by millionairemind » Fri Jan 23, 2009 8:46 am
Google Profit Tops Estimates as Web-Ad Sales Rise (Update2)
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By Brian Womack
Jan. 22 (Bloomberg) -- Google Inc., owner of the most-used Internet search engine, reported fourth-quarter profit that beat analysts’ estimates as more companies used the Web to promote products over the holidays.
Net income was $382.4 million, or $1.21 a share, the company said today. Leaving out some costs, profit was $5.10 a share, beating the $4.96 estimated by analysts in a Bloomberg survey. Google wrote down investments in Time Warner Inc.’s AOL and Clearwire Corp. by $1.09 billion, causing profit to drop 68 percent from a year earlier.
Chief Executive Officer Eric Schmidt, grappling with Google’s first recession as a public company, has trimmed costs and jettisoned underperforming products to maintain profit growth. Spending in the U.S. on ads linked to Web-search results increased 21 percent in 2008, compared with a growth rate of 30 percent in 2007, according to research firm EMarketer Inc.
“This was a pretty decent quarter considering all the fear and loathing out there in the market,†said Christa Quarles, an analyst with Thomas Weisel Partners in San Francisco. “It seems that retailers had pulled out all the stops to drive revenue.â€
Google added $6.29, or 2.1 percent, to $312.79 in extended trading after closing at $306.50 on the Nasdaq Stock Market. The shares lost about 56 percent last year.
Option Exchange
Google also said it will offer employees a stock-option exchange, an effort to retain talent. The program would let employees trade their options for new options with an exercise price equal to the closing price on March 2.
Excluding revenue passed on to partner sites, sales climbed to $4.22 billion, beating the $4.13 billion predicted by analysts. Total revenue increased 18 percent to $5.70 billion.
“Business is quite healthy, especially given the tough economic environment,†Schmidt said on a conference call with analysts. “We’re in this for the long haul.â€
Revenue from Google’s own sites increased 22 percent to $3.81 billion, accounting for about two-thirds of overall sales, the company said. Ad sales from Google’s partner sites rose 3.5 percent to $1.69 billion.
“Even with the worst economic guidance loaded in our models, Google still performs well,†said Jeffrey Lindsay, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein, said in an interview from New York. “It’s a strong indicator that Google can continue to perform well throughout 2009.â€
AOL Partnership
Last year, Google had a profit of $1.21 billion, or $3.79 a share. The company agreed in 2005 to pay $1 billion for 5 percent of AOL as part of a partnership to share online advertising and search software. Google announced the investment in Clearwire, which is building a high-speed wireless network, in May.
International sales accounted for half of revenue, compared with 48 percent a year earlier, Google said. A weakening dollar hurt revenue growth -- had exchange rates remained constant from the third quarter to the fourth quarter, sales would have been $334 million higher, Google said.
Under Chief Financial Officer Patrick Pichette, Google has reduced the use of contract workers and said last week that it would cut 100 people from its recruiting department. The company also gave out mobile phones this year for a holiday bonus instead of $1,000 in cash.
Capital Spending
The company slowed capital expenditures to $367.8 million in the fourth quarter from $678.2 million a year earlier. The company added about 100 employees in the quarter.
Google has cut some products that didn’t meet its expectations, including the newspaper ad program started in 2006. The company is pulling the plug on Google Notebook, which lets users post content from various sources to one site.
“Google has historically been spending an ungodly amount of money trying to pursue a large series of initiatives, and that’s fine when everything’s going great,†said Youssef Squali, an analyst with Jefferies & Co. in New York. “In this kind of macro environment you need to turn your penny twice before you spend it.â€
"If a speculator is correct half of the time, he is hitting a good average. Even being right 3 or 4 times out of 10 should yield a person a fortune if he has the sense to cut his losses quickly on the ventures where he has been wrong" - Bernard Baruch
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