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Yahoo! earnings raise hopes

Jim Hu CNET News.com

Published: 10 Jul 2002 12:10 BST

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The light at the end of Yahoo!'s tunnel may be glowing brighter.

The Web portal, which saw revenue plunge last year, is expected to report revenue of $217m when it states its finances for the second quarter on Wednesday. That's well within management's guidance of $205m to $225m and a marked improvement compared with the $182.2m reported for the same period last year.

The turnaround stems partly from the success of an aggressive diversification program that has led the company to sharpen its focus and enter new businesses such as classified job listings. But analysts said they are still waiting for signs of recovery in Yahoo!'s core display advertising business, which has suffered in the industrywide slump.

"The vast majority of revenues still come from advertising," said Paul Kim, an analyst at investment bank Kaufman Bros. "That's what will determine the success of the business."

In the past year, Yahoo! has undergone a management and strategy overhaul to refocus the business and stem revenue declines brought on by slack advertising sales. Under the guidance of chief executive Terry Semel, who joined Yahoo! in May 2001, the company reorganised into six units and began eliminating under-performing areas while diverting resources to non-advertising businesses.

The company has ended many of its free services, imposing fees for some and closing others altogether. In the most recent moves on this front, the company this month shut down its Finance Vision business news program and Yahoo Radio, a streaming service created through its $5bn purchase of Broadcast.com in 1999.

The company has also invested in new businesses and partnerships aimed at diversifying revenue, joining SBC Communications on an Internet access service, acquiring jobs listing site HotJobs.com, and selling advertising on its search pages in a deal with Overture Services.

E-commerce has been a bright spot, with online transaction sales increasing 28 percent in the first three months of 2002 compared with the previous quarter.

Despite these successes, advertising remains the company's bread and butter. Last quarter, Yahoo! reported that advertising dropped 15 percent from the previous year and 11 percent from the previous quarter.

As a result, while analysts applaud Yahoo!'s diversification efforts, many remain cautiously optimistic about the company's prospects over the short haul.

"Although the overall advertising market has seemingly bottomed and embarked on a recovery, it is unclear when Internet advertising will recover," Frederick Moran, an analyst at brokerage firm Jeffries, wrote in a note to investors on Tuesday. "As a result, an increase in traffic growth should not translate into improving results."


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