Here's our initial take on Alphabet's (NASDAQ: GOOG) fourth-quarter financial report.
Metric | Q4 2023 | Q4 2024 | Change | vs. Expectations |
---|---|---|---|---|
Total revenue | $86.31 billion | $96.47 billion | +12% | Missed |
Adjusted earnings per share | $1.64 | $2.15 | +31% | Beat |
Google advertising revenue | $65.52 billion | $72.46 billion | +11% | n/a |
Google cloud revenue | $9.19 billion | $11.96 billion | +30% | n/a |
Alphabet's fourth-quarter financials showed solid gains. Overall sales growth of 12% came in just shy of the consensus forecast among those following the stock, with Google Search, YouTube, and various other services helping to produce consistent growth. Net income climbed 28% year over year, and a modest decline in outstanding shares helped boost earnings-per-share figures at an even faster 31% rate.
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Many investors are watching the Google Cloud business closely, seeing it as the main growth driver to offset any competitive challenges to Alphabet's core search business. Gains of 30% in segment revenue reflected the success of the Google Cloud Platform and various new initiatives, including artificial intelligence infrastructure and generative AI solutions. However, Alphabet shareholders had anticipated Google Cloud revenue well above the $12 billion mark, making the actual figures a bit of a disappointment.
Investors weren't pleased with Alphabet's missed targets. The tech stock moved sharply lower, down as much as 7% in the first half hour of the after-hours session following the close of regular trading Tuesday afternoon.
However, the news from Alphabet wasn't all that surprising in the context of recent events. Rival Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) also had trouble meeting high expectations from Wall Street for its cloud business when it released its own quarterly report last week. Even with the after-hours declines, Alphabet shares still trade slightly higher than where they started the year.
Stocks rise and fall in the short run based on quarterly results, but Alphabet still seems to be participating fully in the AI boom. CEO Sundar Pichai called out Alphabet's AI leadership, including AI-driven search overviews and the pervasiveness of artificial intelligence-related features across Alphabet's product and services suite.
AI initiatives won't come cheap, though, as Pichai predicted capital expenditures of $75 billion in 2025. For now, most investors are happy to see Alphabet participating fully in AI expansion. At some point, though, the tech company will have to prove that those steep investments will pay off with lasting positive results. That's what long-term investors in Alphabet need to watch for in the years ahead.
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Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet and Microsoft. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.