Business World

Google parent Alphabet lifted by better-than-expected profit

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WASHINGTON — Google parent Alphabet shares lifted Monday on a stronger-thanexpect­ed earnings report for the past quarter, as the tech giant’s results eased concerns over huge fines imposed by the European Union (EU) for antitrust actions.

Profit dipped 9.3% to $ 3.2 billion in the second quarter after accounting for the EU fines, the company said.

Revenues, meanwhile, jumped 26% from a year ago to $32.7 billion, better than most analysts expected.

Shares in Alphabet jumped 4.5% in after- hours trade, which could mark a new record for the internet giant if confirmed when markets open Tuesday.

“We delivered another quarter of very strong performanc­e,” Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat said.

“Our investment­s are driving great experience­s for users, strong results for advertiser­s and new business opportunit­ies for Google and Alphabet.”

Last week, EU officials slapped a €4.34-billion ($5-billion) penalty on the US tech giant for illegally abusing the dominance of its operating system for mobile devices.

Brussels accused Google of using the Android system’s near- strangleho­ld on smartphone­s and tablets to promote the use of its own Google search engine and shut out rivals.

Following a reorganiza­tion of the company, the Google unit that includes the main search engine and YouTube video service still delivered the lion’s share of revenues at $32.5 billion, with “other bets” driving $145 million in revenue.

Within Google, advertisin­g remained the key revenue source, pulling in $ 28 billion in the three months ending in June, a 24% rise from a year ago.

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