The tech company has posted record profits for two straight quarters as homebound people use more of its services during the pandemic. Google's dominance in online search means its dream run is likely to continue.
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Google owner Alphabet trumped market expectations by a huge margin, posting a record profit in the first quarter driven by a huge surge in online ad sales on its search results and YouTube videos.
Alphabet's total quarterly sales rose 34% to $55.3 billion (€44.2 billion), and net profit more than doubled to $17.9 billion.
Google and other tech peers, including Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Microsoft, have been among the biggest winners during the pandemic as people stuck at home used their services to stay connected, work from home and make purchases.
"Over the last year, people have turned to Google Search and many online services to stay informed, connected and entertained," said Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and Alphabet.
The "elevated consumer activity online" sent Google ad sales soaring 32% in the first quarter. The online advertising business accounted for 81% of Alphabet's first-quarter revenue.
"Google had an absolute monster quarter with ads leading the way," analyst Patrick Moorhead from Moor Insights and Strategy told DW in an email statement. "YouTube [advertising revenue] grew an eye-watering 49% year over year which I attribute to increased YouTube viewing and increased YouTube TV subscribers."
Riding the vaccine-led recovery
However, Alphabet warned on Tuesday the surge in usage and ad sales during the pandemic might slow as restrictions were gradually lifted and people resumed in-person activities.
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"It's too early to forecast the extent to which these changes in consumer behavior and advertising spend will endure," Alphabet Chief Financial Officer Ruth Porat told analysts.
Analysts say the company was being conservative and that it's well-placed to ride the vaccine-led recovery, especially in its biggest market by revenue, the United States. The International Monetary Fund expects the US economy to grow by 6.4% this year, aided by the Biden administration's fiscal largesse and a rapid vaccination drive.
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Image: picture-alliance/NurPhoto/Yichuan Cao
In top gear
Tesla has emerged as the most valuable automaker amid the pandemic, eclipsing Toyota and Volkswagen, despite selling only a fraction of cars sold by the traditional behemoths. Tesla shares rose more than 100% in the second quarter during which the carmaker's sales topped estimates thanks to a rapid ramp-up in production at its Shanghai plant, which remained largely unaffected by the pandemic.
Image: Reuters/Y. Sun
Netflix and chill
Netflix has added more than 25 million subscribers in the first six months of the year as lockdowns forced people to stay homebound. The streaming platform has gained $70 billion (€61 billion) in market capitalization this year, making it more valuable than media giants such as Walt Disney, AT&T, the parent of HBO, and Comcast, owner of NBC and Universal Studios.
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Ditch your gym
The fitness startup Peloton, which makes exercise bikes and also offers online fitness classes, saw its sales jump 66% in its third quarter as stay-at-home orders and coronavirus fears prompted many fitness enthusiasts to ditch their gyms and opt for the company's offerings. In April, Peloton held its largest class ever with more than 23,000 people attending it from home.
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Coronovirus billionaires
Moderna Chief Executive Stephane Bancel (R) briefly became a billionaire after the company shipped an experimental coronavirus vaccine for clinical testing in humans, boosting its share price, Bloomberg reported. Malaysia's Lim Wee Chai (L), who owns a majority stake in medical gloves maker Top Glove, also entered the billionaire's club amid the outbreak.
Stay home, stay connected
Few companies have been so talked about during the past few months as teleconferencing firm Zoom. At its peak, the company attracted more than 300 million participants on some days in April, up from 10 million in December, despite some PR troubles around privacy and security issues. The company's market cap has zoomed past $70 billion, up from around $16 billion at the time of its IPO last year.
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Gaming gains
Gaming provided a perfect escape for millions stuck at home. Online games such as Call of Duty attracted tens of millions of players. The latest game, Nintendo's popular Animal Crossing franchise, sold more than 13 million units within six weeks of its launch in March. Nintendo's Switch and other consoles such as Xbox and PlayStation have seen demand soar over the past few months.
Image: Getty Images/AFP/K. Nogi
Streaming to glory
The Swedish music streaming firm saw its paid subscribers base surge to 130 million in the first quarter amid coronavirus lockdowns. The company saw usage on video game consoles such as Xbox and PlayStation soar during the period. Spotify's US-listed shares are among the top performers so far this year.
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Stay-at-home stocks
The pandemic has boosted stay-at-home stocks such as Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and Facebook — companies whose offerings facilitate online communication, remote working and transactions. These companies have been the main drivers of US indices over the past few months. Companies like Paypal and cloud-computing firm Twilio have also surged in the past months.
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Empty shelves
Retailers such as Germany's Rewe and France's Carrefour saw food items fly off their shelves during the initial days of the pandemic as panicking shoppers stock up their pantries. The rush at the supermarkets prompted investors to lap up shares of packaged food companies. Online retailers like Amazon are also seeing strong demand as virus-spooked shoppers avoid brick-and-mortar stores.
Makers of face masks, hand sanitizers and sanitary wipes are witnessing a huge surge in demand as shoppers around the world seek ways to protect themselves against the rapidly spreading virus. 3M Corp, which makes face masks among other things, is one of the biggest beneficiaries.
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Google's ad business, a market leader by some distance with over 90% share, was hit at the height of the pandemic by a drop in advertising by travel and hospitality firms and brick-and-mortar retailers, key contributors to the tech company's search business. But travel and retail-related advertising seems to be picking up and is likely to soar as businesses react to the pent-up demand expected to be unleashed once the restrictions are lifted.
People have been locked down in their homes for months now, resulting in them hoarding hundreds of billions of euros in cash and bank deposits. When lockdowns are lifted, these people are expected to go on a spending spree, eating out and setting off on vacations, most likely after using a Google service to help with the planning.