Google revenue falls short despite curbing price declines

By on
Google revenue falls short despite curbing price declines

Google's revenue fell short of Wall Street's expectations, as growth in Internet advertising slowed in the most-recent quarter, offsetting a modest improvement in ad pricing, sending its shares down about 3 percent.

The total number of ads, or paid clicks, expanded by 17 percent in the third quarter. That was down from the 25 percent growth rate that Google delivered in the second quarter.

But online advertising rates, which have been mired in a multi-year decline, moderated slightly in the third quarter, declining 2 percent year-on-year. That marked an improvement from the 6 percent decline in "cost-per-click" or CPCs in the second quarter.

Shares of Google fell 2.7 percent to US$510.11 in extended trading on Thursday US time.

“The CPC decline abated. That’s a big positive,” argued BGC Partners analyst Colin Gillis. "If CPCs flatline that’s going to help the core meaningfully.”

Google posted US$16.52 billion in revenue for the three months ended 30 September, compared to US$13.75 billion in the year ago period. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S were looking for revenue of US$16.57 billion in the latest quarter.

Google ramped up its spending during the quarter. The company increased its headcount by roughly 3,000 employees, contributing to a 46 percent rise in research and development costs.

On Thursday US time, Google announced it had appointed Omid Kordestani its new chief business officer, replacing Nikesh Arora, who had departed a quarter ago to join Japan's Softbank Corp. The chief business officer is considered a key position, overseeing all the company's revenue-generating activities and serving as a liaison to investors and Wall Street.

Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Tags:

Log in

Email:
Password:
  |  Forgot your password?