Apr 28, 2020
Alphabet / Google Q1 2020 Earnings Call Transcript – GOOG, GOOGL
Alphabet, the parent company of Google, held their Q1 2020 earnings call on April 28, 2020. Read the full transcript of the call right here on Rev.com.
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Candice: (00:00)
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the Alphabet first quarter 2020 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star one on your telephone. If you require any further assistance, please press star zero.
Candice: (00:23)
I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Jim Friedland, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Jim Friedland: (00:29)
Thank you, Candice. Good afternoon everyone and welcome to Alphabet’s first quarter 2020 earnings conference call. With us today are Sundar Pichai and Ruth Porat. Now I’ll quickly go over the Safe Harbor. Some of the statements that we make today regarding our business operations and financial performance including the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on those areas may be considered forward looking, and such statements involve a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. For more information, please refer to the risk factors discussed in our most recent form 10K filed with the SEC. And in our form 10Q for the quarter ended March 31st, 2020 expected to be filed with the SEC later today.
Jim Friedland: (01:14)
During this call we will present both GAAP and Non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of Non-GAAP to GAAP measures is included in today’s earnings press release, which is distributed and available to the public through our investor relations website located at abc.xyz/investor. And I’ll now turn over the call to Sundar.
Sundar Pichai: (01:37)
Thank you, Jim, and good afternoon everyone. When I last spoke with you in early February, no one could have imagined how much the world would change and how suddenly. Our thoughts are with everyone who has been impacted by COVID-19, especially those who have lost loved ones or their livelihoods. It’s a challenging moment for the world. Through it all, we are incredibly grateful for all of the essential workers on the front lines of this crisis from healthcare workers and first responders, to the grocery store clerks and delivery workers, to teachers grappling with new technology to help children learn remotely, to all the scientists and researchers working hard to develop vaccines and treatments, and many others who are leading through these difficult times. Thank you. These people fill us with hope and show us the power of human resilience. We’ll need that energy and resolve in the months and years ahead.
Sundar Pichai: (02:34)
Today, there is still a great deal of uncertainty regarding the path to recovery, but there are some things that we can understand better with the patterns we are seeing. For example, it’s clear from data that people are being more cautious and are seeking authoritative advice and guidance to predict their family’s health and safety. A returned to normal economic activity depends on how effectively societies manage the spread of the virus. There is no one size fits all and the timing and pace of recovery will vary from location to location. There’s a longterm effort.
Sundar Pichai: (03:10)
It’s also clear that this is the first major pandemic taking place in a digital world. Many parts of the economy are also able to continue with some semblance of normalcy, thanks to advances in remote work, online shopping, delivery options, home entertainment, and telemedicine. At the same time, newer technologies like AI, Bluetooth exposure notifications, and 3D printing are being used to help fight the disease head on.
Sundar Pichai: (03:40)
It’s now clear that once the emergency has passed, the world will not look the same. Some social norms will change and many businesses are speaking to us looking to reinvent their operations. We’ve seen that the most pressing concern of small and large businesses right now is business continuity, solving for issues like employee safety, dramatic false or surges in demand, supply chains, and managing remote workforce. Ultimately, we’ll see a longterm acceleration of movement from businesses to digital services including increased online work, education, medicine, shopping, and entertainment. These changes will be significant and lasting.
Sundar Pichai: (04:25)
Given the depth of challenges so many are facing, it’s been a huge privilege to be able to help people and businesses at this moment. In today’s call, I’ll cover four areas. First I’ll mention some of the ways we have marshaled our resources in product development to help. Second, I’ll talk about how people are using our products at this unprecedented moment. Third, I’ll talk about our business, especially our advertising business, which was significantly impacted in the last few weeks of the quarter. And I’ll close with our investment plans and focus for the rest of the year.
Sundar Pichai: (05:02)
In the early days of the crisis, we were able to put in motion a number of efforts quickly. There’s a testament to strategy areas where we have invested over recent years, products that people trust, our technical leadership and innovation, deep partnerships, a highly skilled workforce, and the scale and resilience of our operations. I’ve been proud of all these efforts and what they say about our company. I’ll give just a few examples. First, we’ve been working with healthcare providers, researchers, authorities, and communities to help combat the virus. Our community mobility reports help authority see and aggregate how social distancing requirements are working. Verily has tested thousands of people in California and has partnered with Rite Aid to bring free testing to eight additional states. Google Cloud is forming deep partnerships such as with leading healthcare provider ACA Healthcare to understand data around ICU bed availability, ventilator supplies, and test results. And you may have read about our exposure notification partnership with Apple, designed specifically and carefully to protect user’s privacy while helping public health authorities and governments manage countries reopening.
Sundar Pichai: (06:23)
Second, we are working hard to provide accurate and authoritative information to people using our services. In search, we have launched a number of features such as up-to-date answers from health authorities and remote medical care options. On YouTube, we are quickly removing content that violates policy and raising authoritative content from news organizations and experts. Up to last week, our COVID-19 info panels have had 20 billion impressions.
Sundar Pichai: (06:58)
Third, we are playing a role in supporting businesses and workers that are hurting because of the downturn. In March, we made a commitment upwards of $800 million to support small businesses and crisis response efforts through a combination of grants, small business loans, and ad credits. And the Google news initiative is offering financial support to thousands of small, medium, and local news publishers through a journalism emergency relief fund. We’ve also waived ad serving fees for news publishers globally on Ad Manager for the next five months.
