The results were cheered by Wall Street investors who pushed up Alphabet's share price more than 11 percent and Microsoft shares up nearly 4 percent in after-market trades.
Google parent Alphabet reported profit of $23.7 billion on revenue of $80.5 billion, crediting growth in cloud computing, YouTube, and online search advertising.
Artificial intelligence helped drive the Silicon Valley tech giant's business, according to Alphabet and Google chief Sundar Pichai.
"We are well under way with our Gemini era and there's great momentum across the company," Pichai said, referring to the Gemini AI model that powers services across the Google platform.
"Our leadership in AI research and infrastructure, and our global product footprint, position us well for the next wave of AI innovation."
Some $9.5 billion was brought in by Google's cloud computing unit, compared with $7.5 billion in the same quarter a year earlier.
Google also reported its first-ever dividend of 20 cents per share.
"Things are looking good for Google," said Emarketer senior analyst Evelyn Mitchell-Wolf.
However, the future of Google's core search business is not assured, the analyst cautioned.
Google faces an antitrust case in the United States, and the incorporation of AI-generated content into the company's leading search engine "will arguably be the biggest change to the search advertising market since its inception," Mitchell-Wolf said.
The earnings come as Google, Microsoft, Amazon and other rivals competing in the hot field of AI face scrutiny from regulators in the US and Europe.
The US Federal Trade Commission early this year launched a study of AI investments and alliances as part of an effort to make sure regulatory oversight can keep up with developments in the sector and stop major players from shutting out competitors in a field promising upheaval in multiple areas of business.
Amazon -- through its Amazon Web Services arm -- Microsoft and Google are the world's biggest providers of cloud-based data centers, which store and process data on a vast scale, in addition to being some of the world's richest companies.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said sales in the January to March period rose by 17 percent from a year earlier to $61.9 billion, with net profit up by 20 percent to $21.9 billion.
Microsoft has been hugely rewarded by investors since it aggressively pushed into rolling out generative AI, starting with its $13 billion partnership with OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, in 2023.
The embrace of AI has boosted sales of its key cloud services, such as Azure, which have become the core of Microsoft's business under Nadella's leadership.
Cloud giants Amazon and Google are also looking to beef up cloud sales by rolling out AI features to clients and prove that the AI revolution is more than just hype.
In its push, Microsoft has moved beyond OpenAI and signed partnerships with other promising AI startups such as Mistral AI, as well as investing heavily internationally.
In March, Microsoft also announced that it hired DeepMind AI and Inflection AI co-founder Mustafa Suleyman to lead up its AI unit, poaching one of the industry's key figures from a promising startup.
- Unleashed revolution -
The succession of moves has often taken archrival Google by surprise and seen Microsoft pip Apple as the world's biggest publicly traded company.
"Microsoft's earnings show the company is well-positioned to profit from the AI revolution it helped unleash," said Emarketer senior director of briefings Jeremy Goldman.
"While monetizing AI as effectively as Google remains a challenge, Microsoft has positioned itself in the realm of consideration for ad buys -- something that wasn't necessarily the case even a few years ago."
Meta's results on Wednesday however were a first sign of AI fatigue.
The Facebook parent said its quarterly profits soared last quarter but worries over its spending on artificial intelligence saw its share price take a hit.
A potential dark cloud for AI is government regulators that are taking a closer look at Microsoft's ties with OpenAI and others amid fears that the giant is using its huge financial war chest to thwart the emergence of rivals.
Britain's competition watchdog on Wednesday was the latest to begin examining tie-ups between artificial intelligence firms and their US big tech partners, including Microsoft.
Snap shares pop after revenue tops expectations
San Francisco (AFP) April 26, 2024 -
Shares in social media company Snap, which runs the youth-focused Snapchat, soared nearly 25 percent on Thursday after it reported more quarterly revenue than expected by analysts.
"The value we provide our community and advertising partners has translated into improved financial performance," Snap chief executive Evan Spiegel said in an earnings release.
Snap reported revenue of $1.2 billion compared with $989 million in the same period a year earlier.
The Southern California-based tech firm said it trimmed its loss to $305 million compared with a loss of $329 million in the year-ago quarter.
The number of small and medium sized advertisers on Snapchat increased 85 percent in a similar comparison, while an average of 422 million people used the app daily in an increase of 10 percent from the first three months of 2023, according to earnings figures.
Snapchat+, the company's AI-amped subscription service, reached more than nine million subscribers.
"Our large, growing, and hard-to-reach community, brand-safe environment, and full-funnel advertising solutions have made us an increasingly important partner for businesses of all sizes," Spiegel said.
Snap shares were up more than 24 percent to $14.20 in after-market trades.
In recent years, the company has been at pains to compete for ad revenue against Meta's Instagram, Google-owned YouTube and TikTok.
After its launch in 2011, Snapchat became a hit, particularly with young smartphone users, by letting people share photos or videos in messages that self-destruct after being viewed.
It also innovated with the use of filters for shared content, but an expansion into hardware such as drones and eyeglasses has failed to gain traction.
Early this year Snap said it was letting go of ten percent of its staff, including members of its senior management team, "to reduce hierarchy and promote in-person collaboration."
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