Alphabet Revenue Misses Estimates While Payouts to Partners Rise
Alphabet Revenue Misses Estimates While Payouts to Partners Rise · Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- Google parent Alphabet Inc. is paying more to partners that distribute its search engine, while charging less for each ad that it runs -- a combination that’s putting a damper on growth.

Third-quarter sales, minus partner fees, were $27.2 billion, the internet giant said Thursday in a statement. Analysts on average were expecting $27.3 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Sales from Google’s own properties, including YouTube and search pages, rose 22 percent, slower than the 26 percent growth in the prior quarter. The company’s shares slid in extended trading.

Google is shelling out billions of dollars a year to partners including Apple Inc. to distribute its search engine widely. Then it’s up to Google to generate as much money as possible when people search and click on relevant ads. More of these marketing spots are running on mobile and YouTube, which can’t charge as much as the company’s original desktop search business because they result in fewer eventual consumer purchases.

"It’s a light top-line number," said Ron Josey, an analyst at JMP Securities. "This is the first quarter in a while where growth decelerated."

The number of clicks on Google ads jumped more than 60 percent in the quarter, but prices dropped 28 percent. That’s the biggest decline since at least early 2015, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Alphabet shares dropped 3.9 percent in late trading after the report. Earlier, the stock jumped 4.4 percent to $1,103.59 in New York.

Google can’t charge customers as much for mobile search ads and YouTube spots because they offer lower returns on investment for advertisers, according to Sameet Sinha, an analyst at B Riley FBR Inc. People are less likely to buy something after clicking on these marketing messages, at least compared to Google’s original desktop search ads, he said.

Audience targeting has historically helped raise the price of Google search ads. One feature, called remarketing lists for search ads, or RLSAs, let advertisers adjust Google campaigns based on whether a user has visited their website or app before and what they did there. But an Apple privacy feature called Intelligent Tracking Prevention was updated in mid-September and appeared to disrupt advertisers’ ability to use Google’s RLSAs, at least temporarily, ad agency Merkle Inc. said in a recent report.

Alphabet’s third-quarter net income came in at $13.06 a share, ahead of analysts’ average estimate of $10.45. Accounting gains from the valuation of Alphabet’s many startup investments added more than $1 billion to profit, and the company’s tax rate dropped from a year ago.