Google Inc blew past Wall Street's quarterly expectations as a 25-percent revenue surge offset rising expenses, sending its shares 9 percent higher. Executives offered investors a first - and what they said was a one-time - glimpse of sales generated by its mobile and display advertising businesses on Thursday.
Those ad operations generated annualised revenue run rates of more than $1 billion and $2.5 billion, respectively - underscoring the outcome of investments into smartphones and online projects. Investors had feared that Google, seeking new sources of growth, was spending recklessly on initiatives such as its Android mobile software, acquisitions, renewable energy projects and even automated cars, with uncertain returns. At the same time, social networking giant Facebook poses a growing threat to Google's main online advertising business.
Google disclosed two revenue numbers to give Wall Street "confidence that where we're investing in is really fuelling great growth rates," Chief Financial Officer Patrick Pichette told analysts on a conference call. Analysts also pointed to a 16-percent jump in "paid clicks" on Google's search advertisements, while earnings handily surpassed expectations despite hiring at a near-record pace and a one-third jump in operating costs.
The world's largest Internet search engine posted a third-quarter net income of $2.17 billion or $7.64 a share, excluding items, surpassing Wall Street's average estimate of $6.69 a share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Net revenue, which excludes fees that Google pays to partner websites, came to $5.48 billion, versus expectations for $5.27 billion. Net revenue in the 2009 third quarter was $4.38 billion.
Google said paid clicks on its search advertisements increased 16 percent year-over-year, and 4 percent from the second quarter. It added more than 1,500 employees to its payroll in the third quarter - which some analysts said was a record pace for the company - and its operating expenses totalled $2.19 billion, up from $1.64 billion in the year-ago quarter. CFO Pichette said the Internet industry was waging a "war for talent." He added that its YouTube online video site was now "magnetising" over 2 billion views a week, a rise of 50 percent from a year earlier. Google's 9-percent rise in extended trading, to $590, would be the biggest single gain since November 2008. The stock had closed 0.44 percent lower at $540.93 on Nasdaq before the earnings announcement.
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