The Guardian (USA)

Alphabet revenue unexpected­ly rises in first quarter amid industry slowdown

- Kari Paul

Alphabet stocks rose in after-hours trading on Tuesday after the tech firm beat analyst expectatio­ns for first-quarter earnings, marking an unexpected­ly bright spot in the otherwise struggling tech sector.

The company reported first-quarter revenue of $69.8bn, up 3% year-overyear and above analyst prediction­s of $68.9bn. Its cloud business reported a profit for the first time since its launch, taking in $191m.

Shares were up nearly 3% in afterhours trading, as investors were heartened by Alphabet’s announceme­nt of a $70bn stock buyback.

In a statement accompanyi­ng the report, the company’s chief executive, Sundar Pichai, acknowledg­ed the growing momentum of its cloud services and Alphabet is continuing to invest in search capabiliti­es, including in the use of artificial intelligen­ce.

“We introduced important product updates anchored in deep computer science and AI,” he said. “Our North Star is providing the most helpful answers for our users, and we see huge opportunit­ies ahead, continuing our long track record of innovation.”

Artificial intelligen­ce was a big focus of the day, mentioned upwards of 60 times during a call with investors accompanyi­ng the report. Pichai said the company would accelerate its developmen­t of AI, with safeguards in place. After the success of Microsofto­wned ChatGPT, Alphabet announced Bard – its own AI chatbot – in February.

“As we continue to bring AI to our products, our AI principles and the highest tenets of informatio­n integrity remain at the core of all our work,” Pichai said.

While in previous earnings reports Alphabet fared better than some of its peers such as Meta and Twitter, it had stumbled in recent months, announcing in August it would freeze hiring. In January it cut more than 12,000 jobs, or 6% of its global workforce, and a leaked internal memo in March revealed Alphabet would be cutting back on some employee perks in an effort to save money.

Tuesday’s report suggests a potential recovery, even as the YouTube parent company has struggled to compete with the meteoric rise of TikTok, reporting in its previous earnings that YouTube ad revenue in quarter four of 2022 shrank for the first time in the company’s history – falling about 2% to $7bn from $7.2bn year over year.

YouTube ad revenue was down 2.6% in the quarter, but at $6.69bn still beat the $6.64bn expected by analysts. The company is continuing to invest in short-form video to compete with TikTok, and Pichai stated in the call on Tuesday that YouTube Shorts now has 50bn daily views, up from 30bn this time last year.

The rare beat comes as the tech sector continues to hobble through a downturn. All eyes will be on ongoing earnings reports, with Meta set to release its own on Wednesday and Apple reporting on Thursday.

The company stated in its report that despite layoffs, its headcount was up 16% year over year. But despite the relatively positive report, investor optimism remains “modest”, said Max Willens, a senior analyst at market research firm Insider Intelligen­ce.

“Its cloud segment turning a profit is notable, and a testament to management’s diligence in steering Cloud toward profitabil­ity. But the reality is that Google Cloud remains comfortabl­y behind its two most important competitor­s, and its growth is slowing,” he said.

He added that Google’s core business, advertisin­g revenue, remains “under threat”, with YouTube revenues declining again and other revenues rising less than 2%. “Google’s core business is facing the most serious challenges it has encountere­d in quite some time,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Alastair Grant/AP ?? The company, like Meta and Snap, has struggled to compete with the meteoric rise of TikTok.
Photograph: Alastair Grant/AP The company, like Meta and Snap, has struggled to compete with the meteoric rise of TikTok.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States