The Pak Banker

Poland, Bulgaria get gas from EU neighbours

- BRUSSELS

Poland and Bulgaria are now receiving gas from their EU neighbours after Russia's state energy giant Gazprom turned off the taps, European Commission head Ursula von der Leyen said.

"We will ensure that Gazprom's decision has the least possible impact on European consumers," von der Leyen said.

Speaking in Chile, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said Gazprom's move was "an act of aggression" and would "only accelerate Europe's conversion to green energies, which do not create dependenci­es".

Gazprom has announced the halt of gas to both Poland and highly dependent Bulgaria after not receiving payment in rubles from the two EU members. President Vladimir Putin said last month that Russia would no longer accept payments in currencies other than the ruble in retaliatio­n for the West's economic sanctions against Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine.

Shares in Google's parent company Alphabet sank Tuesday after the internet giant reported that earnings in the recently ended quarter missed market expectatio­ns, with profit down from a year earlier.

Alphabet reported net income of $16.4 billion in the first quarter on revenue that climbed 23 percent to $68 billion when compared to the same period last year. Alphabet profit was $17.9 billion in the first quarter of 2021.

Shares sank nearly five percent to $2,257 on the news. The quarter brought strong growth in Alphabet's search and cloud computing businesses while the company continued to invest heavily in products and services, chief executive Sundar Pichai said in an earnings release.

While Alphabet saw revenue from online ads climb to more than $46 billion, the cost of acquiring online "traffic" that helps fuel that income was up some $2 billion from the same period a year ago, the earnings report showed.

Alphabet's ranks of employees grew to just shy of 164,000 people from 140,000 people in the same quarter last year.

The Silicon Valley titan also continued to pour money into data centers and parts of its operations that power its cloud computing services.

"We are pleased with Q1 revenue growth of 23% year over year," said Alphabet chief financial officer Ruth Porat.

"We continue to make considered investment­s in Capex, (research and developmen­t) and talent to support long-term value creation for all stakeholde­rs."

Insider Intelligen­ce principal analyst Paul Verna told AFP that while Google's search business remained a "bright spot" at the company, earnings at video-sharing website YouTube were "a big miss." "TikTok has become a significan­t competitiv­e threat," Verna said of the pressure on YouTube.

"On the connected television side, there is a lot of competitio­n from other platforms that have entered the space."

Alphabet is also dealing with challenges facing the broader market, such as inflation that has advertiser­s more carefully minding marketing budgets, Verna said.

The tech firm is also dealing with "natural consequenc­es" of coming out of a pandemic that boosted online activity to degrees not truly sustainabl­e, the analyst added.

"In that light. I don't think today's results are disastrous by any means," Verna said.

Alphabet remains a market leader in search and strong in video, he said, "but there's just a saturation limit to growth."

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