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AI Cloud Service Providers Technology

Alphabet (GOOG) $165, Beset By Legal Issues Could Stay Range-Bound

An interesting article in the Wall Street Journal discusses Google’s anti-trust case in more detail. Quoting from the article:

“Some of the DOJ’s proposals were expected, such as the divestiture of the Chrome browser and a ban on payments to Apple AAPL in exchange for default or preferred placement of Google’s search engine on Apple’s devices”, which are minor and something Google could take in its stride.

But the government’s proposal of “Restoring Competition Through Syndication And Data Access”, could be more harmful in the long run.

Restoring competition through access, which involves Google providing its search index—essentially the massive database it has about all sites on the web—to rivals and potential rivals at a “marginal cost.”, in my opinion, is stripping Google of its IP, and competitive advantages, which it has built through decades of human and monetary capital. It is draconian and a massive overreach. It gets worse, if the government has its way, Google would also have to give those same parties full access to user and advertising data at no charge for 10 years.

For now, it’s a wish list, a starting point of a high ask, which I’m sure the government expects to be whittled down to something less harmful and gives it some bragging rights.

Points to consider

  1. This could harm/scare other tech giants.
  2. The Turney Act makes this government agnostic, it guarantees judicial oversights for antitrust actions.
  3. Alphabet has significant and solid resources and defensible arguments to fight this, mainly the 2 decades of resources put into building this moat.
  4. The stock is likely to stay range-bound or sideways because of the legal issues, where most investors would likely be cautious, even though this morning itself there have been strong buy calls from analysts.

I’m definitely going to hold on. While it is bad news that the DOJ is recommending that Google be forced to sell Chrome, it’s not written in stone, and there’s a small likelihood of it actually happening.

Here are several aspects to consider.

The Chrome divestiture is not devastating: Chrome, if divested could be valued at an estimated $20Bn, according to Bloomberg Intelligence, about 1% of Alphabet’s market cap of $2Tr, so it’s relatively less harmful.

All Roads Lead To Google Search: Even if the spinoff did happen, that doesn’t mean users would ditch Google’s search engine for rivals such as Bing and Safari, which account for less than 15% of the overall market.

The judge is unlikely to take up the recommendation: There is also the possibility the breakup doesn’t happen. Judge Amit Mehta, who will address Google’s illegal monopolization, could follow precedent.

“I think it’s unlikely because Judge Mehta is a very by-the-book kind of judge, and while breakups are a possible remedy under the antitrust laws, they have been generally disfavored over the last 40 years,” said Rebecca Haw Allensworth, a professor and associate dean for research at Vanderbilt Law School, in an email Monday. “He is very interested in following precedent, as was clear from his merits opinion in August, and the most relevant precedent here is Microsoft.”

The chances of an appeal are very strong: In June 2000, a judge ordered the breakup of Microsoft but that decision was later reversed on appeal. Google has stated that would appeal vigorously.

One of the analysts I follow had a fair point about some of Google’s “predatory or abusive” tactics on their ad-tech platforms, for which there are guidelines/rules that can be enforced for specific violations. But to get into a “European” mindset about regulating companies just because they have strong competitive advantages/moats is completely wrong, in my opinion. If Google didn’t pay Apple $20Bn to be its default search engine, Apple users would still prefer Google Search to Safari or Bing – this was in the court documents. Penalizing them (Google) is a massive overreach.

Google built this from scratch with tons of human and financial capital, at a time when there were several larger search engines in a fledgling, growing internet. The iPhone explosion came later. I would be very surprised if the government succeeds in destroying Alphabet.

Here is a sum of the parts valuation, which based on these estimates gives Google a higher valuation than its current market cap of $2.1Tr

Here are the WSJ and Barrons’ articles.

Categories
AI Stocks

Alphabet Antitrust Ruling

Alphabet (GOOG) (AI) $164

Yes, I did recommend Buying around $140-160. I own some and last bought in the mid $150s. 

The anti-trust judgement has hurt but lets look at some possible outcomes. The judge is still deciding about remedies and this in my opinion a Behavioral Remedy is a likely one. 

  1. He would ban the The Internet Services Agreement (ISA) between Google and Apple, wherein Google pays Apple a share of its search ads revenue in exchange for Apple preloading Google as the exclusive, out-of-the-box default GSE on its mobile and desktop browser. 
  2. There will likely also be restrictions on auction pricing, since this was clearly abusive.
  3. The proposal that Google not prefer its own services in search results will also likely be adopted.

