Quarterly Outlook
Upending the global order at blinding speed
John J. Hardy
Global Head of Macro Strategy
Global Head of Investment Strategy
Alphabet, Google's parent company, has delivered impressive first-quarter earnings for 2025, soaring past analyst expectations with a compelling mix of resilient search advertising and continued high growth in artificial intelligence. Investors can breathe a sigh of relief—even in turbulent economic waters, Alphabet's numbers are undeniably strong.
Alphabet's total revenue rose 12% to USD 90.23 billion, comfortably beating Wall Street estimates of USD 89.1 billion. Even more impressive was profit growth—net income surged by a remarkable 46% year-over-year to USD 34.54 billion, translating to earnings per share (EPS) of USD 2.81, far exceeding analysts’ consensus of USD 2.01.
As the news broke, investors responded enthusiastically, lifting Alphabet's shares by more than 5% in after-hours trading.
CEO Sundar Pichai emphasized the company's strategic advantage from its “unique full-stack approach to AI,” highlighting Gemini 2.5, Alphabet’s newest AI model. Gemini’s flagship feature, AI Overviews, has quickly grown to attract over 1.5 billion monthly users, significantly enhancing both engagement and monetisation of search results.
The latest quarter demonstrated Alphabet's ongoing evolution from an 'infrastructure' phase of AI toward deeper 'platform' and 'application' layers, unlocking new monetisation potential through products such as AI-driven advertising tools (Performance Max) and advanced multimodal search experiences.
For investors, Alphabet’s strategic investment in AI remains a pivotal focus area—today’s successes likely define tomorrow’s competitive edge and profitability.
While Alphabet’s Cloud segment narrowly missed analyst revenue forecasts ($12.26 billion versus expected $12.32 billion), the division’s revenue still grew impressively at 28%, and operating profits almost doubled. The Cloud segment, management notes, is positioned for robust medium-to-long-term growth, driven by increasing demand for generative AI and enterprise computing solutions.
CFO Anat Ashkenazi, however, acknowledged near-term data centre supply constraints, cautioning investors to expect revenue growth volatility across upcoming quarters. Alphabet maintains its previously announced capital expenditure guidance of approximately $75 billion for 2025, primarily aimed at alleviating these capacity bottlenecks and supporting extensive AI infrastructure investments.
Investors should closely track Alphabet’s Cloud margins and growth in subsequent reports—an essential indicator of operational efficiency in a high-demand, resource-constrained environment.
While Alphabet’s services aren't directly impacted by President Trump's escalated tariffs, management expects indirect impacts—particularly on advertising revenues from Asia-Pacific retailers.
Google's Business Chief Philipp Schindler noted, “Closing the US duty-free trade loophole next month will cause slight headwinds.” Retail investors should watch how tariffs affect global consumer spending and advertising budgets over the coming months.
Beyond advertising, Alphabet's YouTube platform has made significant strides in subscription revenue, with premium and music subscriptions reaching over 125 million subscribers. Alphabet’s management also sees substantial potential in short-form video monetisation, positioning YouTube as a growing contributor to stable, recurring subscription revenues.
This expansion diversifies Alphabet’s revenue mix and provides investors with reassurance about the platform’s future growth trajectory, especially in a potential economic downturn.
Investors have further reason for optimism: Alphabet announced an additional USD 70 billion share buyback program and increased its quarterly dividend by 5% to 21 cents per share. With ample cash reserves exceeding USD 95 billion, Alphabet remains firmly committed to returning cash to shareholders, reaffirming confidence in its financial stability and growth outlook.
Despite this robust performance, Alphabet isn’t out of the regulatory woods yet. Recent US court rulings have declared Alphabet’s dominance in search and online advertising monopolistic. Consequently, Alphabet faces potentially disruptive changes: it could be forced to divest the Chrome browser or reconsider its lucrative default search-engine deal with Apple.
While Alphabet’s immediate financial health remains strong, the regulatory landscape is undoubtedly turbulent. Investors must stay vigilant—any mandated structural changes could significantly reshape Alphabet’s business.
Here are four specific and practical focus areas for investors tracking Alphabet:
Alphabet continues demonstrating robust resilience and growth potential even amid economic uncertainty and intensifying competition. Its investment in AI infrastructure, expansion in subscription-based revenue, and strategic management of its cloud resources position the company favourably for sustainable growth.
However, looming challenges from regulatory scrutiny and tariff-induced economic pressures necessitate careful investor vigilance. Alphabet’s ability to maintain operational excellence, navigate external challenges, and capitalise on emerging AI-driven opportunities will define its future trajectory.
Alphabet’s Q1 results reaffirm confidence that the tech giant remains adept at weathering challenges while continuing to innovate. For retail investors, Alphabet represents an evolving story worth close attention—a tech leader capable of translating today's strategic investments into tomorrow's sustained growth.