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The brightening outlook has encouraged Google to loosen its pursestrings to hire more employees, make more acquisitions and mine new business opportunities such as mobile phones. Investors aren't thrilled with that commitment because Google won't say how much it's prepared to spend, raising worries that its profit margins might not expand as much as its revenue this year. Google added 170 workers in the fourth quarter, bringing its payroll to 19,835 employees. If it can find enough qualified candidates, Google would like to hire about 2,000 workers this year, with an emphasis on engineering and ad sales, Pichette said.
Eric Schmidt, Google's chief executive, told investors in the conference call that the company will likely make at least one acquisition per month, "some big, more small." The company's biggest pending acquisition is a proposed deal to buy AdMob, a mobile advertising service, for $750 million. Google's recent decision to sell a mobile phone, called Nexus One, has been particularly vexing for investors because the costs to promote and support the device could be greater than the revenue it brings in for the forseeable future, said Signal Hill Group analyst Todd Greenwald. If nothing else, the fourth-quarter performance is likely to give people something to talk about other than Google's threat to shut down its China-based search engine and perhaps pull out of the world's most populous country in a dispute over censorship and computer security. Schmidt didn't say anything new about Google's uncertain future in China during a conference call with analysts. He reiterated that Google hopes to find a way to maintain a presence in China while emphasizing the company intends to stop censoring search results in the country within "a reasonably short time." That plan conflicts with China's restrictions against showing content that the government deems subversive or pornographic.
[Associated
Press;
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