eBay Q4 Earnings

Ebay (NASDAY: EBAY), reported Q4 earnings late Wednesday.

4th quarter profit was up 24% with sales volume beating expectations.  Net income was up 5 cents a share over the prior year with net income at $346m.  Sales were up 29% to $1.72b.

The Paypal payments division showed robust growth with payments up 37% to revenues of $417m.  The communications division, home of Skype, showed revenue of $66m which according to comments by CEO Meg Whitman translated to “not yet developing as quickly as we hoped..”

For the coming year, Ebay raised guidance to project earnings for 2007 to be in the range of $1.25 to $1.29 a share; ahead of analyst average estimates of $1.23.  The increase is partly result of expected revenue from the acquisition of Stubhub (est. $120m) and growth at Paypal.

More detailed press coverage on Ebay’s finances can be found at:

Yahoo Finance
Google Finance
Marketwatch

Yahoo Q4 Earnings

Yahoo  (NASDAQ: YHOO), reported Q4 earnings.

The company announced profit was down 61% to $269m from $683m but revenues were up 13% to $1.7b.   Free cash flow was $278m for the quarter.

Average analyst expectations were earnings of earnings of 13 cents per share on earnings. Excluding items including stock based compensation expense, the company had earnings of 21 cents a share.

Also of interest, the Yahoo Answers, Flickr, del.icio.us and Yahoo! Video properties surpassed 100m unique monthly visitors and 50% of those users are under 35 years old; a statistic the company says is better than both MySpace and Facebook.

In the company’s earnings call, there was significant attention on the coming quarters as well as high expectations for the implementation of the Panama modular advertising platform.

More detailed press coverage on Yahoo’s finances can be found at:

Yahoo Finance
Google Finance
Marketwatch

Netflix vs. Blockbuster: Talking Points

I’ve been a long time Netflix customer.  I begrudgingly tolerate Netflix’ well documented throttling practices. (For those unfamiliar: throttling was the name applied to the intentional slow down of deliveries to insure an revenue maximizing ratio of movies delivered per rental fee).  I also tolerate little annoyances like bonus-feature discs (eg/ a disc with nothing on it but directors commentary and deleted scenes) being counted as a separate rental, or the lack of availability of an occasional title.  As a movie fan, I used to hate going to rent a film only to find my local store had none available, nor anything else I wanted to see. Netflix’s larger pool of titles, the convenience of home delivery service and lack of late fees won me over despite the occasional frustrations.

Netflix retains my business today because they have provided the best service of its kind.   They offered a real value. Now, in the increasingly competitive and bloody battles of the movie rental world, that value proposition is degrading.

Netflix is due to announce earnings January 24th.   The expectation is that both subscription and revenue numbers will be up and I imagine, will exceed expectations.  It’s also expected that battles with Blockbuster and ongoing litigation are taking a toll. Operating expenses, including heavy marketing costs (to fight Blockbuster), as well as legal expenses, will be way be up year over year. NFLX-BBI_comparativechart Whatever the numbers, or the reaction from The Street, Netflix faces a difficult future. In the spirit of analyst’s reviews around earnings announcements, here are three talking points from a list of their troubles:

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Got Joost?

Peer to peer architectures can be a very efficient method of sharing content or copying large files across networks.  From Napster to Kazaa to Bit Torrent, their use has been well tested, and proven, for different types of downloads (legality notwithstanding).  Peer to Peer concepts also can be efficient and functional when working with content that is "time present" (e.g. Real Time Streaming as opposed to the delayed use of a file that cannot be accessed until fully downloaded). Skype proved this in the internet telephony marketplace.   

joost logo

Given peer to peer architecture’s ability to work with both time present and time delayed data, it’s only a small logical leap to envisage peer to peer architecture applied to other arenas.

The previously code named “Venice Project” was recently unveiled as such an application for streaming television content.  Skype founders, Niklas Zennström and Janus Friis, began the project with some of the proceeds following the sale of Skype to EBay for more than $2.5b in 2005.   

The new company, Joost (pronounced "juiced"), is set to allow consumers to watch ad-supported TV online through a downloaded software client.  The underlying architecture is reported to be based on similar peer to peer structures to those the two previously developed for Skype. 

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GE (NBC Universal): Q4 Earnings

General Electric (NYSE: GE), parent company of NBC Universal, reported Q4 earnings.

Of the company’s entertainment properties, the NBC Universal Segment showed profit at $841m up from $801m, with revenue up 1% year over year.

Additionally, following a poor 4th place Nielsen rating for NBC TV in the prior season, prime time and non-news ratings were rebounding in December thanks to the success of the breakout hit Heroes and NFL Games broadcast under the  new long term deal (signed in April and valid through 2011) with the NFL.  Cable channels USA Networks, Bravo, and CNBC continue to do well with audiences.

More detailed press coverage of GE’s finances can be found at:

Yahoo Finance
Google Finance
Marketwatch

GE (NBC/Universal) Earnings Q4

General Electric (NYSE: GE), parent company of NBC Universal, reported Q4 earnings.

Of the company’s entertainment properties, the NBC Universal Segment showed profit at $841m up from $801m, with revenue up 1% year over year.

Additionally, following a poor 4th place Nielsen rating for NBC TV in the prior season, prime time and non-news ratings were rebounding in December thanks to the success of the breakout hit Heroes and NFL Games broadcast under the  new long term deal (signed in April and valid through 2011) with the NFL.  Cable channels USA Networks, Bravo, and CNBC continue to do well with audiences.

More detailed press coverage of GE’s finances can be found at:

Yahoo Finance
Google Finance
Marketwatch

Check out a book from the Internet Library

“Making up for lost time” and “better late than never” underscore some of Microsoft’s efforts to compete and keep up with Google.    

Given Google’s published mission to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful, efforts to digitize and index vast libraries is a natural way point on their roadmap.   With efforts over the past year Microsoft has been both catching up and making sure that road is at least a two lane highway.

With a deal widely announced in October, Microsoft partnered with high speed scanning service firm Kirtas Technologies to advance its efforts.  Kirtas’ services allow Microsoft scan as many as 2400 pages per hour.  While October is way back on the calendar from the point of breaking news, the deal, and the ongoing arms race between Microsoft and Google to sign up library/content partnerships makes it as timely as ever – and escalating

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