increased regulation many times.

Alphabet, which generates about 85 per cent of its revenue from sales of ad space and ad technology, reported total third-quarter revenue of US$40.5 billion. That was up 20 per cent over last year and compared with 19-per-cent growth in the second quarter. Analysts on average estimated 19.52-per-cent growth and US$40.325 billion in revenue, according to IBES data from Refinitiv.

Net income for the third quarter rose to US$7.1 billion, or US$10.12 per share, compared with analysts’ estimates of US$8.811 billion, or US$12.44 per share.

The operating margin was 23 per cent, down from 24 per cent in the second quarter.

Shares of Google closed 1.95 per cent higher in regular trade on Monday. The shares earlier had risen about two per cent after Reuters, citing sources, reported Google had made an offer to acquire U.S. wearable device maker Fitbit Inc.

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