Investors
cheered Yahoo Inc's plans to keep a larger-than-expected stake in
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, overlooking
continuing softness in its core online advertising business.Yahoo rose
nearly 1 percent to $33.70 in afterhours trading as it said it would
sell fewer shares than originally agreed from its 24 percent stake when
Alibaba goes public.That means Yahoo will reap more gains if Alibaba's
stock surges after the IPO, said Ben Schachter, an analyst with
Macquarie Research."The idea is you don't want to have to sell at the
IPO price, you want to sell later to potentially get the appreciation
going up," he said.Yahoo's core business of selling online display and
search advertising remained soft in the third quarter under fierce
competition from Facebook Inc and Google Inc.Prices for Yahoo's display
ads declined 7 percent year-over-year, while the number of display ads
sold increased roughly 1 percent.Revenue from search advertising, which
accounts for 39 percent of the total, was up 3 percent year-over-year,
excluding certain costs.Yahoo Chief Executive Marissa Mayer pointed to
improvements in user traffic to the company's various Web destinations
and said the increasing usage would start to show up in Yahoo's revenue
growth in the coming year.She said that users of Yahoo's mobile products
increased 15 percent from the previous quarter to 390 million, while
traffic to a revamped version of Yahoo's sports website had doubled.
"We are in this to win and to win big,vacuum bottle"
Mayer said during a post-earnings video conference that was streamed
live on the company's website.She said new "native" ad formats that
Yahoo had begun experimenting with had encouraging results that could
help Yahoo boost revenue on its mobile products, which she described as
"under-monetized."Yahoo said it earned $297 million in net income in the
third quarter, or 28 cents a share, compared to $3.16 billion or $2.thermos flask64 a share in the third quarter of 2012,vacuum flask when
Yahoo's results included a $2.8 billion gain from the sale of a portion
of its stake in Alibaba Group.Excluding certain items, Yahoo said it
earned 34 cents per share, a penny above the average analyst
estimate.Yahoo's stock price has more than doubled since Mayer took the
reins in July 2012. But analysts say much of the gain is due to
aggressive stock buybacks and Alibaba's expected IPO."They're very
fortunate that people aren't putting that much emphasis on the core
business, they're owning it as a proxy for Alibaba,united-promo"
said Colin Gillis, an analyst with BGC Partners.Yahoo included
Alibaba's second-quarter financial results in its quarterly earnings
report on Tuesday.Alibaba grew revenue 61 percent to $1.74 billion in
the April to June period, while net income leapt 159 percent to $707
million. That pace of revenue growth is down from 71 percent in the
first quarter, but still exceeded Gillis' forecast for about 54 percent.
Yahoo
took down its own forecast for the full 2013 year, trimming the
midpoint of its net revenue guidance from $4.5 billion to $4.425
billion. The company also said its adjusted operating income would be
lower than it previously projected."They're clearly investing, putting
more dollars to work here," said JMP Securities analyst Ronald Josey,
adding that it was unclear when those investments would start to pay
off.Mayer, a former Google executive, has focused on revamping Yahoo's
Web products since joining the company in July 2012.But while Mayer has
brought back some buzz to beilin-bearingthe
Yahoo brand, analysts say the company's business remains challenged by
an industry-wide shift to automated online advertising exchanges. These
exchanges, which allow marketers to buy ads across a wide variety of
websites, have pushed down the price of the premium display ads that
Yahoo sells."The premium business is changing and getting smaller," said
BGC Partner's Gillis. Until Yahoo adjusts its online ad sales business
to the changes, "it's going to be painful," he said.The Web portal
reported $1.081 billion in net revenue, which excludes fees paid to
third-party websites, in the three months ended September 30, compared
with $1.089 billion in the year-ago period. The average analyst
expectation was for net revenue of $1.082 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
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