Sundar Pichai: (07:37)
Turning to the way people are using our products, people are relying on Google services more than ever. There’s a strong recognition of the value of our products, particularly in important and urgent moments. As a few examples, we have seen a significant rise in search activity. To put it into perspective in the U.S. coronavirus related search activity at its peak was four times greater than during the peak of the Super Bowl. People are spending significantly more time on their Android apps with downloads of apps from Google Play rising 30% from February to March. YouTube watch time has also significantly increased. One area in particular is livestreams. I hope you saw Andrea Bocelli on YouTube live on Easter, which has had over 39 million views. It was truly beautiful. 100 million students and educators are using Google Classroom, double the number from the beginning of March. We’ve seen a massive increase in demand for Chromebooks. Analysts have reported a 400% increase during the week of March 21st year over a year. And schools and businesses in particular are using our secure video conferencing platform Meet. Last week we surpassed a significant milestone and are now adding roughly 3 million new users each day, and have seen a 30 fold increase in usage since January. There are now over 100 million daily Meet meeting participants. Stay tuned for much more.
Sundar Pichai: (09:11)
Turning to our business, let me touch on our performance this quarter. Q1 was in many ways the tale of two quarters. For our advertising business, the first two months of the quarter were strong. In March, we experienced a significant and sudden slowdown in ad revenues. The timing of the slowdown correlated to the locations and sectors impacted by the widest and related shutdown orders. As the impact of COVID-19 came into view, we delayed some ad launches and prioritized supporting our customers, as many adjusted their strategy.
Sundar Pichai: (09:48)
We are focused on products where we can help most advertisers and merchants during the crisis. For example, under our new leader of commerce Bill Ready last week we announced that merchants can list products in Google shopping for free. It’s been widely rolled out in the U.S. with more countries to come and the response has been positive. Overall recovery in the ad spend will depend on a return to economic activity.
Sundar Pichai: (10:16)
There are two key aspects of our business that give us confidence about the future. First, as we saw after 2008, one of the strongest features of search is that it can be adjusted quickly so it’s relatively easier to turn off and then back on and marketers see it as highly cost effective and ROI based.
Sundar Pichai: (10:38)
Second, our business is more diversified than it was in 2008. For example, Cloud. In the public sector, we are helping governments deliver critical health and social services. We are supporting the state of New York’s new online, unemployment application system, as it deals with a significant increase in demand. In retail, we have helped Loblaw, one of Canada’s largest food retailers and Wayfair scale to support exponential traffic increase.
Sundar Pichai: (11:11)
We are helping communication companies adapt to new behavior patterns. Waterfall is using Google Cloud platform to help it analyze network traffic flows to keep everyone connected. And we are a helping entity technologies keep real time online games stay up and running. Institutions like Lloyd’s Bank are digitally transforming their businesses and we are helping even more businesses do the same. Through new partnerships with Accenture, AT&T and T-Systems. We now have more than 6 million paying G Suite customers. G Suite is helping Netflix and German manufacturer, [inaudible 00:11:54] transition quickly to remote work. While Twitter, Shopify, retailers shops, and Italian bank, Freedom, are using Meet for things like all hands and customer meetings.
Sundar Pichai: (12:08)
Elsewhere across the business, YouTube subscriptions continue to grow. The team has launched YouTube Kids in 15 new countries around the world since the beginning of the year and rolled out new features to make kids focused channels safer. Android previewed Android 11, which includes seamless 5G connectivity and a smarter keyboard with a faster messaging experience. And as I mentioned we have seen significant growth in Play. There are now over 2.5 billion monthly active Play devices worldwide. And in hardware, we saw a decline in device activation in the quarter due to falling consumer demand globally. But I’m excited about the product roadmap ahead for the year, including yesterday’s launch of Pixel Buds 2.
Sundar Pichai: (12:58)
Finally moving on to our focus for the rest of the year. We are taking a long view and continuing to invest in a longterm priorities but are being thoughtful in the short term. So we made the decision to slow down the pace of hiring for the remainder of 2020, while maintaining momentum in a small number of strategic areas. We are also recalibrating the focus and pace of our investments in areas like data centers and machines and non-business essential marketing and travel. We’ll also continue to thoughtfully manage our Alphabet’s portfolio. Waymo raised 2.2 $5 billion in its first external investment drown, a terrific validation of their technology and longterm business model. Wing saw a surge in deliveries and new users, increasing its daily volume five fold with great momentum and test programs in Australia and Virginia.
Sundar Pichai: (13:57)
At Google, we’ll continue to be focused on the four key areas that I outlined in the last earnings call. First, creating the most helpful product for everyone, particularly at a time where people rely on us for information, work, education, and entertainment.
Sundar Pichai: (14:16)
Second, providing the most trusted experiences for our users. This includes our efforts to tackle misinformation and digital threats, [inaudible 00:14:27] the cell work to safeguard consumer privacy. Third, executing at scale. I’ve been proud of how we continue to work so cohesively and productively even with a distributed workforce. We’ll continue to build on the internal tools, support systems and infrastructure we have built over the years.
Sundar Pichai: (14:48)
And finally creating sustainable value. We’ll be optimizing the way our data centers work and prioritizing strategic areas of investment where we need to support our users and partners.
Sundar Pichai: (15:02)
Let me express my thanks to our employees for their Herculean efforts under these difficult circumstances. While the road ahead for everyone is uncertain, we’ll continue to support our users, communities, and partners. And we’ll all emerge together from this moment. Thank you and please take care everyone over to Ruth.
