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Google ad surge drives up profits for parent firm Alphabet
By Glenn CHAPMAN
San Francisco (AFP) April 27, 2021

Microsoft profits jump as cloud services keep momentum
Washington (AFP) April 27, 2021 - Microsoft said Tuesday profits rose sharply in the past quarter amid strong momentum in cloud services for businesses amid the extended pandemic.

Profits in the three months to March 31 jumped 44 percent from the same period a year ago to $15.5 billion while revenues increased 19 percent to $41.7 billion.

The results showed ongoing momentum for Microsoft as it focuses on services for enterprises in the internet cloud, which has become more critical during the global health crisis of the past year.

"Over a year into the pandemic, digital adoption curves aren't slowing down. They're accelerating, and it's just the beginning," said chief executive Satya Nadella.

"We are building the cloud for the next decade, expanding our addressable market and innovating across every layer of the tech stack to help our customers be resilient and transform."

Microsoft said its commercial cloud revenue was up some 33 percent in its fiscal third quarter as part of the growing trend.

It reported strong gains in its Office suite of products and a more modest increase in similar software and services for consumers.

Microsoft saw gains across a range of products and services, including its Xbox gaming content and services (revenue up 34 percent), search advertising (17 percent), the LinkedIn professional social network (25 percent) and its Surface line of computing products (12 percent).

The surging market for personal computers helped drive revenue for the Windows operating system up 10 percent year-over-year, with a similar increase in Windows commercial products and cloud services.

The results come with Big Tech firms facing growing scrutiny for dominating key economic sectors, while seeing their influence and profits rise during the pandemic.

Shares in Microsoft, whose market value has approached $2 trillion in recent days, dipped some three percent in after-hours trade following the results.

Dan Ives at Wedbush Securities said the results showed "strong numbers that will be another feather in the cap for Microsoft" and pointed to "the stock selling off after hours in knee jerk fashion as the Street was hoping for a bigger top-line beat."

Ives added that "this cloud shift and WFH (work from home) dynamic looks here to stay and the company stands to be a major beneficiary of this trend."

Google parent Alphabet on Tuesday reported that quarterly profit more than doubled as digital advertising surged with more people relying on the internet during the coronavirus pandemic.

Profit in the first quarter leapt to $17.9 billion from $6.8 billion in the same period a year ago while revenues jumped 34 percent to $55.3 billion, led by gains in advertising and cloud computing services.

"Over the last year, people have turned to Google Search and many online services to stay informed, connected and entertained," said Alphabet and Google chief executive Sundar Pichai.

The surge in Alphabet's earnings comes as the tech giant faces increased scrutiny from regulators regarding its power.

"Google essentially manufactures money; they are almost entirely ads," said analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group.

"There is not a risk of downturn in revenue, it is that regulatory action strips the revenue from them."

Facebook and Google are the "short list" when it comes to scrutiny by regulators in Europe and the United States because of "their broad impact on the political process and almost complete dominance of ad revenues," the analyst maintained.

Google is among internet giants in the crosshairs of regulators and critics concerned about whether it unfairly wields its power to dominate markets and fend off competition.

The Silicon Valley giant reported robust gains in search advertising, those messages tied to the leading internet search engine, as well as for its YouTube video sharing platform.

"People have turned to Google search more than ever since the pandemic began," Pichai said on an earnings call, noting queries ran a gamut from Covid-19 questions to job hunts.

While the pandemic has brought tremendous challenges for small businesses, it has also created opportunities for entrepreneurs to tailor offerings for new trends, according to Google chief business officer Philipp Schindler.

"Consumers are spending more time online; they're buying more online, and they were willing to try new brands and eager to support local businesses," Schindler said on the call.

The pandemic has sped up a trend in people using the internet for shopping, work, learning and entertainment.

Google is a centerpiece of online activity, with offerings such as its search engine, ad marketplace, and YouTube video platform.

- Cloud contenders -

Money taken in by Google's cloud computing division, which competes with services offered by Amazon and Microsoft, topped $4 billion, up from $2.7 billion in the same period a year earlier.

Amazon Web Services is the top cloud service provider, with nearly a third of the market, according to industry tracker Canalys.

Microsoft's Azure platform is on the heels of AWS, while Google is a distant third, Canalys said in a market report.

Microsoft on Tuesday reported that profits rose sharply in the past quarter amid strong momentum in cloud services for businesses.

The results showed ongoing momentum for Microsoft as it focuses on services for enterprises in the internet cloud, which has become more critical during the global health crisis of the past year.

Meanwhile, Alphabet continues to invest heavily in data centers and other infrastructure.

"Our cloud services are helping businesses, big and small, accelerate their digital transformations," Pichai said.

- Sticking with offices -

Alphabet intended to continue beefing up its ranks of engineers and investing in office space despite embracing "hybrid" work models that let employees do jobs remotely some of the time.

"We do value bringing people together in the office," chief financial officer Ruth Porat said on the call.

"We are looking at less density per employee, so even with a hybrid work environment we will continue to need space."

Alphabet shares were up nearly five percent in after-market trades that followed release of the earnings figures.

"Google had an absolute monster quarter with ads leading the way," said analyst Patrick Moorhead of Moor Insights and Strategy.

"YouTube grew an eye-watering 49 percent year-over-year, which I attribute to increased YouTube viewing and increased YouTube TV subscribers."


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Spotify counters Apple with podcast subscriptions
San Francisco (AFP) April 27, 2021
Spotify unveiled plans Tuesday for podcast subscriptions, countering a similar initiative from Apple but offering a better deal than its US rival by allowing creators to keep all revenue for a limited time. The updated podcast platform for the United States, set to expand internationally in coming months, lets podcasters make episodes available only to subscribers. Taking advantage of the tool will cost podcasters nothing for the next two years, meaning they get all subscription revenue, Spotify ... read more

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