Advertisement
Technology

Google parent announces stock buyback, modest beat on ad sales

April 25 (Reuters) – Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O) said on Tuesday it would buy back $70 billion in stock and posted first-quarter profit and revenue above estimates as demand rose for cloud services and ad sales held up better than expected.

What you need to know about Google Pixel

Advertisement

Investors cheered the buyback plan, sending shares of the Google parent as much as 4% higher in after-hours trade before they pared gains to trade up 1.6%. Demand rose for cloud services and Google’s ad sales held up better than expected.

Advertisement

Alphabet reported a slight dip in first-quarter ad sales from a year earlier to $54.55 billion, which nonetheless beat analyst estimates of $53.71 billion. It was the third such decline for the company since it went public in 2004, but was the second in a row following a fourth-quarter ad sales drop of 3.6%.

Advertisement

Excluding items, Alphabet reported earnings per share of $1.17, beating an average estimate of $1.07 per share.

“Google exceeded both revenue and earnings per share expectations this quarter, but reasons for investor optimism are modest,” said Insider Intelligence senior analyst Max Willens.

The company, meanwhile, has been looking to keep a tight control on costs amid recession fears and in January decided to cut about 12,000 jobs. Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat told investors on a conference call that she expected capital expenditures this year to be “modestly higher” than in 2022.

Alphabet’s Google unit has been scrambling to keep pace with rivals, notably Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O), in rolling out new artificial-intelligence software that can generate long-form responses to queries and other prompts. Microsoft committed $10 billion to OpenAI whose ChatGPT software has been the talk of Silicon Valley since a free version was introduced in November.

Advertisement

Microsoft on Tuesday also beat Wall Street estimates for third-quarter profit and revenue, driven by growth in its cloud computing and Office productivity software businesses, pushing its shares up 8.5% in after-market trading. Shares of rival tech companies Meta Platforms Inc (META.O) and Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) were up 2.3% and 5.3%, respectively.

It reported net profit of $15.05 billion for the first three months of the year compared with $16.44 billion a year earlier.

Source : reuters.com

Advertisement