Ruth Porat: (15:26)
Thanks Sundar. Our results for the first quarter are a tale of two quarters, with strong results across our revenue lines for January and February, followed by an abrupt to client in March and our advertising revenues as governments globally instituted stay at home orders in response to COVID-19. At the same time, even through March, our non-advertising revenue lines maintained their strong performance, particularly Google Cloud. I’ll provide more details on the impact of the crisis as I review the Google segment revenue results and conclude with an update to the outlook that I shared on our-
Ruth Porat: (16:03)
… revenue results and conclude with an update to the outlook that I shared on our fourth quarter call. Sundar and I will then take your questions. Starting with consolidated Alphabet results. In the first quarter, our total revenues were 41.2 billion up 13% year on year and up 15% in constant currency driven by Search, YouTube and Cloud. Details of Alphabet’s consolidated revenues by geographic region are available in our earnings press release. In short, advertising results reflect in large part the nature and timing of actions around the globe in response to COVID-19. The decline in APAC was more muted than what we have seen in the rest of the world given the uneven impact of COVID as well as the composition of our revenues in the region.
Ruth Porat: (16:53)
The impact in the rest of the world began later and was more acute by the end of the quarter. In terms of the foreign exchange impact, exchange rate movements resulted in a modest headwind to reported revenues. Regarding our key expense lines on a consolidated basis, total cost of revenues including TAC was $19 billion up 19% year on year. Other cost of revenues on a consolidated basis was 11.5 billion up 26% year over year, primarily driven by Google related expenses. The biggest factors here again this quarter were costs associated with our data centers and other operations including depreciation and then content acquisition costs primarily for YouTube’s advertising supported content followed by content costs for YouTube TV, and our paid YouTube Music and premium subscription services.
Ruth Porat: (17:52)
Operating expenses were $14.2 billion with head count growth being the largest driver of year on year growth for R&D and sales and marketing expenses. For GNA, the biggest driver of expense growth was attributable to a reserve for estimated credit deterioration as a result of COVID-19. Stock based compensation total 3.2 billion. head count was at 4,149 from the fourth quarter. Again, the majority of new hires were engineers and product managers. In terms of product areas, the most sizeable head count increases were again in Google Cloud for both technical and sales roles. Operating income was $8 billion down 4% year over year excluding the impact of the EC fine in the first quarter of last year for an operating margin of 19%.
Ruth Porat: (18:49)
Other income and expense was a loss of $220 million driven primarily by losses in equity securities. We provide more detail on the line items within [inaudible 00:19:00] in our earnings press release. Our effective tax rate was 11.9%. Net income was $6.8 billion and earnings per diluted share were $9 and 87 cents. Turning now to CapEx and operating cash flow cash CapEx for the quarter was $6 billion which I will discuss in the Google segment results. Operating cashflow was $11.5 billion with free cash flow of $5.4 billion. We repurchased $ 8.5 billion of our shares. We ended the quarter with cash and marketable securities of approximately $117 billion.
Ruth Porat: (19:40)
Let me now turn to our segment financial results starting with our Google segment. Revenues were 41 billion up 14% year over year on. I’ll now go through the individual advertising revenue lines. Starting with Google Search and other advertising revenues. We generated $24.5 billion in revenues in the quarter that was up 9% year over year. This reflects strong year on year growth for the first two months of the quarter. In March, revenues began to decline an end of the month at a mid-teens percentage decline in year on year revenues. Although user’s search activity increased, their interests shifted to less commercial topics. In addition, there was also reduced spending by our advertisers.
Ruth Porat: (20:34)
YouTube advertising revenues or $4 billion up 33% year on year. Significant YouTube revenue growth persisted until late in the first quarter with different performance trajectories for the brand and direct response components. Direct response continued to have substantial year on year growth throughout the entire quarter. Brand advertising growth accelerated in the first two months of the quarter, but began to experience a headwind in mid March. As a result, by the end of March, total YouTube ads revenue growth had decelerated to a year on year growth rate in the high single digits.
Ruth Porat: (21:15)
Network advertising revenues were $5.2 billion up 4% year on year with healthy year on year growth for the first two months of the quarter. We ended March at a year on your percentage decline in network revenues in the low double digits. Turning to Google Cloud, including GCP and G Suite. Revenues were $2.8 billion for the first quarter up 52% year over year driven by significant growth at GCP and ongoing strong growth at G Suite. Once again, the growth rate of GCP was meaningfully higher than that of Cloud overall. GCP growth was led by our infrastructure offerings and our data and analytics platform. We’re pleased with the ongoing growth in G Suite, which continues to reflect growth in both seat count and average revenue per seat.
Ruth Porat: (22:07)
With respect to the implications of the global crisis for Google Cloud, we’re proud of the accelerated traction we achieved across sectors including public sector and healthcare for disease monitoring and control, working with leading retailers on demand forecasting, working with companies across media and communications to enhance their customer service and across industries on supply chain optimization. In the first quarter, other revenues were $4.4 billion up 23% year over year, primarily driven by growth in YouTube non advertising revenues and play. YouTube’s contribution to other revenues benefited from subscriber growth across its various offerings. Within play, app revenues continue to benefit from strong growth in the number of active buyers in the first quarter.
Ruth Porat: (23:01)
In addition, in the latter part of the quarter, we started to see an increase in user engagement in apps as well as in digital content. Total traffic acquisition costs were $7.5 billion or 22% of total advertising revenues and up 9% year over year. Total TAC as a percentage of total advertising revenues was down slightly year over year. Reflecting once again a favorable revenue mix shift from network to Google properties. Google operating income was $9.3 billion up 1% versus last year and the operating margin was 23%. Google accrued CapEx for the quarter was $5.7 billion, reflecting investments in data centers followed by servers and office facilities.
