The National - News

Alphabet’s Q4 net profit surges 52% on strong business

▶ Higher revenue from Search, YouTube and advertisem­ents drive quarterly income at the California company

- ALKESH SHARMA

Google’s parent company Alphabet reported a 51.8 per cent annual jump in its fourth-quarter net profit, fuelled by an increase in its Search, YouTube and advertisin­g businesses.

The world’s largest provider of search and video advertisem­ents reported a net profit of nearly $20.7 billion, up 5 per cent on a quarterly basis.

Revenue in the fourth quarter climbed 13 per cent on an annual basis, to more than $86.3 billion, beating analysts’ estimates of $85.3 billion.

This was the second straight quarter with a double-digit increase in revenue after four consecutiv­e quarters of single-digit growth.

Alphabet’s 2023 fiscal-year net profit increased 23 per cent to $73.8 billion, while revenue rose 9 per cent to $307.4 billion during the 12-month period.

Despite better-than-expected quarterly earnings, the company’s stock dropped more than 4.42 per cent in after-hours trading to $146.28 a share.

The company’s stock closed 1.16 per cent lower at $153.05 a share on Tuesday, giving Alphabet a market valuation of $1.90 trillion.

“We are pleased with the ongoing strength in Search and the growing contributi­on from YouTube and Cloud,” chief executive Sundar Pichai said.

“Each of these is already benefiting from our artificial intelligen­ce investment­s and innovation. As we enter the Gemini era, the best is yet to come.”

The California-based company earned more than 48.6 per cent of its fourth-quarter revenue, or nearly $42 billion, from the US market.

In Europe, the Middle East and Africa, the company earned more than $25 billion, or nearly 29 per cent of its total sales.

Alphabet’s operating income soared 27 per cent on an annual basis in the fourth quarter to about $23.7 billion. Its earnings for each share increased 56 per cent yearly to $1.64.

Google services business – which includes advertisem­ents, Android, Chrome, hardware, Maps, Search, Google Play and YouTube – accounted for nearly 88.4 per cent of the company’s total sales.

It added more than $76.3 billion to overall revenue, nearly 12.4 per cent more than the fourth quarter of 2022.

Google’s advertisin­g revenue from Search, YouTube and other businesses increased 11 per cent to more than $65.5 billion in the fourth quarter. It missed analysts’ estimates of $65.9 billion, according to StreetAcco­unt.

“Alphabet’s disappoint­ing ad revenue numbers suggest that corporatio­ns worldwide are still uncertain about the pace of interest rate cuts from global central banks, thus keeping some powder dry while waiting for more clues before opening up their wallets,” Thomas Monteiro, senior analyst at Investing.com, told The National.

“More than actual EPS, investors want to see improving margins and free cash flows … still, a healthy correction should make Google an interestin­g stock again, particular­ly due to the good numbers in the cloud business.”

Revenue from its cloud business rose an annual 25.6 per cent to nearly $9.2 billion in the quarter, exceeding analysts’ expectatio­n of $8.9 billion.

Google Cloud comprises 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’s cloud business, which has been bolstered by generative AI solutions in recent months, is facing stiff competitio­n from companies such as Oracle, Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure. Alphabet said its operating income in the cloud segment reached $864 million during the quarter. It improved from the fourth quarter of 2022, when the division’s loss was $186 million.

The company’s operating loss from other subsidiari­es reached about $863 million in the last quarter, from a loss of more than $1.2 billion in the same period for 2022.

Other income is derived mainly through the sale of internet offerings, and 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 $12.1 billion on research and developmen­t, nearly 14 per cent of its total sales in the fourth quarter. This was about 18 per cent more than the research and developmen­t expenditur­e for the same period in 2022.

YouTube added more than $9.2 billion to Alphabet’s revenue, rising about 10.6 per cent annually.

Google’s total acquisitio­n costs stood at $13.9 billion, up nearly 8.2 per cent on an annual basis, against analysts’ expectatio­ns of $14.1 billion.

These are payments that search companies make to affiliates and online companies for bringing traffic to their websites. It is a major expense for companies such as Google and Yahoo.

Alphabet’s total cash, cash equivalent­s and marketable securities reached more than $110.9 billion as of December, from $113.7 billion at the end of 2022.

Alphabet said that due to last year’s workforce reductions, the company incurred severance and related charges amounting to $2.1 billion in 2023.

And Google’s departure from certain offices led to charges of $1.2 billion for the quarter and $1.8 billion for the whole year.

We are pleased with the ongoing strength in Search and the growing contributi­on from YouTube and Cloud

SUNDAR PICHAI

Chief executive of Alphabet

 ?? AFP ?? Quarterly revenue at Google’s parent company climbed an annual 13 per cent to $86.3 billion, beating analysts’ estimates
AFP Quarterly revenue at Google’s parent company climbed an annual 13 per cent to $86.3 billion, beating analysts’ estimates

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