Mumbai: Global advertising dynamics showed divergent momentum in the first quarter of 2026, with Meta outperforming expectations, Google Search delivering strong gains, and YouTube continuing to lag in monetisation, according to the latest Earnings Debrief from WARC Media.
The report benchmarks Big Tech ad revenues against WARC Media’s global ad spend forecasts, revealing that while overall growth remains robust, performance varies significantly across platforms. Meta exceeded projections with ad revenue of $55.0 billion, 2.3 percentage points above expectations, while Google Search outperformed by 5.4 percentage points. Amazon’s advertising business remained largely in line with forecasts at $17.2 billion.

James McDonald, Director of Data, Intelligence & Forecasting at WARC, said, “With this earnings cycle closely tracking our forecasts, WARC’s outlook for the year remains broadly unchanged for the major online platforms. The next phase of growth is likely to favour those that can turn AI from a fashionable noun into a measurable commercial advantage. As ever in advertising, rhetoric is plentiful; revenue is indelible.”

Meta leads with AI-driven performance
Meta’s outperformance underscores its growing ability to translate AI investments into measurable business outcomes. Improved ad targeting, automation, and optimisation have strengthened its monetisation engine, supported by rising engagement across its platforms.
Company leadership highlighted increased user engagement, particularly on short-form video formats, with stronger ad delivery efficiencies helping convert attention into revenue at scale. The performance signals Meta’s continued strength in combining user data, AI infrastructure, and advertiser demand.
Amazon builds full-funnel strength
Amazon’s ad revenue aligned with expectations, reinforcing its steady trajectory in the advertising ecosystem. Its strength continues to lie in high-intent commerce data, closed-loop measurement, and proximity to purchase, making it an attractive platform for performance-driven advertisers.
The company is also expanding beyond lower-funnel advertising through streaming inventory and AI-led creative tools, positioning itself as a full-funnel advertising player.
Alphabet delivers mixed results despite Search strength
Alphabet reported strong overall ad growth, driven primarily by Google Search, which continues to demonstrate resilience even amid AI-led disruption. The company maintains that AI integration is enhancing user engagement and driving increased search activity.
However, performance across its broader advertising portfolio remains uneven. YouTube reported a $72 million shortfall against forecasts, indicating that while engagement remains high, monetisation is not keeping pace. This marks the second consecutive quarter of underperformance for the video platform.
Meanwhile, Google’s Display Network continues to decline, reflecting broader challenges in the open web advertising ecosystem, where revenue fell more sharply than expected.
Industry outlook: scale, data, and automation win
The combined performance of Meta, Amazon, and Alphabet—accounting for 58% of global ad investment excluding China—highlights a clear trend: advertisers are prioritising platforms that offer scale, first-party data, and advanced automation.
Meta’s results demonstrate the upside of aligning AI with both engagement and monetisation, Amazon is evolving into a comprehensive advertising ecosystem, and Alphabet’s Search business remains a dominant force despite challenges in video and display.
Overall, the quarter reinforces that while digital advertising continues to grow, success increasingly depends on the ability to convert technological capability into consistent commercial returns.
















