Alphabet Finally Discloses Size of YouTube's Ad Business: Over $15 Billion in 2019 - 4 minutes read
YouTube's Ad Revenue Was Over $15 Billion in 2019, Alphabet Discloses
Google’s parent company Alphabet Inc. has disclosed how much YouTube’s advertising business rakes in for the first time, writing in filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission that the streaming giant made just shy of $15.15 billion in ad revenue in fiscal year 2019. It made some $4.79 billion of it in Q4 2019 alone.
Alphabet has long resisted releasing information about the financial performance of its subsidiary companies, the most notable of which are Google and YouTube. Per Marketwatch, Alphabet’s hand seems to have been forced by rules implemented in 2017 that require investors to receive the same financial results as the chief decision-maker at the company; it previously claimed that CEO Larry Page didn’t see the results broken down by unit. But Google CEO Sundar Pichai was promoted to CEO of Alphabet last year following Page and co-founder Sergey Brin’s decision to take a backseat, meaning that the company could no longer hide the data from investors. Pichai and Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat both said the official rationale for the disclosure was to provide extra “insight into our business.”
2019's YouTube ad revenue was an increase from 2018, when it made just shy of $11.16 billion, according to the disclosures. (Those tallies don’t include other revenue YouTube makes, such as YouTube Music and YouTube Premium, which collectively have 20 million subscribers.) Other figures released on Monday include the revenue of Google’s Cloud business, which is fighting against Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure. That rolled in just short of $8.91 billion in 2019, up from $5.84 billion in 2018.
“Our investments in deep computer science, including artificial intelligence, ambient computing and cloud computing, provide a strong base for continued growth and new opportunities across Alphabet,” Pichai wrote in the release.
The numbers hammer home how much bigger YouTube is than other streaming services—AdWeek noted that Hulu’s 2019 ad revenue was a comparatively paltry $700 million, alongside $1.3 billion in subscriber revenue—but Alphabet’s overall Q4 2019 performance at $46.07 billion in sales missed analyst expectations of $46.94 billion. That’s the worst Q4 revenue growth Alphabet has posted since 2015, according to the Guardian. Google’s hardware business also apparently didn’t do so well, with CNET reporting that Porat mentioned “declining hardware revenue,” though it’s not clear from the release which specific product lines are missing the mark.
However, Alphabet did deliver shareholder earnings of $15.35 per share, beating expectations of $12.53. That wasn’t enough to stem an after-hours trading drop, with Alphabet falling over four percent, according to the Guardian.
Source: Gizmodo.com
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Google’s parent company Alphabet Inc. has disclosed how much YouTube’s advertising business rakes in for the first time, writing in filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission that the streaming giant made just shy of $15.15 billion in ad revenue in fiscal year 2019. It made some $4.79 billion of it in Q4 2019 alone.
Alphabet has long resisted releasing information about the financial performance of its subsidiary companies, the most notable of which are Google and YouTube. Per Marketwatch, Alphabet’s hand seems to have been forced by rules implemented in 2017 that require investors to receive the same financial results as the chief decision-maker at the company; it previously claimed that CEO Larry Page didn’t see the results broken down by unit. But Google CEO Sundar Pichai was promoted to CEO of Alphabet last year following Page and co-founder Sergey Brin’s decision to take a backseat, meaning that the company could no longer hide the data from investors. Pichai and Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat both said the official rationale for the disclosure was to provide extra “insight into our business.”
2019's YouTube ad revenue was an increase from 2018, when it made just shy of $11.16 billion, according to the disclosures. (Those tallies don’t include other revenue YouTube makes, such as YouTube Music and YouTube Premium, which collectively have 20 million subscribers.) Other figures released on Monday include the revenue of Google’s Cloud business, which is fighting against Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure. That rolled in just short of $8.91 billion in 2019, up from $5.84 billion in 2018.
“Our investments in deep computer science, including artificial intelligence, ambient computing and cloud computing, provide a strong base for continued growth and new opportunities across Alphabet,” Pichai wrote in the release.
The numbers hammer home how much bigger YouTube is than other streaming services—AdWeek noted that Hulu’s 2019 ad revenue was a comparatively paltry $700 million, alongside $1.3 billion in subscriber revenue—but Alphabet’s overall Q4 2019 performance at $46.07 billion in sales missed analyst expectations of $46.94 billion. That’s the worst Q4 revenue growth Alphabet has posted since 2015, according to the Guardian. Google’s hardware business also apparently didn’t do so well, with CNET reporting that Porat mentioned “declining hardware revenue,” though it’s not clear from the release which specific product lines are missing the mark.
However, Alphabet did deliver shareholder earnings of $15.35 per share, beating expectations of $12.53. That wasn’t enough to stem an after-hours trading drop, with Alphabet falling over four percent, according to the Guardian.
Source: Gizmodo.com
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
YouTube • YouTube • California County Routes in zone S • Google • Alphabet Inc. • YouTube • Advertising • Business • U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission • S15 (ZVV) • Fiscal year • Fiscal year • Alphabet Inc. • Information technology • Finance • Subsidiary • Google • YouTube • MarketWatch • Alphabet Inc. • Investor • Finance • Company • Chief executive officer • Larry Page • Google+ • Chief executive officer • Sundar Pichai • Chief executive officer • Alphabet Inc. • Entrepreneurship • Sergey Brin • Company • Chief financial officer • Ruth Porat • Corporation • YouTube • YouTube • YouTube • YouTube • YouTube • Revenue • Google • Cloud computing • Amazon Web Services • Microsoft Azure • Computer science • Artificial intelligence • Cloud computing • Alphabet Inc. • Sundar Pichai • YouTube • Streaming media • Adweek • Hulu • YouTube • Alphabet Inc. • Fiscal year • Revenue • Economic growth • Alphabet Inc. • The Guardian • Google • Computer hardware • Business • CNET • Ruth Porat • Computer hardware • Revenue • Product (business) • Alphabet Inc. • Shareholder • S15 (ZVV) • Extended-hours trading • The Guardian •