This cost Apple roughly $20Bn in 2022. But as Eddie Cue from Apple stated” “No price that Microsoft could ever offer Apple to make the switch, because of Bing’s inferior quality and the associated business risk of making a change. I don’t believe there’s a price in the world that Microsoft could offer us. They offered to give us Bing for free. They could give us the whole company.”

Pretty strong words! We would end choosing Google Search anyway….

This cost Apple roughly $20Bn in 2022, but Google saves this money on Traffic Acquisition Costs. In the near term, I think Google comes out ahead, although the top line could see some decline as some folks choose another Search Engine. Loosing the search monopoly but still being a more profitable market leader.

If the judge suggest breaking up the company – then yes, its not so straightforward, and it will likely tank on the day of the news, and we’ll have analyze it from a different angle – simply because Search is the cornerstone of their entire business. But then there are the inevitable appeals.

I’m holding for now.

Categories
AI Stocks

Alphabet (GOOG) $178 Pre-Market, Analysts Question Spending 

Q2-24 Earnings  

June revenue at Alphabet grew 5% sequentially from March to $84.3 billion, a 13% year-over-year rise and a bit of a deceleration from March’s 15.4% year-over-year rise. 

Q2 GAAP EPS of $1.89 beats by $0.04. 

At $180, Alphabet is priced at only 21-times 2025 earnings. Very reasonable for a member of the M-7, search market leader, AI pioneer, and owner of You-Tube. 

Why is it down post earnings: WSJ’s title was apt Google Fails to ‘Wow’ as AI Bills Mount 

  • Overall revenue exceeded Wall Street’s consensus projection by just 0.6%—the lowest beat percentage in at least five years,  
  • Capex = $49Bn for the year, this was mostly expected but still got a thumbs down, because depreciation will hurt the bottom line. 

Google has to spend to keep up – it doesn’t have a choice. 

“Look, obviously we are at the early stage of what I view as a very transformative area,” Alphabet Chief Executive Sundar Pichai  “the risk of underinvesting is dramatically greater than the risk of overinvesting for us here,” not mentioning the record amounts of capex that tech rivals Microsoft, Amazon and Meta Platforms are pouring into the same thing.  

Rejected Alphabet’s bid for $23Bn – I think that’s actually good for Google, at 46x current year sales. Granted this would have given them a considerable leg up in cybersecurity – but is a $500Mn revenue company, which would never move the needle for the behemoth.  

I own GOOG, and plan to hold for a long, long time, it’s been recommended on several occasions here. I could buy more if the price drops but given the change in sentiment towards big tech I’m happy to sit on the sidelines for a bit. 

There seems to be an inflection point – the rate of growth is going to get lower on tougher comparisons and therefore there is more hesitation to buy at inflated levels. 

Categories
Cloud Service Providers

Alphabet Surges 12% on Strong Q1 Earnings: YouTube, Cloud, and Search Drive Growth

Alphabet stock surged by double digits — (NASDAQ: GOOG) +12%, — after its first-quarter earnings easily cleared analyst expectations as revenues jumped 15% with strong performance, particularly at YouTube.

Revenues rose to $80.54B, easily topping consensus for $78.7B. Advertising revenue rose 13% to $61.7B.

Meanwhile, YouTube ads revenue — previously an area of concern — rose a full 21% to $8.09B. Subscriptions, platforms, and devices revenue jumped 18%.

And the momentum in Cloud continued, with 28% revenue growth and operating income that more than quadrupled year-over-year.

Operating income jumped 46% year-over-year, to $25.47B. Earnings per share landed at $1.89 vs. $1.50 expected by Wall Street.

The operating margin also expanded, to 32% from a year-ago 25%.

“Our results in the first quarter reflect strong performance from Search, YouTube, and Cloud,” said CEO Sundar Pichai. “We are well underway with our Gemini era and there’s great momentum across the company.”

Revenues by segment: Google search and other, $46.16B (up 14.4%); YouTube ads, $8.09B (up 20.9%); Google Network, $7.41B (down 1.1%); Google subscriptions, platforms and devices, $8.74B (up 17.9%); Google Cloud, $9.57B (up 28.4%); Other Bets, $495M (up 71.9%).

Operating income by segment: Google Services, $27.9B (up 28.3%); Google Cloud, $900M (up 371%); Other Bets, -$1.02B (vs. year-ago -$1.23B); Alphabet-level activities, -$2.3B (vs. year-ago -$3.3B).

The company also authorized the buyback of up to an additional $70B worth of shares and declared a cash dividend of $0.20 per share.