SAN FRANCISCO -- With Google's
business under pressure from mobile advertising prices, CEO Larry Page talked
up the potential for none other than the Internet giant's mobile businesses.
Google
on Thursday missed Wall Street's expectations for both profit and revenue,
sending shares 5% lower in after hours. Concerns continue about so-called
cost-per-click prices that advertisers pay Google for Internet-search
advertising.
That
didn't stop the soft-spoken Page, who in May disclosed vocal chord paralysis
issues, from touting the promise of Google's mobile strategy and teasing
interest in a coming next-generation of mobile products.
"There's
so much excitement around new devices today, and the potential for innovation
is tremendous," Page said on a conference call with analysts, investors
and members of the media. "I know you are all eagerly anticipating what
Motorola is launching soon."
Google
purchased Motorola Mobility in a $12.4 billion deal last year and has captured
the attention of Silicon Valley watchers awaiting the debut of its Moto X
phone. A rare U.S.-made device, Google's Moto X aims to compete with Apple's
iPhone and Samsung's Galaxy lineup.
Google's
average cost-per-click, which includes clicks related to ads served on Google
sites and the sites of its network members, decreased about 6% in the quarter
compared with a year ago. Analysts had predicted prices would drop about 3% in
the period.
Enormous
popularity for mobile computing devices has radically shifted the Internet
business landscape in recent years. Companies such as Facebook, Microsoft and
Zynga have sounded the alarm in shifting to a mobile focus to meet the rising
demands from consumers. Microsoft has mostly missed the mobile bandwagon with
low uptake for products running its operating system, while Zynga's CEO has
stepped aside amid revenue declines.
"It's
hard to fault them (Google), because everyone is still searching for their
mobile business model. I think we've figured out that merely transplanting the
desktop model to the mobile business is not working," said independent
analyst Jonathan Yarmis.
EARNINGS: Read Google's 2Q report
Google
reported second-quarter net income of $3.23 billion compared with $2.79 billion
a year ago. Revenue in the quarter rose 19% to $14.1 billion.
Analysts
were expecting Google to report net income of $3.6 billion on $14.41 billion in
revenue for the quarter, according to the survey of estimates from Thomson
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