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Thursday 30 January 2014

Google Q4 earnings up 17% despite fall in ad rates...

SAN FRANCISCO: Google's fourth-quarter earnings rose 17% even though a long-running slump in its online ad prices deepened.

The performance indicates that Google is still struggling to close the gap between the rates for ads shown on mobile devices and those on personal computers.

Advertisers haven't been willing to pay as much to reach prospective customers on the smaller screens of smartphones and tablets, but Google has been tweaking its digital marketing system so mobile and PC ad campaigns are bundled together. In doing so, Google is hoping advertisers eventually will recognize the advantages of reaching people on the go and gradually begin to pay higher prices for mobile marketing pitches.

But Google's average ad price during the fourth quarter fell 11% from the previous year. That was the steepest quarterly drop in 2013. It marked the ninth consecutive quarter that Google's average ad rate, also known as "cost per click," has fallen from the previous year. 

Google earned $3.4 billion, or $9.90 per share, in the October-December period. That compares with $2.9 billion, or $8.62 per share, in the prior year. 

Excluding costs to cover employees' stock compensation, Google said it earned $12.01 per share. That was slightly below the average estimate of $12.22 per share among analysts polled by FactSet. 

Revenue rose 17% to $16.9 billion. 

After subtracting Google's ad commissions, revenue stood at $13.5 billion, in line with analyst projections. 

Google's stock edged up $1.61 to $1,137 in extended trading.

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