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Google parent Alphabet's profit up 29 per cent on strong ad sales

SAN FRANCISCO: Google parent Alphabet Inc posted a surge in profit and revenue on Thursday as its core advertising business continued to grow at an extraordinary rate and problems such as an advertiser boycott of YouTube had little impact.

Alphabet’s profit beat Wall Street estimates and rose 29 per cent to US$5.43 billion, a growth rate that analysts called exceptional for a company so large.

“For a company of Google’s size to post the growth that it has is just a testament to the quality and usefulness of the products they make,” said Colin Gillis, an analyst with BGC Partners. “They are the dominant force in digital advertising.”

Shares of the company rose 2.8 per cent to US$916.80 after the bell on Thursday.

Like its arch-rival Facebook Inc, Google has aggressively shifted the focus of its business to mobile advertising.

Google is expected to command a 61.6 per cent share of the search ad market worldwide in 2017, up from 60.6 per cent in 2016, according to research firm eMarketer.

Wall Street grew anxious as a series of high-profile advertisers fled YouTube amid concerns about ads appearing alongside extremist content. But Google’s results showed that controversy was little more than a speed bump for the company as revenue rose 22.2 per cent to US$24.75 billion from US$20.26 billion in the quarter ended March 31.

“YouTube revenues continue to grow at a significant rate, driven primarily by video advertising,” Alphabet chief financial officer Ruth Porat said during an earnings call.

Analysts marveled at the company’s ability to continue to post sizeable year-over-year gains from such a large base.

Google’s ad revenue, which accounts for the lion’s share of its business, rose 18.8 per cent to US$21.41 billion in the first quarter.

Paid clicks, where an advertiser pays only if a user clicks on ads, rose 44 per cent. Analysts on average had expected a rise of 29.7 per cent, according to FactSet StreetAccount.

With the traditional business of search advertising maturing, the company is looking to YouTube as its next driver of growth.

The strong results also allayed concerns about a recent controversy surrounding the video service and its impact on Google’s ad revenue.

YouTube had come under fire for ads appearing alongside videos carrying homophobic or anti-Semitic messages, prompting a number of companies to suspend their digital ads on the video service.

“Advertisers can be fickle and certainly the approval of the advertiser is critical, but less so than the approval of the user,” said Phil Bak, CEO of ACSI Funds, an asset manager.

Alphabet is also reaping the benefits of investing heavily in areas such as hardware and cloud.

Revenue from its Google Other unit, which includes Pixel smartphone, Play Store and cloud business, rose 49.4 per cent to US$3.10 billion.

Net income rose to US$5.43 billion, or US$7.73 per share, from US$4.21 billion, or US$6.02 per share, a year earlier.

Analysts on an average had expected a first-quarter profit of US$7.34 per share, according to Thomson Reuters. -- REUTERS

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