Google's average ad rates just keep falling, but Wall Street no longer seems to care
Google had a blowout quarter yesterday. It beat earnings expectations and announced a massive stock buyback. Every analyst on Wall Street is screaming "BUY!"
This is despite the continuation of a trend that Wall Street used to worry about a lot: Google is making less money every time you click on one of the ads it shows. This metric is called cost-per-click (CPC), and as this chart from Statista shows, it's been dropping on an annualized basis ever since the last quarter of 2011.
For the last two quarters, Google has been blaming a new kind of YouTube ad called "TrueView," which advertisers aren't willing to pay as much for as they are for Google search ads. The rise of mobile advertising, which has lower rates, is partially to blame.
Whatever the reason, Wall Street doesn't seem to be worried about it any longer. As long as Google keeps growing its revenue and profits by expanding into new ad markets, it can survive charging lower prices for ads.
Statista via Google
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