Google to Buy Ad Mob for $750 Mil.
By wchung | 20 Mar, 2026
Google Inc. is stepping up its push to sell advertising on cell phones, announcing a deal Monday to buy a mobile ad network, AdMob, for $750 million in stock.
Google already has a mobile ad delivery system, DoubleClick Mobile, which it got with its $3.2 billion acquisition of DoubleClick Inc. in 2008. Google said buying AdMob will give it more expertise in a market that is expected to grow rapidly over the next several years.
Google shares rose $9.84, or 1.8 percent, to $560.94 in afternoon trading.
Omar Hamoui founded AdMob in 2006. The company, which is based in San Mateo, Calif., provides a market for advertisers to buy space on Web sites geared for mobile devices.
“Mobile advertising has enormous potential as a marketing medium and while this industry is still in the early stages of development, AdMob has already made exceptional progress in a very short time,” Susan Wojcicki, Google’s vice president of product management, said in a statement.
11/9/2009 12:52 PM MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (AP)
Articles
- Netflix to Livestream Saturday BTS Concert from Seoul
- Tesla to Buy $2.9 Billion Worth of Chinese Solar-Panel Production Equipment
- OpenAI to Combine ChatGPT, Codex and Browser into One Superapp
- Jeff Bezos Seeks $100 Billion to Transform Manufacturing with AI-Based Automation
- Americans Think Trump Lying About Not Sending Ground Troops to Mideast
- The Real Difference Between Luxury Living in New York and China
- Takaichi Pressed to Join Hormuz Escort Service with Pearl Harbor Comparison
- Xiaomi's Lei Jun Quadruples AI Budget to $8.7 Billion As MiMo-V2-Pro Excites Developers
- Samsung to Supply HBM4 Chips for OpenAI's Custom Processor Project
- OpenClaw Craze Turns Ordinary Chinese into 'Lobster' Farmers
