Alphabet's mobile ad revenue surges; shares jump
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[October 27, 2017]
By Paresh Dave and Arjun Panchadar
(Reuters) - Alphabet Inc <GOOGL.O> on
Thursday reported stronger-than-expected advertising sales and higher
operating margins, driving shares up in after-hours trading as investors
brushed off concerns about higher costs for acquiring mobile customers.
The company's shares were up nearly 3 percent at $1,020 after the bell.
They have gained 25 percent this year.
Third-quarter revenue for Alphabet, the parent company of Google, jumped
24 percent to $27.8 billion, above the average analysts' estimate of
$27.2 billion.
Profit of $6.7 billion, or $9.57 per share, was well ahead of Wall
Street estimates.
Alphabet, along with much of the tech sector, has enjoyed torrid growth
in recent years as advertising moves from traditional media to the
internet and consumers flock to an ever-expanding array of digital
devices.
While the company faces political pressures, especially in Europe, over
its growing dominance and its role in spreading propaganda online, those
problems have yet to hit the bottom line.
The third quarter was the 15th in a row in which the company has shown
double-digit, year-over-year sales growth. Advertising sales at Google,
Alphabet's main operating unit, account for the vast majority of the
company's revenue.
Investors have been increasingly concerned about a sharp rise in costs
for getting ads in front of mobile users as Google pays a growing cut of
ad sales to Apple Inc <AAPL.O> and other companies that integrate Google
search into mobile products and services.
Those costs are referred to as traffic acquisition costs, or TAC, and
they rose 54 percent in the quarter, accounting for 12 percent of ad
sales. But analysts said revenue growth and cost controls made that
increase less of an issue.
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The Google logo is pictured atop an office building in Irvine,
California, U.S. August 7, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
“There is way too much focus on TAC as a cost - it’s a great investment
for Google to control the publishing ecosystem," said Richard Kramer of
Arete Research.
James Cordwell, an analyst at Atlantic Equities, said: “TAC is surging,
but the trade-off between growth and margin is a good one, with overall
gross profit dollars still growing in excess of 20 percent."
Google's "other revenue" line, which includes hardware such as the Pixel
smartphones and Home speakers as well as the cloud computing business,
also enjoyed solid growth. Sales from non-ad businesses rose 40 percent
from a year ago to $3.4 billion in the quarter.
Google is playing catch-up with Amazon Web Services in the business of
providing corporate computing services via large data centers. The
company does not break out its cloud revenue, but Jefferies analysts
estimate Google Cloud Platform is about 15 percent of Google’s other
revenue.
Google is also trying to take on Apple in the high end of the smartphone
business with the Pixel. Google's Android operating system already
powers most non-Apple smartphones.
But Google's second-generation Pixel had a rough debut last week, with
the company investigating user complaints of a faulty screen and poor
call quality.
(Reporting by Arjun Panchadar in Bengaluru; Editing by Jonathan Weber
and Leslie Adler)
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