The Hoover Company’s vacuum
cleaners once so dominated its market that people often still describe using any
make of vacuum cleaner as ‘hoovering up’. Similarly, people ‘Google’
information from the Internet, even if they do not use Google. The only
difference is that Google’s dominance of the Internet search market is far
greater than Hoover had ever achieved with its vacuum cleaners. Earlier this
year, Google’s search engine had an astonishing 92% of the market, with Bing,
the next in line, owned by Microsoft, having barely 3%. This underpins its
position as the world’s second largest private company by market
capitalisation, at a massive $670bn on 29 September, and backs its seventy offices in
forty countries. [1]
Google’s success in Internet
search has been based on its speed and efficiency, things that have been
supplemented by its maps and other products such as Gmail and Youtube. As with
other Internet-based companies, these services are free to use, but come with a
downside: as you use them, you build up a personal profile within Google’s
system. This not only ends up delivering different search results to you than
other people would get. More importantly, for Google at least, your profile is
also used as a marketing tool for companies advertising their products.
Worldwide advertising
expenditure last year was just under $500bn, with 36% of that, nearly $180bn,
being taken up by digital adverts. Of the digital advertising, Google and
Facebook together account for 54% of the global market, with Google the bigger
player of the two, and alone accounting for more than half of the US market.
Digital advertising is growing faster than for ‘offline’ advertising
on television, radio and in newspapers, helping boost the value of Google on
the stock market.
The Google base
Entering popular vocabulary has
its commercial benefits. They have expanded this company so much and given it
economic power so that it has changed its corporate structure twice in the past
two years. In October 2015, Google was reformed as Alphabet, a holding company
that had Google as its main component, the one acting as an umbrella company
for its Internet operations. In September 2017, Alphabet created a new holding
company, XXVI Holdings Inc, which now holds the Google operation and others.
The rationale for these moves is varied, and will reflect its expanded
operations and business strategy, but I will not cover this further. The Google
Internet operation remains the predominant business, providing 99% of revenues,
so is the relevant one to investigate
Google operates differently from
Facebook. Facebook has two billion users signed up worldwide, people
who have supposedly given it their personal details, including their age, gender and
location, and likely others, including their friends, relations and interests. Google, however,
works at a more abstract level. It uses all aspects of a person’s Internet
searching to build a profile that can be sold to advertisers.
Given that it also owns Youtube
and Gmail, among other things, its ability to delve into an individual’s
inclinations go well beyond simply figuring out if you might be in the market
for a particular product. However, the vast volume of data at its disposal also
argues against the notion that it is monitoring what an individual person is doing.
It handles more than three billion searches per day! Of course, it could
hand over your information to the state security services, like other Internet
companies.[2]
But its modus operandi is to use its huge mountain of data to feed the
machine that offers advertisers on its system a likely audience of many millions of people.
In 2016, 88% of Alphabet’s total
revenues – $79.4bn out of $90.3bn – came from advertising. These advertising
deals, although generating larger revenues than for Facebook, ‘can be
terminated at any time’. This shows a similar business vulnerability to
Facebook, and one that has not been allowed for by capitalist markets. As
usual, these markets find it difficult to imagine how a company that delivers
your Internet ‘daily bread’ might be hit by a new trend among Internet users to
use gluten-free products or switch from bread completely.
New technology
Developments in information
technology have facilitated the growth of the Internet giants, but they also
force these companies to move beyond their traditional revenue sources to
maintain their prominent position. Who knows how the market might develop? So
they buy up potential rivals – often using their own shares as the means of payment
when the bill gets beyond a few hundred million dollars.
This is a game where bright
sparks in the relevant area of technology advance what looks like an innovative
application and wait for a Google, or Facebook, or Amazon, or Alibaba, or
whoever, to show up with an attractive bid for their business, in the process
making them multi-millionaires or better. Google has bought more than 200
technology companies from 18 countries since 2001, although most were from the
US. These forays were into online advertising software, travel technology,
artificial intelligence, facial recognition, visual search, robotics,
photography, video, map analysis, mobile devices and many other fields. The
reported value of these takeovers is some $30bn, and likely closer to $40bn, or
more, allowing for the undisclosed amounts paid in many deals.
One of the Google takeovers
reflected its links with the US security establishment. This was of Keyhole Inc
in 2004, a company owned by the CIA-linked In-Q-Tel. Keyhole specialised in
satellite mapping software, funded by the CIA, and went on to become Google
Earth in 2005.
Such takeovers are one way in
which an existing monopolist is able to use the financial system to consolidate
and extend its market power. This is just as well for Google, since it
recognises that getting extra revenues from its traditional search business is
under threat.
Revenues, profits and no dividends
As a relatively new business,
Google/Alphabet has had strongly growing revenues and net income. Both nearly
doubled in the four years to 2016: revenues to $90.3bn and net income to $19.5bn.
But this kind of growth is necessary for a company that, as a matter of policy,
has never paid any dividends to holders of its common stock and does not
plan to do so. Capitalist investors in Google/Alphabet shares must be satisfied
with the growth of the business if they receive no direct income from it,
hoping that such growth will encourage the share price to rise. In other words,
the capital gain from just holding the shares must look good enough to offset
the lack of income from them.
