F5.5G Leap-forward Development of Broadband in Africa The Africa Broadband Forum 2024 (BBAF 2024) was successfully held in Cape Town, South Africa recently, under…
Google’s financial fiasco: No cause for panic
The fiasco around the release of Google’s Q3 financial results was plain embarrassing. From the company that is the king of search this is just downright wrong. On its website, Google says that its “…mission is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.” I guess that there is nothing about a timeous and orderly release thereof.
It turns out that it might not have been its fault, but rather its filing agent released the results earlier than anticipated. That normally is not too big a deal, if the results are in line with Mr. Market’s expectations, but these were a big miss. The early release saw a wild selling scramble and the stock was halted. The horror of it all. An embarrassment for one of the kings of tech.
The actual results themselves can be viewed via its investor relations page. It still has an enormous amount of cash, upwards of US$45-billion. That still translates to 19.8% of its market cap, or roughly US$138 of its US$695 Dollar closing price yesterday.
When the stock reopened for trade, with around 40 minutes of the session left the damage had already been done. At 12:30 the results were prematurely released, the stock was around US$755 a share. Eight minutes later it was at 689 bucks a share. The trading halt was called just after ten to one local time. When the stock re-opened, the buyers stepped in and now, after the dust has settled the stock is back above 700 Dollars in the post market. Pre market. Whatever you want to call it, perhaps just the outside of normal hours market, sounds like a better explanation.
So what happened? I don’t care about the release timing, why did everyone get their knickers in a knot about the results? Why did they miss by quite some margin? It is the issue that is plaguing all of the advertising industry, how to monetize the move to mobile. And it was not that people are not advertising online, the average price paid per click fell 15% in the last quarter, that was the main issue. Ad sales actually increased. Bloomberg has a nice summary with a whole lot of videos, if you are interested.
I found possibly the best analysis of everything Google, from the WSJ, Live: the Google Earnings Disaster. Not too sure that I agree with the headline. But don’t get your knickers in a knot. On the conference call Larry Page said the following:
We have a policy of not talking about the future. I tend to be very impatient. I think that we’re positioned very well and uniquely well because we have a significant fraction on mobile. That’s a great start. We’re working on changes, we’ve been investing in the space for a long time, our mobile monetization isn’t zero. We’ve got a good base there and I don’t think the things we need to do are that huge to get us in a very good spot. I think we have an opportunity to be higher monetization than where we are now with some innovation, which we’re good at doing.
I think that Google is one of the few companies that can actually change the world. And that have changed the world. You need to search on something specifically, boom, you have that search device enabled either by them or a competitor in your pocket. No more do you have to argue about something at a restaurant table, you have the answers fully available in your pocket. Driverless cars is my recent favourite. Google has more than eight-million patents on the USPTO database. How cool is Google street view?
Monetisation of the internet is something that many people grapple with. I think that Google is going to continue to change the world. Think about it, PSY’s Gangnam Style is about to go through 500-million views. I agree with this article: Opportunity in Google’s Fat Finger. We think that this is a buying opportunity. Nobody even talks about the future advertising revenue via YouTube, which I use a whole lot more than many other people.