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Google,
Facebook show power of ad duopoly as rivals stumble
- 29th July 2017




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by
David Ingram
SAN
FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Quarterly results from Alphabet
Inc (GOOGL.O) and Facebook Inc (FB.O) provided fresh
evidence this week that the digital advertising market
is effectively a duopoly, a dynamic with deep implications
for two of Silicon Valley's titans.
Alphabet,
the owner of Google and YouTube, and Facebook, the
world's largest social network, each produced billions
in profits during the most recent quarter and enjoyed
steep revenue increases, while smaller rivals such
as Snap Inc (SNAP.N) and Twitter Inc (TWTR.N) struggle
to maintain growth and reduce losses.
This
year, the Big Two in internet advertising are expected
to take half of all revenue worldwide, and more than
60 percent in the United States, according to research
firm eMarketer.
In
the U.S. market, no other digital ad platform has
market share above 5 percent.
Google
suffered a minor blip in earnings due to higher payments
to mobile carriers and others for search traffic.
But efforts by Verizon and other network operators
to compete for mobile ad dollars have had little impact
thus far.
Independent
advertising technology companies such as Rubicon Project
(RUBI.N) and Rocket Fuel (FUEL.O) have also found
it tough to compete.
Advertisers
are flocking to Facebook and Google because they reach
billions of people and have a wealth of data that
can be deployed for targeted marketing.
Their
growing dominance, however, raises questions about
how they will use their billions in profits to maintain
growth when the advertising market as a whole is expanding
only modestly.
"Digital
advertising will soon be approaching a point of saturation,
indicating that there are limits to growth which may
not be fully accounted for by the investment community,"
Brian Wieser, senior analyst at Pivotal Research,
said in a client note this week.
The
advent of a duopoly is also spurring concerns about
monopolistic practices. Google this month set aside
$2.7 billion to pay a record European Union antitrust
fine for favoring its shopping service in search results,
and it faces two additional investigations in Europe.
Facebook
declined to comment on Friday. In the past, the company
has rejected the idea that it is part of a duopoly,
saying that it competes against more than just digital
platforms and has less than 5 percent of the overall
advertising market. Alphabet did not reply to requests
for comment.
Video
Gold
Video
is one market that Facebook and Google both view as
a crucial new frontier. With huge investments planned,
the companies are preparing to do to the television
advertising business what they have long since done
to traditional print advertising: namely, take much
of it for themselves.
YouTube
has been rolling out new series with stars such as
Ellen DeGeneres and Kevin Hart, and says that the
service's overall 1.5 billion viewers watch, on average,
60 minutes a day on their phones and tablets.
Facebook
is expected to launch original video series of its
own within weeks, after signing deals with companies
such as Vox Media and BuzzFeed. Facebook's Instagram
unit is also becoming a bigger producer of revenue,
with video likely to be a big part of the mix.
Already,
many advertisers feel they cannot ignore the massive
reach of YouTube. Some big advertisers launched a
boycott of YouTube this year after their ads appeared
alongside videos from Islamic extremists, yet there
was no evidence from Alphabet's earnings report on
Monday that it had any impact on revenues.
"Marketers
aren't going to get fired for hiring Facebook and
Google," said Harry Kargman, chief executive
of Kargo, which manages digital marketing for media
companies including Time Inc (TIME.N).
Antitrust
Risk
Other
owners of digital ad inventory are feeling the squeeze.
This month, an alliance of U.S. news organizations
started a lobbying campaign for an exemption from
antitrust law that would allow them to coordinate
their negotiations with Google and Facebook, although
such requests from other industries generally have
not succeeded.
Consumer
advocates worry about the giants snuffing out competition.
"All
of the major technology companies should be on alert
that people are a bit spooked and unsettled about
their size and their ability to expand into new markets,"
said Gene Kimmelman, president of Public Knowledge,
a nonprofit that advocates for an open internet.
Size
is not by itself an antitrust concern, and neither
is the ability to quash competitors, even through
copying as Facebook has done with rival app Snapchat.
Facebook and Google are not under U.S. antitrust investigation.
Still,
the prospect of a future probe could still affect
their business strategies.
"As
long as they toe the line and stay in the market position
they're in, it's going to be kind of hard to go after
them under the existing antitrust laws," said
Herbert Hovenkamp, a University of Pennsylvania professor
of antitrust law.
But
acquisitions, he said, would be another matter.
"Even
a merger between Facebook or Google and a smaller
rival would probably be looked at very closely,"
Hovenkamp said.
(Reuters)
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