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Yahoo exceeds Wall St. estimates in Q1 2005
By Juan Carlos Perez

Yahoo Inc. topped financial analysts' earnings and revenue forecasts for its first quarter of 2005, the Sunnyvale, California, provider of online content and services said Tuesday.

Revenue excluding traffic acquisition costs (TAC) came in at $821 million, up 49 percent from 2004's first quarter and above the $796.8 million consensus estimate from financial analysts polled by Thomson First Call. Yahoo generated revenue of $1.174 billion, up 55 percent from 2004's first quarter. TAC is the portion of revenue that Yahoo pays to the third-party affiliates of its Overture online ad network.

Net income was $205 million, or $0.14 per share, including $15 million, or $0.01 per share related to the sale of certain investments and settlements, up from $101 million, or $0.07 per share in 2004's first quarter. The analyst consensus had been for $0.11 per share, excluding the $0.01 investment and settlement gain, so Yahoo exceeded that forecast by $0.02 per share.

During a conference call with analysts to discuss the quarterly results, Yahoo executives said they were extremely pleased with the results of the quarter, which ended March 31, 2005.

"Yahoo is off to a terrific start in 2005. We have raised the bar even higher in the first quarter. The pace of innovation and the appeal of our services has translated into deeper relationships with our users and continued growth for Yahoo," said Terry Semel, Yahoo's chairman and chief executive officer.

"Our intention is to continue capitalizing on our industry leading assets to deliver consistent and powerful growth over the long term," he added.

The strong results were driven primarily by Yahoo's sales of online advertising, which continued to grow, with a particular bright spot in the text ads that are triggered by search engine queries, executives said.

"We are in an excellent position to take advantage of all forms of advertising opportunities on the Web. We appeal to a strong and diverse range of customers including hundreds of blue chip traditional marketers, hundreds of thousands of small and medium size businesses and hundreds of millions of consumers and we can extend these opportunities very rapidly on a global scale," Semel said.

The executives are so optimistic about the rest of the year that they raised their financial forecast for revenue excluding TAC, which for the entire 2005 fiscal year is now expected to fall between $3.565 billion and $3.715 billion, up from a previous range of between $3.365 billion and $3.565 billion.

Yahoo ended the quarter with 372 million unique users, up 36 percent from 2004's first quarter. Of the 372 million, 176 million were active registered users, up 25 percent. Active registered users are those who have signed up for at least one Yahoo service, such as e-mail, and who visit the Yahoo network at least once per month. Among the active registered users, 8.9 million were fee-paying users -- defined as those who pay for at least one Yahoo service -- up 53 percent.

Meanwhile, Yahoo's workforce increased by 36 percent from 2004's first quarter to 8,023 employees.

Posted April 20, 2005 01:28 AM |




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