Google Digs In For Economic Slide

Google (NASDAQ: GOOG), the world’s leading Internet search engine, said on Tuesday it was well positioned to weather any economic downturn as its advertisers were broad based.

Google CEO Eric Schmidt acknowledged sliding share values and noted that a shortage of credit in financial markets was “a very serious issue.” He said many people were expecting a global economic slowdown.

“It’s too early to say if there’s [already] been any specific impact, but if there were I don’t think it would be much,” Schmidt told reporters at a briefing during a visit to Sydney.

“We believe that if there were [a U.S. recession], we’ll be well positioned. We’re not particularly dependent on any particular one market. There’s not a lot of advertising for any one market over another,” he said.

Direct marketing, a successor to online marketing, had historically performed well in times of economic recession, Schmidt said.

“There tends to be a flight in a global slowdown to higher quality advertising, and higher-quality advertising is determined by what sells,” he said.

Google, which earned $4.827 billion in revenue in the fourth quarter, makes around 98 percent of its income from text ads but was exploring new formats, such as advertising on You Tube videos.

Google has a $900 million, three-year deal to sell advertising to News Corp’s (NYSE: NWS) MySpace customers under which it must pay MySpace whether or not it makes money selling ads on the site.

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