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  Alphabet’s Q2 earnings soar despite losses

Alphabet’s Q2 earnings soar despite losses

AP
Published : Jul 30, 2016, 12:12 am IST
Updated : Jul 30, 2016, 12:12 am IST

Business is booming at Google’s parent company, Alphabet, even as it loses billions of dollars on kooky-sounding projects that may never produce any revenue.

Business is booming at Google’s parent company, Alphabet, even as it loses billions of dollars on kooky-sounding projects that may never produce any revenue.

Huge chunks of the losses have been piling up in Alphabet’s “X’’ lab, a wellspring of far-out ideas that has become known as a “moonshot factory” since Google co-founder Sergey Brin launched it about six years ago.

The lab is responsible for some once-zany projects, such as Google’s self-driving cars, that matured into potentially revolutionary technology. It also has pursued but ultimately abandoned other outlandish endeavours, such as an effort to convert seawater into gasoline.

Like going to the moon, exploring new technological frontiers is expensive. Although Alphabet doesn’t specify just how much money it pours into the X lab, it is among the costliest drains in a far-flung category that falls under the “Other Bets” segment in the company’s financial statement.

Fibre, an effort to bring ultra-fast Internet service to major US cities, is also requiring huge investments.

Alphabet’s second-quarter earnings report, released Thursday, showed an operating loss of $859 million in Other Bets, widening from a $660 million loss a year ago. It’s the second consecutive quarter in which losses have deepened. Last year, Other Bets lost $3.6 billion — exceeding the annual revenue of many companies.

The Mountain View company can afford to gamble because Google runs the world’s most profitable advertising network, spread across its dominant search engine, YouTube video site and Gmail, as well as well millions of third-party websites that draw upon its marketing machine.

Powered by Google, Alphabet earned $4.9 billion during the April-June quarter, a 24 per cent increase from the same time last year. After subtracting ad commissions, Alphabet’s revenue climbed 22 per cent to $17.5 billion.

Although Alphabet CEO Larry Page has repeatedly told investors to expect big money to be wagered on Other Bets, the company has been reining in expenses since hiring Wall Street veteran Ruth Porat as its chief financial officer 14 months ago.

Mr Astro Teller, who runs the X lab, says he strives for a balance between the pursuit of envelope-pushing technology and Wall Street’s demands for some semblance of fiscal prudence.

“In short, we try to steer X to be ‘responsibly irresponsible’ as we develop new products,” Mr Teller wrote in an online essay published Thursday.

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