Here s what Alphabet CFO Ruth Porat is betting on as YouTube ad revenue slumps Fortune
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Here s what Alphabet CFO Ruth Porat is betting on as YouTube ad revenue slumps
BYSheryl EstradaOctober 26, 2022, 10:48 AM UTCGoogleplex, the corporate headquarters complex of Google and its parent company Alphabet Inc. Alex Tai/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images Good morning, This year’s tech-stock slump continues as Google misses the mark on its latest earnings. But the tech giant is betting on the world’s pivot to a distributed workforce, hybrid work, and digital transformation, more than the next YouTube star, to help buoy future growth. Alphabet, the parent company of Google and YouTube, reported a total of $69.1 billion in revenue in the third quarter that ended Sept. 30, a 6% increase from $65.12 billion at the same time last year. On average, analysts expected revenue to be $70.58 billion, according to Refinitiv data. YouTube advertising revenue declined. The company reported $7.07 billion in revenue for the quarter, compared to $7.2 billion in the third quarter of 2021. Regarding Google Search, which is in the Google services segment, “we did see a pullback in spend by some advertisers in certain areas in search ads,” Philipp Schindler, SVP and chief business officer at Google, said during the company’s earnings call on Tuesday. “For example, in financial services, we saw a pullback in the insurance, loan, mortgage, and crypto subcategories. There’s no question we’re operating in an uncertain environment.” The third quarter reflects, “healthy fundamental growth in search and momentum in cloud, while affected by foreign exchange,” Ruth Porat, CFO of Alphabet and Google said on the call. Google Cloud revenue was $6.9 billion for the quarter, up 38%, but had an operating loss of $699 million, Porat said. However, the revenue is more than Zacks Consensus Estimate for Q3 2022 of $6.7 billion. “Customers globally are adopting our products and services to digitally transform their businesses,” Porat said. There’s opportunity in the space as “businesses and governments are still in the early days of public cloud adoption,” she said. The company was on a hiring spree in Q3, but will slow down some next year. Alphabet added 12,765 employees in the third quarter, of that more than 2,600 joined Google Cloud as part of the company’s acquisition of Mandiant, Porat said. “In the fourth quarter, we expect headcount additions will slow to less than half the number added in Q3,” she said. But the company will continue hiring for “critical roles,” focusing on engineering and technical talent, she said. Regarding CAPEX, the company will make big investments in tech infrastructure with servers as the largest components, Porat said. Google may be trying to comfort investors about missing the mark by promoting the potential of investments in A.I. capabilities for YouTube, Google Search, and Google cloud. But some experts are saying that’s a silver lining for tech investments. In a blog post on Tuesday, Lei Qiu, portfolio manager of disruptive innovation equities at the asset management firm AllianceBernstein, pointed to robots, the cloud, and the Internet of Things driving growth beyond this year’s tech-stock bust. “Investors in technology stocks have been badly bruised,” Qiu writes. Like the MSCI World Index technology took a dive nearly 33% through September 30, she writes. But the “transformation of technology-enabled infrastructure” has become a must due to changes in consumer behavior. Flexibility and efficiency for hybrid workforces, for example, requires shifting workloads to the cloud, using data-management tools, Qiu writes. That results in spending more on cloud infrastructure for agility and cybersecurity to safeguard the work environment, she writes. In addition, robots are being used across industries for efficiencies and cost savings. And, “humans and machines are also communicating in new ways via the Internet of Things,” Qiu writes. She concludes that this year’s technology sector declines shouldn’t deter equity investors. Google is spending heavily on cloud, so they need investors to jump on the bandwagon. See you tomorrow. Sheryl Estrada[email protected]