Ruth Porat: (23:49)
Moving onto the performance of other bets, for the first quarter, revenues were $135 million primarily generated by Fiber and Verily. Operating loss was $1.1 billion for the first quarter. Let me now conclude with our thoughts on the impact of the global crisis on our revenues and investments, including an update on the outlook I shared on our fourth quarter earnings call. We remain optimistic about the underlying strength of our business over the longterm. On a daily basis, our products play an important role for consumers and businesses globally. This has been evident throughout the crisis and the usage metrics that Sundar referenced earlier. We’re humbled that users continue to turn to us as much as they do in a time of global need and uncertainty. We take that responsibility very seriously. Users clearly are depending on us to provide useful and accurate information. They are looking to YouTube for information, education and entertainment constantly as they study, create and work from home. They are using our G Suite products to collaboratively communicate, connect, and work. Although users may not be focused as much on purely commercial activities right now, over the longterm, the value we provide to billions of users globally serves us well. Our previous investments in technical infrastructure ensure that we have the capacity and resilience to meet the increased demand from our users in this extraordinary time.
Ruth Porat: (25:23)
We are redoubling our efforts to help our advertising, customers and partners by sharing insights and developing new tools to keep them connected to their customers and help them be best positioned for recovery. In terms of more specific product points, I will start with search advertising where our financial results are driven in part by users’ search behavior. At the inception of the crisis, the increase in user interest was for information about COVID-19 and related non-commercial topics. Although we have seen some very early signs of recovery in commercial search behavior by users, it is not clear how durable or monetizeable this behavior will be.
Ruth Porat: (26:05)
In order to gauge the ongoing potential financial impact to our business from COVID-19, a key signal to monitor is macro economic performance, which has tended to be correlated with advertising spend. As of today, we anticipate that the second quarter will be a difficult one for our advertising business. As we move beyond the crisis and the global economy normalizes, this should be reflected in our advertising revenues, but it would be premature to comment on timing given all the variables here. In terms of Google Cloud, we remain very pleased with the execution by the team reflected in the ongoing pace of customer adoption of both GCP industry specific solutions and G Suite collaboration tools to help businesses operate efficiently and effectively.
Ruth Porat: (26:53)
Moving onto profitability. Well, TAC and content acquisition costs are obviously tied to revenues. There’s a sizable percentage of items and other cost of revenues that are generally less variable in nature such as depreciation and operations costs of our technical infrastructure as well as for activities like customer support and content review. Much of our operating expense is also not directly correlated to changes in revenues. Given that we are faced with a global crisis of uncertain depth and duration, we have been focused on taking steps to enhance efficiency, including slowing the pace of hiring and some categories of marketing spend as well as further enhancing machine utilization.
Ruth Porat: (27:40)
More specifically with respect to the pace of hiring, last quarter I indicated that the rate of head count growth in 2020 would be slightly higher than the 20% growth in 2019. We now anticipate a deceleration in head count growth that should start to be visible in the third quarter and continue into the fourth quarter. Although we are focused on these and other steps to moderate the overall pace of investment, we remain committed to the longterm opportunities for which we are well positioned, so we will continue to invest in these areas including search, machine learning and Google Cloud.
Ruth Porat: (28:17)
Finally, with respect to CapEx, on the fourth quarter call we shared our expectation that investments in both technical infrastructure and office facilities would increase compared to 2019. We now anticipate a modest decrease in the level of total CapEx in 2020 compared with last year. The biggest change in our outlook is a reduction in global office facility investments due to both the need to pause most of our ground up construction and fit outs in response to COVID-19 and our decision to slow down the pace at which we acquire office buildings.
Ruth Porat: (28:55)
In terms of technical infrastructure, we expect a moderate reduction to our forecast relative to the beginning of the year given the impact of COVID-19 on data center construction delays as well as the benefit of our ongoing focus on server efficiency. Overall, we anticipate technical infrastructure investment to remain at roughly the same level as in 2019 with relatively more spend on servers than on data center construction. Thank you and Sundar and I will now take your questions.
Speaker 1: (29:27)
Thank you. As a reminder, to ask a question you will need to press *1 on your telephone. To withdraw your question, please press the # key. To prevent any background noise, we ask that you please mute your line once your question has been stated. And our first question comes from Eric Sheridan from UBS. Your line is now open.
Eric Sheridan: (29:47)
Thanks for taking the question and hope all is safe and well with every one of the team there at Alphabet. Two questions if I can. One on the comment with respect to direct response advertising on YouTube, we’d love to get a little more color on how direct response advertising as ad units continued to evolve and perform and how advertisers are using those ad units as part of their broader advertising goals. And then maybe Ruth for you on the comment on expenses, just want to understand a little bit of how much of what you’re messaging on expenses is efficiency gains that you were aiming for in 2020 before we got to COVID-19 versus elements of the cost structure that you’re re-examining as a result of the pandemic. Thanks so much.
Sundar Pichai: (30:34)
Eric. Thanks for the wishes. On YouTube direct response, we’re definitely are seeing traction there. I think an area where it really works well for example, is app installed. That’s a great example of it. Gaming is another good example of it and we’re working on iterating and making the formats work better so that it applies to more context as well. But in general I think businesses are learning to adapt. Obviously we’ve had great success with Search and so we are bringing a lot of those learnings and we are sharing it with our customers and so we expect to see more traction there over time.
Ruth Porat: (31:27)
And on your second question, I like the way you framed it. Yes, we do have efficiency efforts that we started that we had going as we entered this year. But as a result of what we’re seeing in the environment, our view was that we should really double down on those. And so when we go through the various areas that I mentioned, we had started the year with an expectation about really optimizing head count around the various areas. What we’ve determined is we’re going to, at this point, slow the pace of hiring to be very clear. We are continuing to hire, but we’re slowing the pace of hiring and that’s helping…
Ruth Porat: (32:03)
… sure, but we’re slowing the pace of hiring and that’s helping as we’re driving a deeper look into how do you optimize within each area. The same is true, for example, in some of the comments on marketing.
