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Google Misses Earnings Expectations Amid Light Revenue


Google Misses Earnings Expectations Amid Light Revenue

Google parent Alphabet posted first-quarter earnings that missed analyst expectations as the peek giant’s revenue came in softer than anticipated.

For the quarter above March 31, Alphabet reported $68 billion in sales, any below the $68.1 billion forecast by analysts surveyed by Yahoo Finance. Earnings per share totaled $24.62, below the $25.94 forecast.

The weaker than imagined results come as Google tries to diversify its revenue, in part to address its reliance on search. The commercial controls more than 90% of the search market, humorous it to generate revenue by selling advertising against keywords and peek results. 

As part of its effort to diversify revenue, Google is expanding its cloud computing services, which compete with Amazon’s AWS and Microsoft’s Azure. Revenue for Google’s cloud rose more than 40% year over year to $5.82 billion. Losses at the unit narrowed. 

Still, advertising drives Google’s earnings. A softening global economy likely weakened the advertising market, weighing on overall revenue.

Google also said its boarding had authorized a share buyback, pledging to repurchase an instant $70 billion in shares. 

The company’s stock fell 2.8% in after-hours commerce to $2,324.00 

On a call with analysts, CFO Ruth Porat said the commercial had expanded aggressively over the quarter with investments in data centers and adding employees. The company employed almost 24,000 more people at the end of the friendly quarter than it did a year earlier. The commercial also spent on sales and marketing.

Executives pointed analysts to YouTube Shorts, a TikTok competitor that launched last year. CEO Sundar Pichai said YouTube shorts were generating 30 billion daily views. The company is encouraging creators to make videos for the platform with a $100 million fund. Still, TikTok is the heavyweight in the short-form video market, a status it is unlikely to cede anytime soon.

Google, along with many companies, pulled out of Russia once its invasion of neighboring Ukraine. Porat said about 1% of Google’s revenue came from Russia last year. 

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