miércoles, 28 de enero de 2009

Yang's Era at Yahoo Ends With a Loss

Analysts asked the question time and again after Ms. Bartz delivered Yahoo's financial results to Wall Street for the fisrt time since becoming chief executive earlier this month.

Time and again, Ms. Bartz said she had not yet made up her mind. If anything, Ms. Bartz suggested that breaking off the search business would not be easy and that any decision would not come soon.

Ms. Bartz

"It is my job to make sure that as a company we look at anthing that makes sense long term for the company and creates shareholder value," Ms. Bartz said in a conference call with analyst on Tuesday. "So yes, everything is on the table."

But she added: "This is not a company that needs to be pulled apart and left for the chickens."

While Ms. Bartz delivered Yahoo's mixed financial results, the fourth quarter was the end of Jerry Yang's turbulent 18-month tenure as chief executive.

Yahoo swung to a loss durinf the quarter, as sales declined slightly because of weakness in the online display ad business. The company also recorded number of one-time charges. But cost-cutting efforts, including sizable layoffs, helped Yahoo had made three months earlier.

"Delvering on profitability expectations is a real achievement is in the environment," Ms Bartz said.

Yahoo reported a net loss of $303 million, or 22 cents a share, compared with a profit of $206 million, or 15 cents a share, a year ago. Yahoo said it incurred $108 million in charges related to severance of employees and $488 million in write-downs of some of its European assets.

After adjusting for those and other charges, Yahoo said it had a profit of $238 million, or 17 cents a share, up from 13 cnents a share a year ago, and above the 12 cents a share expected by analysts.

Yahoo said that its revenue of $1.8 billion was down about 1 percent from $1.83 billion a year ago. Net revenue, which excluedes comissions Yahoo pas to advertising partners, was $1.37 billion, down from $1.4 billion a year ago, and in line with analysts' estimates.

Some investors were bracing for worse, and Yahoo's shares rose about 5 percent in after-hours trading, after the company's report, to $11.93. Yahoo shares closed the regular trading session at $11.34, up to 17 cents.

"They didn't bleed as much as the very bearish side feared," said Martin Pyykkonen, an analyst with Wunderlich Securities. "I don't think this is a quick fix and the economy is going to add headwinds to that."

Yahoo's results reflected the continued shift by marketers toward forms of advertising that deliver inmediate and measurable results. Search advertising, which marketers use to attract costumers to their sites, grew about 11 percent, while display advertising declined about 2 percent.

Those results suggest that other online publishers that rely heavily on displays ads, including AOL, are likely to suffer as well.

Last week, Google reported that its net revenue jumped 25 percent in the fourth quarter.

fuente: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/28/technology/companies/28yahoo.html?_r=1&em

Microsoft steps up browser battle

Microsoft has stepped up the battle to win back users with the latest release of its Internet Explorer browser.


The US software giant says IE 8 is faster. easier to use and more secure than its competitors.

"We have made IE 8 the best browser for the way people really do use the web", said Microsoft's Amy Barzdukas.

"Microsoft needs to say these things because it continues to lose market share to Firefox, Chrome and Safari," said Gartner analyst Neil MacDonald.

Recent figures have shown that Microsoft's dominance in this space has been chipped away by competitors.
At the end of last year, data from Net Applications showed the software giant's market share dropped below 70% for the first time in eight years to 68%.
Meanwhile Mozilla broke the 20% barrier for the first time in its history with 21% of users using its browser Firefox.

martes, 20 de enero de 2009

With earnings call, Apple heads back to business

January 20th, 2009
By Tom Krazit

The sales performance of Apple's new MacBooks, such as this MacBook Air, will be one of the key factora in Apple's fist-quarter results.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET News)
After a week spent worrying about the health of CEO Steve Jobs, Apple will look forward to getting back to business Wednesday when it reports its fisical first-quarter earnings.
The last three months were not kind to computer and consumer electronics companies, but Apple is expected to have weathered the storm better than others. Analysts are predicting the company will report revenue and earnings per share at the high end of the guidance it provided in October, with expectations of $9.76 billion in revenue and earnings per share of $1.38.
The three-month period between October and December is usually one of Apple's best quarters of the calendar year, but this was anything but a typical holiday season. Overall retail sales fell 2.7 percent in December as compared with November, as the full emotional impact of the late-2008 stock market swoon took hold.
We got a bit of an earnings preview last week, when IDC and Gartner reported their PC market share estimates for the fourth calendar quarter. Apple's Mac shipment growth slowed from the strong pace it set throughout 2008, but the company is still growing faster than the market itself. Measured against a U.S. PC market that fell 3.5 percent compared with last ear, Apple's shipments grew 7.5 percent. That suggests that Apple is still enjoying momentum in its Mac division, which no doubt got a boost from the inroduction of new notebooks in October.
Still, the economic climate is having some sort of impact on the Mac, which is almost exactly what analysts felt would happen ging into this quarter. Most analysts seem to be expecting Apple to have sold around 2.6 million Macs during the quarter, representing decent year-over-year growth at around 13 percent but slower than Apple had been reporting over the last several quarters.