Ruth Porat: (32:18)
We are continuing to invest in marketing. As you know well, sales and marketing, the majority of it is headcount related and we do continue to invest here in ads and in particular in Cloud. As it relates to the marketing component, namely ads and promo spend, we did reduce it relative to our plans in the beginning of the year and we continue to have a healthy budget for ads and promo, particularly in digital to support many business areas. But as with the other areas of investment, we’re really focused on optimizing across products and services. With physical events canceled for much of the year, marketing spend is also reduced and so that’s another example. With machines and servers, we’ve been focused on efficiency of the fleet for some time now. This is giving us the opportunity to push that even further.
Ruth Porat: (33:06)
We’re we’re looking at the operating environment and saying we should continue to lean into the efficiency programs we can. It does help us free up some resources for the growth areas that continue to be a priority, but it is an accentuation of where we were.
Speaker 2: (33:22)
Thanks so much.
Speaker 3: (33:24)
Thank you. Our next question comes from Doug [Ammuth 00:33:27] from JP Morgan. Your line is now open.
Doug Ammuth: (33:31)
Great. Thanks for taking the questions. One for Sundar or one for Ruth.
Doug Ammuth: (33:35)
First, Sundar, you just talked about how once the crisis has passed, the world will not look the same. I’m curious if you can just elaborate a little bit more on how you think Alphabet comes out stronger on the other side of this downturn?
Doug Ammuth: (33:47)
Then, Ruth, maybe taking the question on expenses a little bit further. Does this give you any more opportunity to be even more disciplined or diligent on costs on the other side as well? Thank you.
Sundar Pichai: (34:03)
Thanks, Doug. It’s a good question and we are thinking deeply about it as well. In general, I would say the highest-level opportunities across everywhere, we see businesses thinking deeper about the shift to digital and that’s true across marketing, Cloud, in every place we see that trend. Part of this is making sure our investments deliver value with respect to that shift. If you look at advertising, people who in the past may have debated things like, how do I get virtual showrooming, now are really thinking about it. People who may have been hesitant to shift their budgets do, or are looking through moments like this and trying to get all that working better.
Sundar Pichai: (35:01)
Cloud is an obvious area. Every company has been thinking about digital transformation, but they are asking the questions deeper. For example, if you have data centers, they are fixed costs through something like this and you learn going through a moment like that and you are thinking about the opportunity harder. Across everything we do, be it search, be it YouTube, be it Played, be it Plowed, I think we are investing to capitalize on this longterm opportunity.
Sundar Pichai: (35:32)
I would say overall on Alphabet as well, when you look at investments like [inaudible 00:35:37] and Bing, you can imagine in the future these things working well, can play a significant role. Even in the limited areas [inaudible 00:03:49], we clearly saw its potential to a moment like this. We’re betting on those big trends.
Ruth Porat: (35:56)
To your other question, if I understood it correctly, you’re asking about the durability of some of the efficiency efforts. I think that the way I would answer that is after a decade of growth, there has to be opportunities for added efficiency. We’ve been focused on that for some time, but painful times like this put a spotlight on an urgency around making sure you’re focused on the levers that you have. Hopefully those instill the right kinds of health metrics, et cetera, against what you’re managing. I would say that the intent most certainly is that these are durable investment to ensure that we’re operating as effectively and efficiently as we can be. I just need to reiterate, and Sundar and I have both said this, we remain committed to investing for the longterm. We’re not compromising where we need to invest for longterm growth. We’re trying to make sure that each dollar of investment is well-managed.
Doug Ammuth: (36:58)
Thank you both.
Speaker 3: (37:00)
Thank you. Our next question comes from Heather Bellini from Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.
Heather Bellini: (37:07)
Great. Thank you so much for taking the question. Ruth, I have two questions for you actually. First, I wanted to thank you for the color around the growth you’re seeing as you were exiting the quarter in the ad business. There’s, there’s been some signs from different partners or different companies that ad spending, while still down considerably, has actually improved a little bit, maybe some green shoots from the decline that you might’ve been referencing at the end of March. Any chance you can give us a sense of the type of growth you’ve been seeing for the first kind of three, four weeks of the quarter, just to kind of just to help level set us.
Heather Bellini: (37:48)
Then, just in regards to the provision you mentioned in G and A related to credit deterioration, is there a chance you can tell us the amount of that provision and do you expect have to do this again in the second quarter? Thank you.
Ruth Porat: (37:59)
Thank you for those. In terms of ads revenue, as I said in opening comments, for our ads business, a key signal to monitor is macro-economic performance, which has tended to be correlated with ad spend. I think it’s premature for me to comment on the trend.
Ruth Porat: (38:21)
In terms of what we saw in the first quarter, as I said for search and other revenues, they were up 9% year on year for the quarter. But in March revenues began to decline and then ended the month at a mid-teens percentage decline in year on year revenues. Then with YouTube, we had strong revenue growth until late in the quarter when trajectories for direct response and brand diverged. As I said, direct response does continue to have substantial, had substantial growth throughout the quarter while brand began to experience a sizeable headwind starting in mid-March. By the end of March, total YouTube ads revenue growth had decelerated to a year on year growth rate in the high single digits.
Ruth Porat: (39:01)
Then for the second quarter so far, I think it’s premature to gauge given uncertainty in the environment and a few weeks obviously is not a quarter. In such an unprecedented crisis, I would not want you to extrapolate from just a couple of weeks. That being said, the decline in our search and other ads revenue was abrupt in March. Although we’re seeing some early signs at this point that users are returning to more commercial behavior, it’s not clear how durable or monetizable that will be.
