Yahoo! posted earnings of $205 million, or 14
cents a share, up from the year-ago $101 million,
or 7 cents a diluted share, a year earlier.
Excluding a penny-a-share gain on the sale of
investments, latest-quarter earnings were 13
cents a share. Revenue rose 49% from a year ago
to $821 million on a so-called net basis,
excluding the money Yahoo! shares with its paid
search partners.
Wall Street analysts had forecast earnings of 11
cents a share on revenue of $797 million.
Just as impressive were the reasons behind
Yahoo!'s growth that CEO Terry Semel gave in a
conference call -- not only are more users
visiting Yahoo! in the U.S. and around the world,
they also are spending more time on the site each
time they do. Some 372 million people visited
Yahoo! in March calling up more than 100 billion
pages from the site, pushing average daily page
views up 34% on year.
And the deeper Yahoo!'s users get drawn in, the
more attractive the site becomes to
advertisers. "Some of the largest advertisers
spend between 2% and 4% of their marketing
budgets on the Internet," said Semel. "But
consumers are spending 15% of their media time
online."
As the gap between those two figures narrows,
Yahoo! expects to capitalize on its clear lead as
the premier advertising venue on the Internet.
Already offering big advertisers both branding
advertisements such as banner ads and sponsored
ads on search results, the company is working on
fusing those two ad models closer together.