So far this has worked. From
around $160-170 in early 2009, the share price rose to just over $1000 by June
2017, and was still around $960-970 last week. Nevertheless, the prospect for
future rapid revenue growth does not look as good. The Google/Alphabet 2016
annual report notes that advertising revenues from Youtube ‘monetise at a lower
rate than traditional desktop search ads’ and that ‘we generate our advertising
revenues increasingly from mobile and newer advertising formats, and the
margins from the advertising revenues from these sources have generally been
lower than those from traditional desktop search’.
Larry and Sergey gave Mark some ideas
Google/Alphabet has some
similarities to other Internet-related companies. The lack of dividend payments
and reliance on capital gains through a rising share price matches what
Facebook and Amazon do, although Amazon was ahead of Google with the ‘initial
public offering’ (IPO) of its shares in 1997, compared to Google’s IPO in 2004. The Facebook IPO was in 2012. However, Google appears to have set the precedent for
Facebook’s ownership/voting structure.
The two main founders of Google
were Larry Page and Sergey Brin, former PhD students at Stanford University in
California. While they had to attract funds from other investors by issuing
shares, they still ended up maintaining control of the company. Now they may own only
around 12% of the total stock, but that includes the most important shares – the ones
with the special extra voting power. In the same way as Facebook, some years
later, they own most of the 'Class B' shares, which have 10 votes each and
are held by the company’s initial founders, compared to the A shares with one
vote and the C shares with no votes at all.[3]
Hence, ‘Larry and Sergey’ together control around 57% of the voting power of
all shares in the company, despite owning barely one-eighth of the total shares
outstanding.
Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg has
also built a big personal mountain with other people’s money. He alone controls
60% of his company's votes while owning less than one-third of the shares, a feat enabled
by him having a big chunk of the B shares that also give 10 times the voting
power of the A shares!
You would think that people with
loads of money to invest would have the nous to recognise that B might be
better than A. Maybe they do, but the B shares are not traded on the
stockmarket, so capitalists wanting to get in on the action can do little about
it if they are not one of the founders already owning B shares. They can only
buy the A or C shares. To the extent that they realise that C is worse than A,
this is currently reflected in a discount of just 1-2% for the zero-vote C shares
compared to the one-vote A shares. But that small discount also shows how
money capitalists are mainly bothered about getting a return on their
investment – in this case via share price gains only – rather than really
wanting to get involved in voting on, so deciding, what the business actually
does.
Conclusion
This article completes my review
of some of the world’s major corporations. Probably. Earlier articles have
covered Alibaba, Amazon, Apple and Facebook, each of which is currently among
the top six or seven world companies by market capitalisation. What they all
have in common is their distance from what is normally considered to be the productive
sphere of the economy, the one producing goods and services that people need.
That may seem incorrect or
unfair. After all, Apple produces smartphones, among other things. However,
Apple’s ‘production’ turns out to be more a way to design a set of products
that others produce and that it can sell within a monopolistic and tightly
controlled marketing structure, one buoyed by a huge financial operation.
Alibaba and Amazon are more simply in the commerce business, acting as a
platform for selling what others make and taking a cut from the producers,
although Alibaba has a big subsidiary in finance, while Amazon is also big in
cloud computing services. Google/Alphabet, like Facebook, has provided Internet
services to attract advertising revenues, with their ‘raw material’ provided by
the users of their systems. All these companies also build on their resources
to branch out into other areas.
What they have in common too,
with the exception of Alibaba, is that they are based in the US. The
predominance of the US as a home for these top companies is based upon its
large, relatively prosperous population. It offers both a big market in which a
‘start up’ can evolve into a major corporation and a ready supply of very rich
individuals able to advance money to what looks like a good idea – and one that
will enrich them further. Even today, the US accounts for nearly half of
Google/Alphabet’s revenues. Here is one mechanism by which existing privilege
helps secure future privilege. Alibaba’s China has a much bigger population,
but this is offset in many respects by the relative poverty of its audience.
These reviews should offer some
insights for those interested in analysing imperialism today. Hopefully, they
will also be of interest to the more general reader who wants to find out how
the world economy works.
Tony Norfield, 1 October 2017
Note added late on 1 October: the above text has been amended in some places more clearly to express what I wanted to say, although no point has been changed.
Note added late on 1 October: the above text has been amended in some places more clearly to express what I wanted to say, although no point has been changed.
[1] This is the
market capitalisation for the Alphabet holding company, not just Google. See
below for the company links, but the key point is that Google accounts for the
vast bulk of Alphabet’s revenues. In what follows below, I will use the term
‘Google’ to refer to Alphabet’s core business in Google, unless otherwise
stated.
[2] The official
statement is: “Google cares deeply about the security of our users’ data. We
disclose user data to government in accordance with the law, and we review all
such requests carefully. From time to time, people allege that we have created
a government ‘back door’ into our systems, but Google does not have a backdoor
for the government to access private user data.”
[3] At the end
of 2016, there were only 67 ‘holders of record’ for the Class B shares,
compared to more than 2,000 for each of the Class A and Class C shares.
Outstanding shares held were: A, 294.2m; B, 48.9m and C, 344.7m.
2 comments:
Just want to say that this series of posts has been brilliant, I and many other anonymous Marxists have been following them closely.
Anonymous: thanks! This series has taken a lot of work over the past 6 months. There have been few comments on my posts and it's good to get some feedback.
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