Expenses offset Google profits

Google missed Wall Street's quarterly profit estimates for the first time in two years after a spike in expenses offset a 24 …

Google missed Wall Street's quarterly profit estimates for the first time in two years after a spike in expenses offset a 24 per cent revenue jump, but it vowed to keep investing in new businesses to drive long-term growth.

Shares of the Internet search engine leader fell almost 4 per cent on worries about rising costs as it spent heavily on research and development and hired aggressively to expand into new products and markets in hopes of maintaining the growth momentum Wall Street looks for.

Google eased worries that lingering economic uncertainty from the European debt crisis could take a toll on its business, and stressed that it planned to continue to aggressively invest in new growth opportunities.

"They're throwing more money into R&D than people were expecting and a little bit less into sales and marketing," said BGC Partners analyst Colin Gillis. "Google has been pretty clear that it's going back into investment mode. They added 1,200 people in the quarter, which means more expenses are going to kick in in September."

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Google said the spending was concentrated on a handful of initiatives it believes could grow into billion-dollar businesses, providing diversification from the search advertising that now accounts for the lion's share of revenue.

Finance chief Patrick Pichette cited Internet display advertising and the nascent smartphone advertising market as some of the key areas for investment, and defended the spending amid the economic uncertainty.

"It's while everybody is cautious that you need to pounce," Mr Pichette said.

Mr Pichette added that Google, which generated 52 percent of its second-quarter revenue outside the United States, has not suffered any ill effects amid as investors fear that an economic slowdown could crimp advertising spending.

Yesterday's results were a rare outright earnings miss - Google's first since the second quarter of 2008.

The world's largest search engine posted net income of $1.84 billion, or $5.71 a share, in the second quarter - up from $1.48 billion, or $4.66 a share, in the year-earlier period.

The company has made a number of major strategy shifts this year, including the decision to stop censoring search results in China - a move analysts say has contributed to the more than 20 percent decline in Google's stock this year.

While it announced last week that its license to operate a website in China was renewed for a year, Google did not address that during yesterday's earnings call other than to say that revenue from the country in the second quarter was "decent" but remained immaterial to the company.

More immediately, Google is increasingly pitting itself against rivals beyond Yahoo Inc and Microsoft Corp, as it ventures into smartphone operating systems, mobile advertising and other areas in search of future growth.

Executives highlighted a three-fold jump in searches made on phones running Google's Android operating system as a sign of the platform's growing market traction.

To compete with the likes of Apple, Google made a string of acquisitions in recent months and added 1,184 employees to its payroll during the second quarter for a total of 21,805.

That spending spree contributed to a 22 percent year-on-year jump in operating expenses in the second quarter and took a toll on the bottom line, according to analysts.

"The question is going to be, how much money are they going to have to be putting in for new initiatives?" asked UBS analyst Brian Pitz.

Shares in Google fell to $474.50 after closing at $494.02 on Nasdaq.

Some analysts highlighted strong 24 per cent growth in revenue as signs that Google was weathering well a difficult economic and advertising environment.

Reuters