Yahoo – AFP,
2 February 2016
|
In opening
trade following a robust earnings report, Alphabet, parent firm for
Google,
shares rose 2.9 percent to lift its market capitalization to $543 billion
(AFP
Photo/Justin Sullivan)
|
New York
(AFP) - Alphabet, the parent firm for Google, became the world's most valuable
company Tuesday as a jump in its share price helped it vault past tech rival
Apple.
In opening
trade following a robust earnings report, Alphabet shares rose 2.9 percent to
lift its market capitalization to $543 billion while Apple's value declined to
$530 billion with a modest dip in trading.
Alphabet's
quarterly profit rose five percent to $4.92 billion on the back of strong
online advertising revenue, particularly from searches done by holiday season
shoppers using smartphones or tablets.
|
A woman
wears Google glass in Paris
on November 6, 2014 (AFP Photo/
Joel Saget)
|
Google ad
revenue climbed globally, gaining on both mobile devices and desktop computers,
according to Alphabet chief financial officer Ruth Porat.
The
California-based Internet colossus said its revenue topped $21.3 billion in the
final three months of last year.
The
earnings report was the first in which recently formed parent corporation
Alphabet separated money made by Google from what it calls "Other
Bets" such as its work on self-driving cars or providing Internet service
using high-altitude balloons.
The new
structure under Alphabet is expected to offer more transparency for investors
worried about Google investing in money-losing projects.
While
Google is best known as the dominant player in Internet search, it has launched
a variety of trailblazing projects in recent years that are marginally related
at best to its core operation.
Alphabet
subsidiaries include Google, Nest Labs, and Google X labs devoted to big-vision
new technologies such as self-driving cars, along with such projects as smart
"Google Glass" spectacles, drones, health care and Google TV -- none
of which has become a major source of income.
Industry
tracker eMarketer expected Google to remain the dominant player in worldwide
search advertising, raking in $45.58 billion in revenue this year to claim a
share just shy of 57 percent of total spending on such ads.
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