The National - News

ALPHABET SHARES JUMP AFTER $70BN STOCK BUYBACK PLEDGE

▶ Google parent’s first-quarter revenue up 3 per cent to $69.8 billion, but profits down 8.4 per cent

- ALKESH SHARMA and MASSOUD A DERHALLY

Shares of Alphabet, the world’s largest provider of search and video advertisem­ents, rallied after the company said it would buy back about $70 billion in stock and its first-quarter revenue results exceeded analysts’ estimates.

Revenue during the threemonth period to the end of March rose about 3 per cent annually to $69.8 billion as the company’s search engine business performed well despite the economic slowdown and its cloud unit became profitable for the first time. The revenue results beat Refinitiv estimates of about $68.9 billion.

However, first-quarter net profit dropped about 8.4 per cent on an annual basis, as the company took a $2.6 billion hit related to job cuts and a reduction in office space.

Net profit at Google’s parent company dropped to about $15 billion in the three months to the end of March, from the same period in 2022. Alphabet said its board agreed for the company to repurchase up to an additional $70 billion of its Class A and Class C shares, according to a regulatory filing.

That was welcomed by investors, with the company’s shares jumping as much as 5.9 per cent in after-hours trading before they pared gains to trade up about 1.7 per cent. Alphabet’s shares closed down 2 per cent to $103.85 in regular trading hours on Tuesday.

The stock has gained 16.5 per cent so far this year and the company had a market value of about $1.33 trillion at market close on Tuesday.

In January, the company said that it was laying off 12,000 people – out of nearly 190,000 employees – after a review across product areas and functions.

This month, chief financial officer Ruth Porat announced further cost-cutting measures in the form of reducing employees’ incentives and perks – such as free snacks, shuttle services and fitness sessions.

“We are pleased with our business performanc­e in the first quarter, with Search performing well and momentum in Cloud,” Alphabet and Google chief executive Sundar Pichai said.

“We introduced important product updates anchored in deep computer science and AI … we see huge opportunit­ies ahead, continuing our long track record of innovation.”

Alphabet earned more than 47 per cent of its first-quarter revenue – nearly $32.8 billion – from the US market. In Europe, the Middle East and Africa, it earned more than $21 billion.

Alphabet’s operating income dropped 13.3 per cent on an annual basis in the first quarter to about $17.4 billion. Its earnings for each share dropped 4.8 per cent yearly to $1.17.

Google services business – which includes advertisem­ents, Android, Chrome, hardware,

Maps, Search, Google Play and YouTube – accounted for nearly 89 per cent of total sales.

It added almost $61.9 billion to overall revenue, nearly 0.80 per cent more than the first quarter of 2022.

Google’s advertisin­g revenue from Search, YouTube and other businesses dropped slightly to about $54.5 billion in the first quarter.

The total revenue from the cloud business grew an annual 28 per cent to about $7.4 billion in the March quarter.

Google Cloud includes the company’s infrastruc­ture and data analytics platforms, collaborat­ion tools and other services for enterprise customers.

It generates revenue mainly from fees received for cloud platform services and workspace collaborat­ion tools.

Alphabet said operating income from the cloud segment reached $191 million during the quarter.

It improved from the first quarter of last year, when it recorded a $706 million loss.

Operating losses from other bets, or subsidiari­es, reached $1.2 billion in the last quarter, up from a loss of $835 million in the same period in 2022.

Other bets derive mainly from the sale of internet offerings, plus licensing and research and developmen­t services. This includes Alphabet’s X lab, self-driving unit Waymo and other non-Google companies.

Alphabet spent more than $11.5 billion on research and developmen­t – nearly 16.4 per cent of its total sales in the first quarter. This was 26 per cent more than the R&D expenditur­e for the same period in 2022.

“We remain committed to delivering long-term growth and creating capacity to invest in our most compelling growth areas by re-engineerin­g our cost base” said Ms Porat.

YouTube added nearly $6.7 billion to Alphabet’s revenue, dropping 2.5 per cent annually.

Google’s total acquisitio­n costs stood at more than $11.72 billion, down nearly 2.4 per cent on an annual basis, against analysts’ expectatio­ns of $11.78 billion.

TACs are payments search companies make to affiliates and online companies for bringing traffic to their websites.

Its search engine business performed well despite the economic slowdown and its cloud unit became profitable for the first time

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Google’s Bay View campus in Mountain View, California
Bloomberg Google’s Bay View campus in Mountain View, California

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates