Showing posts with label percent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label percent. Show all posts

CHICAGO | Thu Jul 28, 2011 5:06pm EDT

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Online travel agency Expedia Inc said its quarterly net profit rose as bookings increased by 19 percent.

The company said on Thursday that its second-quarter net profit amounted to $140 million, or 50 cents per share, compared with 114 million, or 40 cents per share, a year ago.

Excluding one-time items, Expedia earned 55 cents per share, beating a Wall Street consensus forecast for 49 cents per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

The value of the company's bookings rose 19 percent to $8 billion. Domestic bookings increased 10 percent and international bookings increased 37 percent.

Expedia cited especially strong growth in hotel bookings, up 21 percent. The company also said its advertising and media revenue jumped 27 percent.

Shares of Expedia rose 7.1 percent to $31.05 in aftermarket trading from a closing price of $28.99 on Nasdaq.

Expedia, which competes with Priceline and Orbitz Worldwide, said in April that it plans to split into two publicly traded companies through a proposed spin-off of its TripAdvisor business.

The company has said the proposed spin-off of TripAdvisor is expected to be completed in the third quarter.

Expedia also recently announced a partnership on a travel website with online coupon service Groupon Inc.

(Reporting by Kyle Peterson; Editing by Tim Dobbyn)


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A woman talks on her phone as she walks past T-mobile and Sprint wireless stores in New York in this July 30, 2009 file photo.

Credit: Reuters/Brendan McDermid

By Sinead Carew


NEW YORK | Thu Jul 28, 2011 4:50pm EDT


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Sprint Nextel Corp's shares plunged nearly 20 percent on Thursday as heavy subscriber losses in the second quarter called into question the strategy and outlook of the No. 3 U.S. wireless company.


Sprint had spent heavily to promote its service and better compete against larger rivals Verizon Wireless and AT&T Inc. But that strategy backfired as profit margins eroded and customer losses persisted.


The weak results overshadowed Sprint's announcement of a $9 billion network contract with start-up LightSquared, and sent the stock tumbling to its lowest point since February before recovering a little to close down 16 percent.


Investors questioned whether Sprint would be able to meet its 2011 targets after such a disappointing performance.


"Their cost of doing business went up dramatically," said Piper Jaffray analyst Christopher Larsen. "People have less confidence they can meet expectations."


Sprint's operating profit margin of 16.3 percent was well below the average Wall Street estimate of around 19 percent as the company had changed its product rebate terms in an effort to combat Verizon Wireless' sale of the Apple Inc iPhone, and an iPhone discount at AT&T.


But the bet did not pay off as Sprint still saw defections of 101,000 net subscribers -- also known as post-paid customers -- compared with analysts' expectation for losses of 15,000.


Meanwhile, Verizon Wireless added 1.3 million subscribers in the quarter and AT&T added 331,000 subscribers.


Chief Financial Officer Joe Euteneuer said Sprint made a "conscious decision" to spend more in the second quarter in the hope of avoiding getting "killed with market share."


"This was a unique quarter because of intense competition," he told analysts on a conference call.


Sprint warned the rate of customer defections would worsen this quarter, in line with typical third-quarter trends, but repeated a promise for subscriber growth in full-year 2011.


GUIDANCE DOUBTS


Chief Executive Dan Hesse said improvements in subscriber numbers in June gave him confidence the company could meet its targets for the rest of the year.


"If we continue at the current pace of improvement we will get there. The only way we won't is if performance deteriorates," Hesse told Reuters.


But analysts doubted if Sprint could meet its target for a 2011 operating profit that is roughly the same as in 2010.


"People are right to be skeptical," Pacific Crest analyst Steve Clement said. "They didn't point to any silver bullet."


Bernstein analyst Craig Moffett was also skeptical.


"Without post-paid subscriber growth, Sprint has little prospect of generating sustainable revenue growth, nor of generating sustainably rising margins," he said. "On those critical dimensions, Sprint's results were a clear disappointment."


Adding to the uncertainty, Sprint did not outline its plans to develop fourth-generation (4G) high-speed wireless services, and instead postponed that announcement to October.


Even news of the LightSquared deal failed to comfort investors, who questioned if they would ever see the fruits of that partnership because it is dependent on LightSquared solving difficult technology problems and raising money.


Under the agreement, LightSquared -- backed by hedge-fund manager Philip Falcone's Harbinger Capital -- will pay Sprint $9 billion in cash over 11 years. Sprint also has the option to rent space on the LightSquared network through credits estimated to be worth $4.5 billion.


The news pushed Clearwire shares down 22 percent as Sprint is its majority owner and biggest customer. Sprint declined to comment when asked if it would continue to use Clearwire beyond its current agreement which expires in 2012.


"It's less clear that Sprint and Clearwire will have a long-term fruitful relationship," Larsen said.


Hesse said he would be in a position to give a clearer picture of Sprint's strategy on October 7.


"There are some new pieces to the puzzle that were unanticipated that will add strength and color to the story if we wait a little longer," Hesse said without giving details.


Sprint's loss widened to $847 million, or 28 cents per share, from $760 million, or 25 cents a share, a year earlier.


Excluding items such as losses from its Clearwire investment, Sprint's loss per share of 6 cents was better than Wall Street expectations for 12 cents, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Net operating revenue rose to $8.31 billion from $8.03 billion.


Sprint shares closed down 15.9 percent at $4.34 on the New York Stock Exchange.


(Reporting by Sinead Carew; Editing by Derek Caney, Maureen Bavdek and Richard Chang)


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The eyes have it: 71 percent of online Americans are using sites like YouTube and Vimeo, up from 66 percent a year ago, and 33 percent in 2006, according to the Pew Internet Project.

“The rise of broadband and better mobile networks and devices has meant that video has become an increasingly popular part of users’ online experiences,” Kathleen Moore of Pew, said in a statement. “People use these sites for every imaginable reason — to laugh and learn, to watch the best and worst of popular culture and to check out news."

Video-sharing sites are also "very social spaces as people vote on, comment on, and share these videos with others.”

YouTube, Pew said, reports that 48 hours of video are posted on the site "every minute. And since 2005 the number of visits to the site has grown from 8 million views a day to over 3 billion per day" in 2011." YouTube gets more than 200 million views a day via mobile connections.

Parental eyeballs are also increasing on YouTube and related sites: 81 percent of parents in the Pew survey said they visit video-sharing sites, up from 72 percent in May 2010, "while non-parental use dipped slightly from the 63 percent reported in the same survey."

The increase, Pew said, "might also be attributable to the fact that parents with minors at home are younger as a group than the non-parents cohort and use of video-sharing sites is linked to younger users."

If we're not watching YouTube, we may be shooting videos to upload to it or to share with others. Pew says 34 percent of cell phone owners say they've shot video with their phones; 26 percent have watched video on their phones; and 22 percent have posted videos or photos online.

When it comes to combining cell phones and video, "men are more likely to watch videos on their mobile devices than women, but both sexes are equally likely to record and post videos," Pew said.

Related stories:

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