Ruth Porat: (39:41)
Based on our estimates from the end of March through last week for search, we haven’t seen further deterioration in the percentage of year on year revenue clients. For YouTube, direct response has remained strong. However, we’ve seen a continued decline in brand advertising and it’s really too early to add more. I think that the main point though is a few weeks obviously is not a quarter and given it is such an unprecedented environment, I would not extrapolate from these comments for the full quarter.
Ruth Porat: (40:14)
Then I’m sorry you have a second question? Yeah, [crosstalk 00:40:16]
Heather Bellini: (40:16)
[crosstalk 00:40:16] GNA. Sorry. No, that was very helpful. Thank you in behalf of everybody. Then just the GNA that you mentioned, the credit provisions that you said you took. I just was wondering if you could share the amount. It might be in the queue later tonight.
Ruth Porat: (40:29)
It will be in-
Heather Bellini: (40:30)
I was just wondering if you could share with us the amount on the call?
Ruth Porat: (40:32)
It will be in the queue later. It will be on the queue later tonight.
Heather Bellini: (40:36)
Okay, thank you.
Speaker 3: (40:36)
Thank you. Our next question comes from Michael Nathanson from MoffittNathanson. Your line is now open.
Michael Nathanson: (40:45)
Thanks. Thanks. I have one for Sundar and one for Ruth.
Michael Nathanson: (40:49)
Sundar, people have asked you about your priorities, you’ve talked about it, but I wonder if you could step back and think about what this crisis will do, the other side and maybe a reorienting of your priorities, so perhaps where you would shift, spend in the longterm and maybe take advantage of where this is going.
Michael Nathanson: (41:07)
Then, Ruth, we appreciate the color on YouTube, just want to dig in some more. If you can give us any sense of YouTube geographies, is there any difference by a change by geography? That really be helpful too. Thanks.
Sundar Pichai: (41:22)
In terms of overall priorities, I would say we’ve always taken a longterm view on thinking through the arc of where things are going. Our deep focus on AI is an example of that. We’ve been convinced for a while that those trends will play out in the long term. If anything through moments like that, the strong foundation we’ve built allows us to continue to be able to invest in our longterm areas. AI is a good example of it.
Sundar Pichai: (41:59)
The shift over time on computing to ambient computing is something we’re going to be deeply committed to and continue to invest there. Cloud and productivity software for businesses of all sizes is a deep area of investment. The thesis still remains, so we continue to focus anywhere we think the actual work we are doing is based on. Deep technology, deep computing, deep computational scale is the kind of investments we think still stand the test of time through things like that.
Sundar Pichai: (42:39)
But beyond that, we are actively looking at how user patterns are emerging. For example, eCommerce is an area and you saw us respond through this with the changes we announced on our shopping property and going for comprehensiveness there. With new leaders in place, we are going to be making sure we work on the user experience there. We are looking at shifts, be it video conferencing with Google Meet and G Suite and adapting and investing in those areas as well. That’s how we’re approaching it.
Ruth Porat: (43:16)
Then in terms of the geographic breakdown for YouTube, we haven’t broken that down. Although, as I think that you know well, we have a breakdown for the major regions around the world. To give you a little more color there, in mid-February revenue growth across business began to decelerate in APAC. Although, as I noted, the decline in APAC was more muted just given the uneven impact of COVID and the nature of our business across the region. Then the impact in AMIA was first evident in mid-February with a steeper fall off in March. In the second week of March, we then saw results in the US as well as other Americas fall off shortly; but nothing more specific, a byproduct.
Michael Nathanson: (44:02)
Okay. Thank you, Ruth.
Speaker 3: (44:08)
Thank you. Our next question comes from Brian [Noah 00:44:10] from Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open.
Brian Noah: (44:14)
Thanks for taking my questions. I have two. The first one, Ruth, just to go back to your comments around the early signs of improvements in behavior and search. I know it’s early and don’t want to over extrapolate, but does any more detail on the types of behaviors seeing of which verticals or which categories or which geographies where you’re seeing sort of the first sign of green shoots on the search side?
Brian Noah: (44:37)
Then, Sundar, just to go back to your comments about the shift toward digital opportunities or digital transformation, maybe talk to us about, as you sort of look back over the last couple of years at what you’ve done on the SMB side, and what are sort of one or two of the key hurdles where you see you really need to invest and build more comprehensive SMB products for post recovery?
Sundar Pichai: (45:02)
Maybe I can give color both on the SMB and a bit on that side too. On the SMB side, it’s an area we’ve been investing for a while. Obviously, we have assets both across AdWords, Google Maps, Google My Business and obviously providing them with G Suite and the tools to get their business running. I do think we have a lot of touch points, but the focus has been simplifying it, making it more of one cohesive, easy experience, making sure it works well from mobile that that is a truly lightweight AdWords experience so that they can get onboarded quicker, reducing the work they need to and also over time bringing technologies like AI to just make it all much simpler and seamless for them. It’s going to be a continued focus for us, and especially scaling this up and making sure it works internationally well as well. We have clear metrics and targets internally and we are aligning the teams better to get there. You will see us do more.
Sundar Pichai: (46:17)
On the ad side, to your question about maybe I can give more qualitative cover to what Ruth said earlier. The good thing about search ads and direct response on YouTube as well, but search primarily, is that it’s an extraordinarily effective system. It’s a transparent system. You have a very clear sense of ROI. It’s very measurable, highly cost-effective. We’ve always seen, and we saw this in 2008 as well, people respond in the short term, but the recovery is also fast when it comes back, and so it tends to work.
