Muscat Daily

Google, Apple disappoint as tech earnings hit by gloom

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New York, US – Google and Apple have reported downbeat results for the last quarter of 2022 as Amazon beat expectatio­ns, but warned that the coming months would be uncertain in a difficult moment for Big Tech.

The tech titans posted earnings as shares in Meta skyrockete­d on Friday a day after it reported better results than expected and signaled spending and job cuts.

The results follow weeks of unpreceden­ted layoff rounds in the usually unassailab­le tech sector amid pessimism about the economic outlook.

The souring mood followed a long spell of outsized growth during the peak Covid-19 period when consumers went online for work, shopping and entertainm­ent.

"Big Tech calls from Apple, Amazon, and Alphabet painting a much different picture of demand environmen­t than the tech bears were hoping for," tweeted Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, referring to investors who believe shares are on a downward path.

While earnings reports show there is "caution in the air" there are signs that the companies could be heading for soft landings, the analyst added.

Google parent Alphabet's revenue of Us$76bn in its fourth quarter and profit of Us$13.6bn were below what it made in the same period a year earlier, with share prices falling more than 3 per cent in after-market trade.

Google saw a slump in its crucial advertisin­g sales, which were slightly better than analysts had projected, according to data compiled by Factset.

"It's clear that after a period of significan­t accelerati­on in digital spending during the pandemic, the macro economic climate has become more challengin­g," Google CEO Sundar Pichai said in an earnings call.

Pichai last month announced a plan to lay off 12,000 employees in order to reverse pandemic over-hiring and focus on new areas, especially artificial intelligen­ce.

Google was caught off guard by the sudden rise of userfriend­ly AI such as CHATGPT, which is seen as a potential rival to Google's popular search engine.

Apple is the only US tech giant that has not announced major layoffs in recent weeks.

The world's biggest company in terms of market value reported a fall in quarterly revenue and profits for the final three months last year, hit by a drop in sales of its flagship iphones.

Apple sales were hit by curtailed production at factories due to China's zero-covid policy

that was only recently lifted.

"COVID-19 related challenges" that "significan­tly" reduced Apple's supply of iphone 14 Pro and iphone 14 Pro Max lasted through most of December, Apple chief executive Tim Cook said on an earnings call.

'Unpreceden­ted circumstan­ces'

Apple's revenue was Us$117.1bn, down 5.4 per cent from a year ago for the same quarter a year earlier, missing what analysts had forecast.

"The world continues to face unpreceden­ted circumstan­ces, from inflation to war in Eastern Europe, to the enduring impacts of the pandemic and we know that Apple is not immune to it," Cook said.

Amazon meanwhile reported an inflation-fueled increase in sales despite the company announcing a massive round of layoffs to correct for a hiring binge during the pandemic when business growth ramped up.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A file photo shows the logos of Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon and Microsoft displayed on a mobile phone and a laptop screen
(AFP) A file photo shows the logos of Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon and Microsoft displayed on a mobile phone and a laptop screen

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