Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
Google parent Alphabet beats quarterly revenue, profit estimates By Reuters
{Current column}6526People have watched
IntroductionBy Greg Bensinger and Yuvraj Malik(Reuters) - Alphabet (NASDAQ:) beat second-quarter revenue and pro ...
By Greg Bensinger and Chen Rizun's latest foreign exchange newsYuvraj Malik
(Reuters) - Alphabet (NASDAQ:) beat second-quarter revenue and profit estimates on Tuesday, driven by a rise in digital advertising sales and healthy demand for its cloud computing services.

The shares rose about 2% after dipping slightly in after-market trading. They had gained more than 30% this year.
Net income in the quarter ended June 30 rose 28.6% to $23.6 billion, besting the average estimate of $22.9 billion.
Advertising sales, Alphabet's chief revenue source, rose 11% to $64.6 billion. The company sells ads in its search product using customer data to better target them.
Alphabet's results underscore robust demand for digital ads, driven by events like the Paris Olympics and elections in several countries including the U.S., while a recovery in enterprise spending is boosting is software business.
"This was another stellar quarter from Google with beats across the board," said Ido Caspi a research analyst with Global X, citing ad sales and artificial intelligence offerings as drivers.
Revenue grew 14% to $84.74 billion, compared with analysts' consensus estimate of $84.19 billion according to LSEG data.
Revenue from cloud computing services, a widely watched barometer for the health of enterprise technology spending, rose 28.8% to $10.35 billion. Analysts had expected $10.16 billion.
Despite heightened regulatory scrutiny, Google had been pursuing its largest acquisition ever, a roughly $23 billion buyout of cybersecurity firm Wiz. But Wiz told employees on Monday it was walking away from the deal and would instead pursue going public.
Google also held talks to acquire customer relationship management firm HubSpot (NYSE:) before walking away from it earlier this month. The deal would have turned Alphabet into a rival of Salesforce (NYSE:), Oracle (NYSE:) and others in that market.
Google said on Monday it is planning to keep third-party cookies in its Chrome browser backtracking function after years of pledging to phase out the tiny packets of code used to track internet searches.
It marked a major reversal after advertisers expressed concerns that the loss of cookies would limit their ability to collect and parse information for personalizing ads, making them dependent on Google's user databases.

Sales for the Mountain View, California company's so-called "other bets," including experimental projects and its self-driving car unit Waymo, rose 28% to $365 million.
Ad sales in its YouTube division rose 13% to $8.67 billion.
Statement: The content of this article does not represent the views of FTI website. The content is for reference only and does not constitute investment suggestions. Investment is risky, so you should be careful in your choice! If it involves content, copyright and other issues, please contact us and we will make adjustments at the first time!
Tags:
Related articles
Oil climbs after US leaders strike provisional debt deal By Reuters
{Current column}By Florence TanSINGAPORE (Reuters) - Oil prices rose in early Asian trade on Monday after U.S. leade ...
Read moreMicron, Bank of America, Apple rise premarket; Walt Disney, Pfizer fall By
{Current column}-- U.S. futures edged higher, led by banking stocks after the major lenders passed the Federal Reser ...
Read moreTop 5 things to watch in markets in the week ahead By
{Current column}-- Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report and Wednesday’s minutes of the Federal Reserve&rsquo ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Oil slips as U.S. debt caution offset supply concerns By Reuters
- Fed's Powell: we are still monitoring the banks' situation very carefully By Reuters
- Muslim grouping OIC says measures needed to prevent Koran desecration By Reuters
- Six dead in private jet crash outside Los Angeles By Reuters
- RBNZ hikes rates by surprise 50 bps, says inflation still too high By
- Canadian port strike talks resume, supported by federal mediators By Reuters
Latest articles
-
Russia says two of its commanders killed as Kyiv wages Bakhmut offensive By Reuters
-
US new vehicle sales rise on strong demand, better supply By Reuters
-
Asian stocks sink as Fed minutes fuel rate hike bets By
-
Oil down 2% as more 'happy spending' Americans suggest July Fed hike By
-
Asian stocks edge lower amid weak earnings, economic uncertainty By
-
Asia FX rises as dollar slips on easing U.S. inflation By