Sundar Pichai: (46:58)
It is very diversified, not just geographically, by different verticals. Even through moments like that, we do see businesses responding to demand shift. We see through our system if people suddenly are looking for office furniture or even pajamas, the system response, right? You see the dynamic nature of it.
Sundar Pichai: (47:21)
I mentioned earlier, people are really thinking about the shift to digital. Phillip and our ads team are super-engaged with our customers, helping them think through the opportunities through moments like that. I gave a earlier example, if you’re thinking about cars and you’ve been hesitant to do virtual car showrooming, now is the time. You’re beginning to have those conversations in a deeper way.
Sundar Pichai: (47:46)
There are budgets which are shifting in certain cases. Some of the large customers, maybe they’ve spent a lot of money on live sports, that is clearly on hold. They are looking to shift some of those budgets into opportunities they see. But having-
Sundar Pichai: (48:03)
To opportunities they see. But having said that, there are large sectors of the economy which are affected. Things like travel and our large partners and customers are impacted and so we clearly see the impact of that and that’s the color Ruth gave as well.
Speaker 4: (48:20)
Great. Thanks, Sundar.
Speaker 5: (48:22)
Thank you and our next question comes from Brent Dill from Jefferies. Your line is now open.
Brent Dill: (48:29)
Good afternoon. I’m curious if you could just give us a little more color across SMB and enterprise, any common threads you saw between those two segments?
Sundar Pichai: (48:44)
We have had tremendous momentum on G Suite and all of Google works this way, products like Gmail, Google docs are built from the ground up to really help people be productive and collaborative in a distributed working environment. And so we are clearly seeing traction there. Google Meet is seeing great traction and I mentioned some user momentum there, but we have more announcements coming up including later this week. And so we are seeing tremendous traction and engagement on G Suite. On Cloud, the shift to digital has been a deep trend. And if anything people are really engaged on it.
Sundar Pichai: (49:31)
I earlier talked about you can imagine if you’re a customer and you have data centers, these are fixed costs when you go through moments like this. And so people are really looking at opportunities there and so our teams are super engaged, but I do want to acknowledge maybe those small businesses across the world are deeply impacted. As a company we’ve announced several efforts to support small and medium businesses and we are going to be deeply engaged with them. But I think it’s a tough journey we are all on and we look forward to working with them to help them through this.
Speaker 5: (50:19)
Thank you. Our next question comes from Dan Salmon from BMO Capital Markets. Your line is now open.
Dan Salmon: (50:28)
Good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. Sundar, I wanted to return to those longterm initiatives that you walked through earlier and the one that was most close to your core business and the changes that you were announced this week for shopping. Could you explain a little bit more about the reasons for making those changes and extending the free listings or creating the free listings and what drove you to make that decision now? And then a related followup for Ruth. Same question essentially, but as we think about the financial impact of such a change, I imagine this is one of those things which may qualify as causing maybe some variability in the quarter to quarter rate, but something that benefits all parties over the longterm I think is how we’ve often visited these sorts of changes. But any color you could add on sort of the near and longterm impact of the Google shopping changes would be great too.
Sundar Pichai: (51:31)
Going through a moment like this, it’s very clear part of what makes Google work well is people come across a diverse range of needs. And that’s true for shopping. They spend time discovering and comprehensiveness really matters. That’s how we can have a greater user experience. And so as we’ve been thinking about this space, we realized, and this is how organic search works, for us to truly give the comprehensiveness and the quality of experience we need the widest catalog possible and then be good at ranking it and providing and matching users to what they’re looking for. And so it’s made a lot of sense for us and just looking through the range of experiences people who are seeking through the COVID pandemic validated it even more.
Sundar Pichai: (52:31)
And then obviously we’ve been executing really hard there with new leadership in place and so we saw the opportunity to go back to our first principles and improve the comprehensiveness there. One of the tricky things about when you do that is making sure you don’t have spam and you’re managing and giving people good quality experiences. And that’s where our deeper partnership, be it with PayPal and other providers so that they get the quality signals and really improve the experience as we improve comprehensiveness. So both of them are going hand in hand. And as we’ve demonstrated with search when we improved the organic experience, the advertising experience also gives an opportunity and the system works well.
Sundar Pichai: (53:18)
And so I’m really excited about this change. It is still early, but it’s been very positively received and you’re going to see us enhance the experience in this area deeply. While we talk about shopping, another area where we are investing and building the right foundation is with Google Pay and we have great leadership there as well. We’ve been executing well over there for the past year, and the growth on Google Pay has been strong. And so being able to bring all of that together along with strong players like PayPal, that will help us give great experience for our users here.
Ruth Porat: (53:58)
And in terms of your question about the financial implications of the effort, there’s really not much to add here today. I would just say re echo Sundar’s comment. We’re excited to have Bill leading the effort and Sundar said the outset, one of the priorities is creating sustainable financial value and we have a leader who has a demonstrated track record of doing that. So we’re excited about what he is building here with the team.
Dan Salmon: (54:24)
Okay. Thank you both.
Speaker 5: (54:27)
Thank you. And our next question comes from Justin Post from Bank of America. Your line is now open.
Justin Post: (54:33)
Great. Appreciate all the advertising updates in March. Just wondering, your Cloud growth is obviously quite stable in the low fifties. Any impact in March on workloads or a slowdown in the new customer pipeline? And then maybe Sundar, if you could talk about what could be the benefit for Cloud as we get to the other side of this? More work from home or just other things and secular changes in Cloud that might come about from this. Thank you.
