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Google’s Q1 ad sales surge 32% as Alphabet profit doubles

The figures suggest advertiser confidence in an economic rebound from the pandemic.

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Google’s digital advertising network has shifted back into high gear, with its corporate parent reporting profit that more than doubled after an unprecedented setback during the early stages of the pandemic.

The robust first-quarter advertising growth announced on Tuesday provides the latest sign that advertisers are expecting the US economy to roar back to life as more people are vaccinated against Covid-19 and burst out of their pandemic cocoons.

That is particularly true in the travel industry, a key part of the ad market that drastically curtailed its spending last year after governments around the world imposed lockdowns to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

“It’s too early to say how durable this consumer behaviour will be as economies recover and restrictions on mobility are lifted,” said Ruth Porat, chief financial officer for Google’s parent, Alphabet Inc.

Google’s sales surged 32% from the same time last year to nearly 45 billion dollars (£25.12 billion) during the January-March period. It’s the third consecutive quarter of accelerating ad growth for Google following an 8% decline during last year’s April-June period. That marked the first time Google’s quarterly ad revenue had fallen from the previous year since the company went public in 2004.

The resurgence enabled Alphabet to easily surpass the analyst estimates that help set investor expectations.

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Google’s results easily surpassed analyst expectations (Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP)

Total revenue, which also includes Google’s cloud-hosting service and device sales, climbed 34% from last year.

Analysts had projected earnings of 15.76 dollars per share (£8.80) on revenue of 51.5 billion (£28.75 billion), according to FactSet. The performance pleased investors, who drove up Alphabet’s stock by 4% in extended trading after the numbers came out.

Aside from the one-quarter downturn in ad revenue, Google has mostly thrived throughout the pandemic as people became more dependent on its services — a phenomenon that has strengthened other technology stalwarts such as Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Facebook and Netflix.

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