By Yuvraj Malik and Greg Bensinger
(Reuters) -Alphabet beat second-quarter revenue estimates on Tuesday, driven by a rise in digital advertising sales and healthy demand for its cloud computing services.
Its shares were barely changed in after-market trading, after rising more than 30% this year.
Advertising sales, Alphabet (NASDAQ:)’s chief revenue source, rose 11% to $64.6 billion. The company sells ads in its search product using customer data to better target them.
Revenue grew 14% to $84.74 billion in the April-to-June period, compared with analysts’ consensus estimate of $84.19 billion, according to LSEG data.
Revenue from cloud computing services, a widely watched barometer for the health of enterprise technology spending, grew 28.8% to $10.35 billion.
Analysts had expected $10.16 billion.