Google’s parent company reports worst quarterly revenue growth since 2015

Shares in the tech gian Alphabet Inc fell by 3% in extended trading

Google and YouTube logos as seen at the entrance to the Google offices in Los Angeles, California last year. Photograph: ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images
Google and YouTube logos as seen at the entrance to the Google offices in Los Angeles, California last year. Photograph: ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images

Google's parent company Alphabet Inc on Monday reported its worst fourth-quarter revenue growth since 2015, missing analysts' estimate for a period in which its top online advertising rivals beat expectations.

Shares of the company fell about 3 per cent in extended trading. Alphabet offered new disclosures about its cloud computing and YouTube ads units, posting $2.61 billion (€2.36 billion) and $4.72 billion in quarterly revenue from them respectively.

The company has been the web’s biggest draw for advertisers for a decade, enabling it last month to become the fourth listed company to top $1 trillion in market capitalisation.

But new concerns have emerged among investors about whether its dominance will last as US antitrust regulators investigate Google and as Amazon.com and Facebook continue to grow their ads businesses globally.

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Google over the past year has posted slowing sales growth for its ad business. It has blamed foreign exchange rates and one-time product changes.

Expenses have ballooned with hiring of thousands of salespeople, building of new data centers and marketing the Google brand through hardware and other ventures.

The fourth-quarter results continued those trends. Overall sales were $46.08 billion, up 17 per cent, compared with an average estimate of $46.94 billion among financial analysts tracked by Refinitiv.

Alphabet’s total costs and expenses rose 18.5 per cent from a year ago to $36.809 billion. That left profit of $10.67 billion, or $15.35 per share, compared with the analysts’ average estimate of $8.787 billion, or $12.53 per share.

Google faces internal challenges too. Some of its 119,000 employees have resisted working on weapons-related software for militaries or censored search products for Chinese users, leading Google to abandon such efforts. Others have expressed frustration with curbs on companywide discussions and what they have described as retaliation for labor organizing.

In December, Google Chief Executive Sundar Pichai gained the additional role of Alphabet CEO from Larry Page as he and fellow co-founder Sergey Brin stepped back even further from day-to-day management.

It is unclear whether Pichai plans major changes to quell workplace unrest. But a shareholder lawsuit, which alleges that company leaders covered up sexual misconduct at Google, recently entered mediation and threatens to loosen the control held by Pichai, Page and Brin.

On Monday, Pichai’s new role brought with it changes to Alphabet’s financial disclosures, which investors before generally criticised as too opaque to understand how it is weathering specific challenges.

Shares of Alphabet are up 28.1 per cent in the past 12 months. - Reuters