News

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Alphabet’s revenue jumped 15 per cent in the first quarter of 2024 and it announced it would pay its first dividend of 20 cents a share, buoyed by a rise in earnings across its main business lines of advertising, search, YouTube and cloud.

Revenue rose to $80.5bn from $69.8bn a year ago, beating analysts’ expectations for $79bn, according to a filing on Thursday. Earnings per share were $1.89, up from $1.17 last year and exceeding the average $1.53 estimate.

Advertising revenue, which accounts for the vast majority of Google’s top line, grew 13 per cent to $61.7bn, compared with analysts’ consensus forecast for $60.2bn. Ad revenue on YouTube also rose 21 per cent to $8.1bn, while Google’s Cloud services business saw a 28 per cent increase to $9.6bn.

The shares rose 12 per cent in after-hours trading. The first-quarter dividend is worth almost $2.5bn.

This is a developing story

Articles You May Like

With nearly half of IIJA dollars in hand, states tackle ailing bridges
Judge extends litigation stay in Puerto Rico utility bankruptcy
Nvidia is a no-go for over half of this ultra-rich club’s members with assets worth $165 billion
Massive calendar awaits investors; munis improve as jobs data sparks risk-off trade
Reeves plans to ‘fiddle’ fiscal rules to boost borrowing, claim Tories