Alphabet Stock Offers a Rare Buying Opportunity

 | Nov 15, 2022 02:02AM ET

  • Shares hit 2-year lows after its Q3 2022 earnings release indicating a growth slowdown
  • A strong U.S. dollar accounted for top-line revenues up 6% versus 11% in constant currency
  • YouTube revenue growth is decelerating as Ad Spend has been weak in the financial service and crypto segment
  • YouTube Shorts monetization can bolster ad revenues as well as the falling U.S. dollar index, which is already down (-5%) off its highs
  • Social media technology provider Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) stock is down (-33%) for the year after rallying 11% off its earnings lows. As complicated as Alphabet and its numerous side ventures can be, it is really just a massive advertising platform powered by the world’s most active search engine Google.com and most active user-created video content delivery service YouTube. Alphabet has numerous side businesses, investments, and projects ranging from the Google Tensor G2 chip used in its line of Pixel smartphones and tablets to Lens translator, DeepMind AI language translation technology to its Waymo autonomous driving division.

    The growth of hybrid work has driven Google Workspace adoption to over 8 million businesses worldwide. Google Cloud continues to see growth as revenues climbed 38% to $6.87 billion. That sound’s like a lot, but it pales in comparison to the $54.48 billion in Google ad revenues, which only saw 2.5% YoY growth. The strong U.S. dollar made a significant impact as revenue growth came in at 6.1% versus 11% on a constant currency basis, almost double.

    h2 It’s All About the Advertising Revenues /h2

    The waning consumer spending as a result of high inflation and weak macroeconomic environment has caused certain advertisers to pull back their spending. This is evidenced across the board on social media sites ranging from Facebook (NASDAQ:META), Snap (NYSE:SNAP), Pinterest (NYSE:PINS), and Twitter recently acquired by Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) CEO Elon Musk. Many platforms also blame Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) privacy restrictions for causing their ad revenues to sink.

    Google noted that they saw a pullback in spending in specific industries, including financial services, insurance, loan, mortgage, and crypto subcategories. While digital ad spending has been shrinking on social media, they are apparently still strong enough to entice new major video streaming companies like Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX), Disney+, and Warner Brothers Discovery (NASDAQ:WBD) to include cheaper ad-supported subscription tiers to boost memberships and lessen the strain on consumers. Video-ad spending has grown to $76 billion in 2022, up significantly from pre-pandemic levels.

    h2 Breaking Down the Numbers/h2

    Alphabet released its fiscal third-quarter 2022 earnings report on Oct. 23, 2022. Total earnings came in at $1.06 per share, which missed analyst estimates by (-$0.19) for $1.25 per share. Total revenues only climbed 6.1% to $69.09 billion, which fell short of analyst estimates for $70.67 billion.

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    Operating margins sank to 25% compared to 32% a year ago in the same quarter. The biggest factor driving cost of revenues up by 13% was costs associated with data centers and other operations. The three segments reported the following: Google Advertising revenues rose 2.5% to $54.48 billion, YouTube Ad revenues fell (-1.8%) to $7.07 billion, and Google Cloud revenues jumped 38% YoY to $6.87 billion. The Company expects larger FX headwinds in Q4 and tough comparisons for advertising revenues due to strong growth in Q4 2021.