Alphabet to buy back $70 Billion in shares as Q1 sales surpass expectations

April 26, 2023

Alphabet Inc announced its intention to repurchase $70 billion in shares and reported its Q1 profit and sales, which surpassed analysts’ expectations. This followed an increase in demand for cloud services, and ad revenues performed better than predicted.

Alphabet’s revenue in the first quarter was $69.79 billion, above the projected figure of $68.95 billion. This was the company’s third dip since going public in 2004, and the second straight reduction following a 3.6% drop in fourth-quarter ad sales. Nonetheless, it was greater than the $53.71 billion predicted by experts. Excluding items, Alphabet reported earnings per share of $1.17, surpassing the average estimate of $1.07 per share.

Despite the post-pandemic challenges, investors reacted favourably to Alphabet’s repurchasing policy, causing the company’s stock price to jump by up to 4% during after-hours trading. However, the gains were ultimately trimmed to a 1.6% increase in share trading.

Ruth Porat, Alphabet’s CFO, claimed that the business intends to permanently modify its cost structure in order to commit resources to critical areas such as cloud computing and artificial intelligence. Furthermore, she stated that capital expenditures for this year are expected to be significantly higher than that of 2022.

The sources for this piece include an article in Reuters.

Top Stories

Related Articles

March 4, 2026 OpenAI is developing an internal code-hosting platform that could compete with Microsoft-owned GitHub, according to a report more...

March 4, 2026 Ziff Davis has agreed to sell its Connectivity division, including Ookla’s Speedtest and Downdetector, to Accenture for more...

March 4, 2026 OpenAI has amended its agreement with the U.S. Department of Defense after CEO Sam Altman acknowledged the more...

March 3, 2026 OpenAI CEO Sam Altman admitted on Monday that the company “shouldn’t have rushed” its new agreement with more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn