Google crushes second quarter earnings expectations

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
San Francisco: Google parent Alphabet beat analyst expectations for the second quarter Thursday, sending its shares up sharply as it bounced
back from a rough first quarter. The company comforted investors with advertising revenue growth that edged out last quarter and assurances
that video streaming site YouTube and the company's enterprise cloud business continue to drive growth. The Mountain View, California-based
company brought in revenue of USD 38.9 billion during the second quarter, a 19 per cent bump from the same period last year. The company
reported profit of USD 14.21 per share, or USD 9.9 billion during the quarter, nearly triple what it made last year when it paid a USD 5.1
billion European Commission fine. Analysts polled by FactSet were expecting Alphabet to report earnings per share of USD 11.10 on revenue of
USD 38.2 billion during the second quarter. Google's stock rose more than 9 per cent in after-hours trading after the earnings report was
quarter
But their concerns didn't continue into the next quarter. Excluding advertising commissions that Google pays to customers, Alphabet's
overall revenue was USD 31.7 billion, more than the USD 30.9 billion analysts had estimated. The company did not disclose anything about
investigating it for antitrust concerns. Google is facing mounting pressure from federal elected officials and regulators over a variety of
services are biased against conservative politicians and viewpoints. The company has repeatedly denied those claims. Google is also
reportedly under scrutiny from the Justice Department , which announced Tuesday that it would investigate big tech companies for
anti-competitive monopoly behavior. The department didn't name specific companies, but scrutiny has recently focused on Google, Apple,
Amazon and Facebook. Google CEO Sundar Pichai briefly addressed the concerns on a conference call with analysts Thursday
The company is no stranger to regulatory scrutiny, he said. "Even in the US we have engaged in the process before," he said
"To the extent we have to answer questions we will do so constructively." Google was the subject of an FTC investigation that ended in early
2013 without the agency taking any antitrust action. Pichai also acknowledged increased conversations about how the company handles user
data privacy
He reiterated announcements Google made earlier this year that are designed to give people more control over what information they are
sharing, when. "It's one of the most important areas we are working on," he said. The company's streaming site YouTube, a big driver of
advertising revenue, has also faced backlash from Congress and regulators over offensive videos on the site and the protection of children
who appear in videos or watch YouTube. Google updated its hate speech policies for YouTube during the quarter, Pichai pointed out, and
continues to focus on its "YouTube Kids" app. A Washington Post report last week suggested the company is expected to pay a multimillion
dollar penalty from the FTC over the way it handled kids' information on YouTube. But none of the bubbling scrutiny put a damper on Google's
financials or executive claims that the company's cloud business is making great strides
That includes its business that rents computing power to other companies, as well as its enterprise software tools such as G Suite. Google's
Bets businesses, which include more "moonshot" businesses such as self-driving car company Waymo and internet connectivity balloon company
Loon
107,646 employees, adding more than 18,000 workers in the last year.