Business

Google parent Alphabet nearly doubles annual profit

Tech giant earns net income of US$76 billion last year, compared to US$40 billion in 2020

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 02 Feb 2022 1:00PM

Google parent Alphabet nearly doubles annual profit
Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai cites strong growth in its advertising business, a quarterly sales record for Pixel phones despite supply constraints, and its booming cloud business for its robust earnings. – AFP pic, February 2, 2022

SAN FRANCISCO – Google’s parent firm Alphabet announced quarterly profits yesterday that beat expectations and nearly doubled in 2021 – after a booming holiday season for the online ads giant facing anti-trust regulation scrutiny.

The tech giant had net income of US$20.6 billion (RM86.2 billion) on revenue that grew 32% to US$75 billion in the final quarter of 2021, ending the year with a total of US$76 billion in profit.

That was nearly double the US$40 billion annual profit reported for 2020, as the pandemic had already accelerated a shift to online shopping, working and learning that also benefited fellow giants like Amazon and Facebook.

Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai cited “strong growth in our advertising business... a quarterly sales record for our Pixel phones despite supply constraints, and our cloud business continuing to grow strongly” for the success.

In all, Google earned more than US$61 billion in advertising revenue, mostly from online search and its video platform, while its cloud business grew by 45% to US$5.5 billion in revenue.

Google’s dominance online has powered it to new heights during the pandemic period, but has also left it in the sights of regulators around the world.

Pichai said during an earnings call that Alphabet is open to “sensible” regulation by Congress but is “genuinely concerned that they could break a wide range of popular services we offer to our users.”

Some regulatory proposals could have unintended consequences such as weakening privacy and safety, or putting US companies at a disadvantage, according to Pichai.

Alphabet’s strong earnings come after Apple, another pandemic-era winner, reported record revenue last week as markets were jittery about tech’s future as well as geopolitical risks like the Ukraine crisis.

However, regulators’ scrutiny around the world is stacking up as one of the most significant risks for the Silicon Valley giant.

“Google has the biggest uphill battle in terms of antitrust issues among all of the big tech companies,” Third Bridge analyst Scott Kessler wrote.

“Despite Apple’s bigger size and Meta/Facebook’s bad publicity, Google is seen most at risk in terms of US antitrust law,” he added.

Retail ads help push growth

Just last week, a group of top US justice officials accused Google in lawsuits of tracking and profiting from users’ location data, despite leading consumers to think they could protect their privacy on the tech giant’s services.

These suits are the latest legal threats against Google and other US big tech giants, which have long faced probes and court cases but a lack of new national laws that would regulate their businesses.

The courts and legislatures are not moving fast. Two weeks ago, for example, Google appealed a European court ruling that upheld a 2.4 billion-euro fine imposed by Brussels in 2017 for anti-competitive practices in the price comparison market.

Alphabet’s expectations-beating results offered positive signals even as diminishing growth shadowed firms like lockdown lifestyle champ Netflix.

Netflix lost tens of billions of dollars in market capitalization last month – but has rebounded – after projecting growth of just 2.5 million subscribers this quarter.

Fortunes were quite different for Google, with Alphabet saying its board had approved a 20-to-1 stock split that would make shares more affordable to small investors.

The firm predicts that its growth will continue in 2022, with digital advertising expected to bring in more than US$171 billion to Google this year, or 30% of the global pie, just ahead of Facebook.

“In the fourth quarter, retail was again by far the largest contributor to year-on-year growth of our ads business,” Alphabet CBO Philipp Schindler told analysts.

“Finance, entertainment and travel were also strong contributors,” he added.

The stock was up nearly 9% in after-market trades yesterday at 2240GMT to US$2,990. – AFP, February 2, 2022

Related News

Malaysia / 3mth

Google investment expected to generate US$3.2 billion, 26,500 jobs

World / 10mth

Argentine cop wins USD16,500 after nude picture appears on Google Street View

Opinion / 1y

Beyond the pay gap – why women need to prioritise wealth, not just income

Malaysia / 1y

Fahmi denies asking Google to disable ringgit currency converter widget

Business / 2y

Google’s ringgit doodle causes a fluster as govt rushes to fact-check and calm nerves

Business / 2y

Malaysia to work with Google on skill opportunities for 300,000 by 2026

Spotlight

Community

Penang new top cop looks to AI to help fight online fraud

By Ian McIntyre

World

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer announces resignation

Malaysia

Zara Inquest: Court to decide in July whether stepsister to testify

Malaysia

Future of our nation rests on the rakyat, not political monkeys

Malaysia

Bersama to contest 15 Johor seats in upcoming state election

Malaysia

Middle East conflict: Costs to Malaysia rise close to 20%, raising food production pressures

Malaysia

MACC probes elephant transfer deal after RM53 million leak claims surface

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Malaysia, Bangladesh seek solution to Rohingya ethnic issue through ASEAN

You may be interested

Business

Dollar holds firm as US-Iran diplomacy lifts market sentiment, yen tests intervention threshold