Alphabet to report Q4 earnings after the bell Tuesday

Alphabet to report Q4 earnings after the bell Tuesday


Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and Alphabet, attends the inauguration of a new hub in France dedicated to the artificial intelligence sector, at the Google France headquarters in Paris, France, on Feb. 15, 2024.

Gonzalo Fuentes | Reuters

Google parent company Alphabet is set to report its fourth-quarter results after the bell Tuesday.

Here are the numbers Wall Street will be watching:

  • Revenue: $96.56 billion expected by LSEG
  • Earnings per share: $2.13 expected by LSEG

Here are additional estimates expected, according to StreetAccount:

  • YouTube advertising revenue: $10.23 billion
  • Google Cloud revenue: $12.19 billion
  • Traffic acquisition costs (TAC): $15.01 billion

Wall Street will be looking for Alphabet to report 11% revenue growth following a pressure-filled year that included artificial intelligence announcements, product mishaps and regulatory litigation.

Alphabet made a series of announcements in the fourth quarter related to Waymo, showing confidence in its ability to commercialize its self-driving car company more quickly.

Waymo’s robotaxi service now operates in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Phoenix, covering more than 500 square miles of public roads. In December, the company said it plans to launch its commercial service in Austin, Texas, and through the Uber app in Austin and Atlanta in 2025. The company also announced that it will begin testing Waymo in Tokyo, its first international expansion.

During the third-quarter, new Chief Financial Officer Anat Ashkenazi said she wanted to “push a little further” with cost savings across the company as Google expands its spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure in 2025. Employees pressed executives for details on cost cuts in December, and in January, they began circulating an internal petition titled “job security,” CNBC reported.

Ahead of expected cuts, Google last week began offering buyouts to U.S. employees in its Platforms and Devices unit. That unit includes more than 25,000 full-time employees who work on Android, Chrome, ChromeOS, Google Photos, Google One, Pixel, Fitbit and Nest.

Alphabet also continued to face antitrust litigation during the fourth quarter.

The Department of Justice in November called for Google to divest its Chrome browser, following an August ruling that the company holds a monopoly in the search market. The DOJ said in a filing that forcing the company to get rid of Chrome — essentially, breaking up the company — would create a more equal playing field for search competitors.

Google executives held a 2025 strategy meeting with employees in December, setting the stage for a year of expected increase in competition, regulatory hurdles and advancements in AI.

“It’s really important we internalize the urgency of this moment, and need to move faster as a company,” CEO Sundar Pichai said. “The stakes are high.”

In January, Alphabet shares closed at $200 per share for the first time as investors grow increasingly bullish on the company’s opportunities in AI, but after the emergence of DeepSeek last month, Wall Street will await any commentary from management about how the Chinese entrant could affect its AI strategy.

As Google Maps turns 20, it's mapping more countries and rolling out generative AI capabilities



Source

CoreWeave stock slumps 14% on wider-than-expected loss ahead of lockup expiration
Technology

CoreWeave stock slumps 14% on wider-than-expected loss ahead of lockup expiration

CoreWeave‘s stock dropped 14% after the renter of artificial intelligence data centers reported a bigger-than-expected loss. In its second quarterly financial results as a public company, CoreWeave reported an adjusted loss of 27 cents per share, compared to a 21-cent loss per share expected by analysts polled by LSEG. CoreWeave’s results came as the lock-up […]

Read More
Amazon launches same-day delivery of meat, eggs, produce in more than 1,000 cities
Technology

Amazon launches same-day delivery of meat, eggs, produce in more than 1,000 cities

An independent contractor wearing a protective mask and gloves loads Amazon Prime grocery bags into a car outside a Whole Foods Market in Berkeley, California, on Oct. 7, 2020. David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images Amazon is rolling out same-day delivery of fresh foods to more pockets of the U.S. as it looks […]

Read More
Ether nears 2021 record high as money pours into ETFs, bullish forecasts abound
Technology

Ether nears 2021 record high as money pours into ETFs, bullish forecasts abound

Key Points Ether at one point Wednesday traded as high as $4,714.02, putting it less than $200 away from its November 2021 all-time high. Inflows into ether ETFs are up to $1.5 billion so far this week, compared to $244 million into bitcoin ETFs. Standard Chartered raised its price target on ETH to $7,500 by […]

Read More