Shares of Google-parent company Alphabet plunged more than 5%—adding to severe losses so far this month—after the company reported lackluster first-quarter earnings on Tuesday which showed a slowdown in revenue growth while also announcing a $70 billion stock buyback.
Adding to uncertainty around tech stocks in recent weeks was a big earnings miss by Netflix, with the streaming giant reporting that it lost subscribers for the first time in over a decade. Citing increased competition and “password sharing,” the company said that it expects to lose more subscribers in the current quarter. Netflix co-CEO Reed Hastings said that in an effort to return to growth, the company would explore offering a lower-priced subscription tier with ads, though it will take several years to implement.
“The quarter is being presented in a negative light” because Alphabet missed expectations, but the actual numbers “aren’t awful, with some modest upside in the core search business,” says Vital Knowledge founder Adam Crisafulli. “YouTube is going to be a source of legitimate anxiety, but on the bright side this isn’t another Netflix),” he adds, calling the $70 billion buyback authorization “an added positive.”
Alphabet is one of the first Big Tech companies to report first quarter earnings at a time when the sector has been hit by big losses this year, as investors worry about the Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest rate hikes to combat inflation. Alphabet’s stock has fallen roughly 17% so far in 2022, while the Nasdaq Composite index down 19% this year.
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