Cloud Computing

Google Cloud lost $5.61 billion on $13.06 billion revenue last year

Key Points
  • It is the first time Google has revealed operating income for its cloud unit.
  • It comes one year after the company began breaking out revenue for the cloud business, which trails Microsoft and Amazon in market position.
  • Wall Street has sought additional financial details surrounding the company's cloud investments, which have included hiring and acquisition sprees.
Thomas Kurian, CEO of Alphabet's Google Cloud, speaks at the Google Cloud Next conference in San Francisco on April 9, 2019.
Michael Short | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Google's cloud business reported operating loss of $5.61 billion in 2020. It brought in $13.06 billion in revenue for the year.

It's the first time the company revealed the operating income metric for its cloud business.

The unit's losses appear to be growing as the company invests heavily in sales staff. The company said the cloud unit lost $4.65 billion on $8.92 billion in revenue in 2019, and lost $4.35 billion on $5.84 billion in revenue in 2018.

It lost $1.24 billion on revenue of $3.83 billion in Q4 2020.

Alphabet shares surge after beating on both top and bottom line
VIDEO0:0000:00
Alphabet shares surge after beating on both top and bottom line

Alphabet's latest push to show it's serious about its cloud unit comes as it tries to diversify revenue, which primarily comes from advertising, a business that showed vulnerability in 2020 — particularly in the second quarter. Google Cloud includes infrastructure and data analytics platforms, collaboration tools such as Google Docs and Sheets, and "other services for enterprise customers."

Wall Street has been seeking additional financial details surrounding the company's cloud business, which Google has pumped resources to grow while in a distant third place to heavyweights Microsoft and Amazon. Google began breaking out cloud revenue for the first time, one year ago.

The company's past attempts to bolster its cloud unit under CEO Diane Greene, who left in 2018, failed to capture much market share. But, since former Oracle executive Thomas Kurian came to Google to lead its cloud efforts in 2019, the company has gone on hiring and acquisition sprees.