Los Angeles Times

Google’s ad sales surge

Results lift revenue at parent Alphabet to $26.2 billion in the second quarter.

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Google is still raking in marketing dollars from advertiser­s, propelling the online search giant to another strong quarter in the face of costly regulatory trouble in Europe.

Parent company Alphabet Inc. reported secondquar­ter sales, minus partner payouts, of $26.24 billion. Analysts were expecting revenue of $25.55 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Google’s advertisin­g business grew 24%. Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat said most of that came from mobile and automated ads.

Alphabet shares jumped as much as 6.1% in afterhours trading.

Google has continued to give search ads more prominent space on mobile phones, fueling the strong sales growth. Spending on Google Shopping search ads, with which marketers can promote consumer products, jumped 31% in the second quarter compared with a year earlier, according to data from digital marketing firm Merkle. Those gains came even as Amazon.com Inc. revs up its own ads business.

Alphabet reported two different profit figures to account for a $5-billion fine the European Union imposed last week for violating competitio­n law with Google’s Android mobile software. Excluding that, Alphabet said profit was $11.75 a share. Google plans to contest the ruling. Even including the record fine, the company generated $3.2 billion in net income during the second quarter.

Google didn’t seem to take a hit from the General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR, a European privacy law that started in May and limits targeted advertisin­g. Similarly, analysts don’t expect EU antitrust investigat­ions to force changes that significan­tly dent Google’s earnings. “The Android fine may suggest that peak regulatory risk is now in the rearview mirror,” Mark Mahaney of RBC Capital Markets wrote in a note before Monday’s results.

A larger share of ad dollars went to Google’s own digital properties, including the search engine and video service YouTube, rather than to outside websites that run its ads. Google properties revenue jumped 26% to $23.3 billion. That leap reflects a recent push by Google to get marketers buying across more of its advertisin­g channels. “They’re using the packaged deal, with all their properties, with a much stronger sell,” said Marco Rimini, chief developmen­t officer at WPP’s Mindshare media agency.

Some in the industry also cite GDPR, which led more advertiser­s to funnel ad spending to Google and its main rival, Facebook Inc. “One of the unintentio­nal consequenc­es of GDPR is the strengthen­ing of the duopoly,” said Gil Elbaz, a former Google executive who now runs the marketing firm Factual. “If Google continues to go unchecked, their dominance will be extreme.”

While second-quarter sales jumped, so did costs. Google capital spending climbed to $5.3 billion, up 87% from the same quarter last year. On a call with analysts, CFO Porat highlighte­d spending on sales and marketing for Google’s cloud division.

The sums Google pays out to websites and mobile partners to distribute its search engine and ads — called traffic acquisitio­n costs — rose to $6.4 billion for the quarter. Still, that was 23% of ad revenue, down from 24% in the first quarter of 2018.

Traffic acquisitio­n costs “came in lower than expectatio­ns which is a clear positive takeaway,” Dan Ives, head of technology research at GBH Insights, wrote in a note to investors.

Investors are also looking for signs of growth beyond advertisin­g, such as Google’s cloud-computing business. The company’s other revenue bucket, which includes cloud, hardware and app sales, grew 37% last quarter to $4.4 billion.

During the call with analysts, Google Chief Executive Sundar Pichai mentioned new cloud customers including Domino’s Pizza Inc., SoundCloud Ltd. and Pricewater­houseCoope­rs.

Other Bets, the home of Alphabet’s riskier, experiment­al businesses, lost $732 million in the quarter, versus a loss of $633 million a year earlier.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? ALPHABET’S shares jumped as much as 6.1% in after-hours trading Monday. Google has continued to give search ads more prominent space on mobile phones.
Richard Drew Associated Press ALPHABET’S shares jumped as much as 6.1% in after-hours trading Monday. Google has continued to give search ads more prominent space on mobile phones.

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