Sundar Pichai: (55:04)
We’re all in Cloud. The interest and the momentum remains strong. We are obviously making a lot of progress both across GCP and G speeds. And we find our offerings are getting deeper and we’re really helping customers from a deeper standpoint, so we see overall momentum. There are cases where even though the deal trajectory is the same and we have the wins, things are taking a bit longer naturally as you would expect. Our customers are impacted through moments like this too. So I would say a time to closing some larger deals are impacted, but the companies, if anything, all the way at a CEO level are thinking about the shift to digital in a deeper way. And I think that’s a longer term trend we are excited about. Obviously consumption gets impacted depending on the sectors which companies are in and and so that has some correlation with the general underlying performance of that sector. And so that’s something we’ll have to wait and see how it develops. But the teams are doing well and it’s an area where we are committed to the course we are on and investing deeply for the long run.
Ruth Porat: (56:32)
You asked about kind of Q2. Nothing to highlight there. Just to reiterate what Sundar said. We’re really pleased with the Q1 performance for both GCP and G Suite and the dynamics affecting Cloud are obviously very different than those from ads. And just to build on Sundar’s comments with a little more on G Suite and some of our opening comments, in this work from home, what we’re seeing is significant interest from governments and companies looking for work for home solutions. So just to add one more example, Cambridge Health Alliance is a US health system with 140000 patients and they relied on G Suite to support their staff and caregivers during COVID-19 helping them connect across hospitals, health centers, and from home. And it’s just yet another example of how we’re able to be present, helpful, useful in this time.
Justin Post: (57:27)
Thank you.
Speaker 5: (57:27)
Thank you. And our next question comes from Kevin Rippy from Evercore ISI. Your line is now open.
Kevin Rippy: (57:34)
Hi, thanks for taking the question, guys. One for Sundar and then one for Ruth. Sundar, the question for you really relates to the resiliency you’re seeing with the direct response piece of YouTube. Are there specific factors or is it a question mix of advertisers there that’s sustaining the growth? And then the question for Ruth, you highlighted that this has given you an opportunity to refocus on cost discipline. It looks like that the capital returns by way of buyback were remaining quite strong in the quarter. Has this affected your thoughts on buybacks and capital returns going forward? Thanks.
Sundar Pichai: (58:14)
Maybe stepping back, I would say we are overall seeing strong momentum on YouTube. People are turning to YouTube. Our watch time has increased across the board. People are always looking for our authoritative news content. Viewership on YouTube is increased significantly compared to last year too. So in many ways through the pandemic, people are using YouTube and the trends are global across North America, [inaudible 00:58:52] and [inaudible 00:58:55] as well. On direct response, I think people are … It’s a journey and people who have been investing are seeing that it is cost effective and so over time more people are looking at it. Our sales teams are doing an excellent job of helping our customers understand the opportunities there.
Sundar Pichai: (59:18)
And so being able to bring all of that to bear. In the case of app campaigns, we have done it with the universal app campaign. So we’ve just made it easier as a customer not to think about whether you’re trying to do this across search or YouTube and bring this simple holistic solution. So all of that is impacting. I mentioned gaming earlier. When you think about things like unboxing and product reviews, those are a natural home for transactions as well. I already had mentioned about all the work we are doing now on commerce, all of that, I’m looking forward to those integrations coming into YouTube and working better as well. And so those are some of the longer term opportunities via working hard to get the experience right and building the right foundation for the future.
Ruth Porat: (01:00:12)
And then on your second question on capital returns, we believe a [inaudible 01:00:17] purchase program for us appropriately sized is responsible in the current environment based on our capital allocation framework and our cash balance. So at the beginning of the year I indicated that we expected to repurchase shares at a pace at least consistent with the fourth quarter on the remaining authorization and that remains our view for the second quarter.
Speaker 5: (01:00:40)
Thank you. And our final question comes from the line of Mark Mahaney from RBC. Your line is now open.
Mark Mahaney: (01:00:47)
Okay, thanks. In terms of the maybe less, worse or somewhat positive trends at the end, you mentioned this recovery or modest move up in consumer commercial search queries. Have you also seen a small improvement in advertiser interests in running campaigns? I think you said both of those factors kind of deteriorated in March. One of them came back. Did the other comeback too? Do you also see advertisers starting to come back? And then secondly that YouTube result in the March quarter was phenomenally strong given what happened in the month of March to YouTube. Was that a comp issue? Was the comp much easier? It sounds as like January and February could have been up strong 40% year over year. So is there any color such as comps, easy comps or was there something that fundamentally changed that caused that kind of material acceleration? Thank you.
Ruth Porat: (01:01:36)
So as I tried to be really clear in my response to others’ question, I would not extrapolate from my comments for the full quarter. It’s early just giving you an early read and there’s really not much more to add than what I indicated. So nothing more to add there. And then in terms-
Sundar Pichai: (01:01:58)
Yeah, maybe just to reiterate what you said earlier and I said that search tends to … People respond to changes in search faster brand trails. So brand is maybe slower to change both on the downside and the upside and search is much faster to adapt as well. And so I think that’s worth keeping in mind, but overall, look, we see a vibrant system. Advertisers are definitely very engaged and looking at it and we are seeing active conversations between our teams and our large advertisers where they’re trying to understand the demand shifts and how they can respond. And so overall I see both from users, users are engaging with Google, YouTube and our core products and services and while obviously there’s an impact on the economy and we’re not immune to that, the engagement from advertisers across our products and with our teams has been very robust.
Speaker 5: (01:03:05)
Thank you. And that concludes our question and answer session for today. I’d like to turn the conference back over to Jim Friedland for any closing remarks.
Jim Friedland: (01:03:13)
Thanks everyone for joining us today. We look forward to speaking with you again on our second quarter 2020 call. Thank you and have a good evening.
Speaker 5: (01:03:23)
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating in today’s conference. This does conclude the program. You may all disconnect.
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