Billions in profits for tech groups in Corona crisis

38 billion dollars - that's how much the four tech giants Apple, Google, Facebook and Amazon earned together last quarter. The Corona crisis has not harmed their business - quite the opposite. The corporations are profiting from the changed behavior of users and advertising customers in the Corona pandemic.

Milliarden

The trend toward online shopping brought Amazon a record profit in the past quarter. Facebook's advertising business is benefiting from the fact that more small companies are going online to compensate for the slump caused by the crisis. At Google, among other things, the business of the YouTube video platform is humming while people are at home more. And at Apple, business with Mac computers and iPads grew in times of home office work and online learning.

Amazon increased quarterly revenue 37 percent year over year to $96.1 billion. Profits tripled to an all-time high of $6.3 billion. "We're seeing more customers than ever shopping for gifts early," Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos stressed. This, he said, was an indication that an "unprecedented" holiday shopping season was ahead.

Amazon held out the prospect of revenues of between 112 and 121 billion dollars for the current quarter. This would be the first time that the Group has broken the 100 billion dollar mark in a quarter. Amazon's delivery services had already benefited strongly in previous quarters from the fact that demand for orders on the Internet rose sharply during the pandemic. Amazon's lucrative cloud business with IT services and storage space on the Internet also continued to flourish recently.

 

Boost for Facebook

At Facebook, analysts were still worried about the business at the beginning of the crisis. Small and medium-sized businesses make up a large part of Facebook's advertising customers. Many of them - such as cafés or restaurants - have been hit hard by the pandemic. But it turns out that Facebook's business is actually getting a boost as more businesses in the pandemic move online in search of new revenue. The online network's revenue, generated primarily from advertising, rose 22 percent to $21.2 billion. The bottom line was a profit of 7.85 billion dollars - an increase of 29 percent.

Top manager Sheryl Sandberg cited the example of a family business that used to sell soaps made in-house at weekly markets. In the pandemic, she now uses Facebook as a platform and has expanded her business. Facebook is building on this to argue that the online network plays a role worth protecting for the economy in the crisis - and that data protection restrictions, for example, could ultimately harm the economy.

The number of daily active Facebook users rose by 30 million to around 1.82 billion within three months. At least one app from the Group - such as Instagram and WhatsApp - is accessed by 2.54 billion users every day.

 

Advertising business running smoothly

Thanks to online advertising, profits at Google parent Alphabet also shot up by almost 60 percent to $11.2 billion, while revenues grew by 14 percent to $46.2 billion.

After a damper in the previous quarter, Google's advertising business was running smoothly again and contributed the largest share of revenue at 37.1 billion dollars. In addition, the advertising revenues of the video subsidiary YouTube, which rose by a third to five billion dollars, and the cloud business with IT services on the Internet also flourished.

 

iPhone sales down

Unlike these companies, Apple still does most of its business by selling devices. And this is where Apple had a problem in the past quarter: The new iPhone generation was not presented in September as usual, but only a month later. That meant a 7.4 percent drop in profits for the quarter, to $12.7 billion.

Year-on-year, iPhone sales fell by a fifth to around 26.4 billion dollars. However, the Group's total revenue still grew by one percent to $64.7 billion. This was due to increased business with iPads and Mac computers, among others, as well as with subscriptions for streaming and other services.

The exciting question now will be whether the Christmas quarter for the new iPhone 12 will be as strong as usual. Finance chief Luca Maestri said in a conference call with analysts that the group expects growth in the business. Mac sales rose 29 percent last quarter to just over nine billion dollars. The iPad business grew 46 percent to $6.8 billion.

At the same time, the successful tech giants are increasingly being targeted by competition authorities in their home market of the USA, where regulators have so far tended to loosen the reins. Last week, for example, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a long-awaited competition lawsuit against Google. It accuses the company of playing off its market power in Internet search and related advertising in a prohibited manner. (SDA)

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