Slowing growth in advertising on YouTube and search as well as a decline in the value of its investments dragged down profits of Google parent
Google’s pandemic boom may finally be slowing. Google’s parent company, Alphabet, reported an 8% decline in quarterly profit Tuesday, dragged down by slowing growth for advertising on YouTube and search as well as a decline in the value of its investments.
The company posted a net profit of $16.44 billion for the first quarter, compared with a profit of $17.93 billion in the same period a year earlier — the first time the company’s quarterly profit had fallen from the prior year since the second quarter of 2020. Revenue surged 23% to $68.01 billion. The results were below analysts’ expectations for a net profit of $17.33 billion on revenue of $68.05 billion, according to estimates compiled by FactSet.
Shares of Alphabet fell about 4% in after-hours trading.
Alphabet’s profit fell from a year ago, when the company experienced a major rebound in demand for digital advertising and posted a $4.8 billion gain in the value of its stock holdings. For the first quarter, Alphabet reported a $1.07 billion loss from the value of its investments. The company has announced in the past that it holds shares of ride-hailing service Lyft and building-security firm ADT, both of which had seen their share prices fall along with the broader market.
Growth at Google’s two main advertising businesses also slowed from previous quarters. Advertising on YouTube rose 14% from a year earlier. The war in Ukraine prompted some European advertisers to pull back spending on YouTube, the company said.
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