Google Q1 profit soars to $1.31bn

42 per cent year-on-year rise

Written by Shaun Nichols

Google's report on the first quarter of 2008 shows an unexpectedly strong start to the year for the search giant.

The company logged $1.31bn in profit between January and March on total income of $5.19bn.

The $5.19bn in revenues marks a 42 per cent increase from the first quarter of 2007, and a seven per cent rise on the last quarter of 2007.

The majority of Google's income came from its own properties. Sites owned by Google accounted for $3.4bn, making up 66 per cent of the company's total revenues.

AdSense accounted for nearly all the remaining income, bringing in $1.69bn and accounting for 33 per cent of revenues.

Some 51 per cent of income came from outside the US, including $803m from the UK.

Google credited a portion of this to the weak US dollar, estimating that around $18m of its revenues were due to the favourable currency rate.

Chief executive Eric Schmidt said that the integration of DoubleClick into Google's advertising platform would "increase value" for advertisers and partners.

Investors shared Schmidt's rosy outlook on the earnings. Google stock rose 20 per cent following the release of the report, the largest single-day surge on the stock market for the company since its IPO in 2004.

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