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Amazon sees shares fall as profits rise

Greg Sandoval CNET News

Published: 23 Oct 2008 08:59 BST

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Amazon's third-quarter revenue was in line with analyst expectations, but e-commerce doesn't appear to be immune to the economic slump affecting offline and online retailers alike.

For the quarter ended 30 September, Amazon reported $4.26bn (£2.61bn) in revenues, up 31 percent compared with $3.26bn in the third quarter of 2007. The numbers came in on the low side of Amazon's forecasts from last summer. The company said revenue would be between $4.2bn and $4.4bn. Analysts, on average, expected revenue to be $4.28bn.

Amazon rival eBay last week lowered fourth-quarter revenue expectations, and Wall Street was very interested to learn how Amazon thought it would fare during the holiday season. Forrester Research has said it expects online retail growth to slow for the first time this holiday season as a result of the weak economy.

Forrester estimated that shoppers will spend $44bn online during the holiday season. That figure represents a 12 percent increase from last year, but it's the slowest rate of growth for online retail to date.

During a conference call after the earnings release, Amazon executives said sales of the Kindle, the company's digital book reader, continue to surpass expectations. The company said it has no plans to introduce an upgraded model until next year at the earliest.

Amazon's stock closed trading on Wednesday at $49.99. Shares, however, dropped as much as 16 percent in after-hours trading, changing hands at $43.75, down $6.24 or nearly 13 percent from their closing price.

Wall Street has hammered Amazon's share price; the stock is down more than 50 percent from its 52-week high of $101.09.

Net income for the quarter was up 48 percent to $118m, or $0.27 per diluted share, compared with net income of $80m, or $0.19 per diluted share, for the same period last year.

Amazon said the fourth quarter, the vital holiday period, will produce revenue of between $6bn to $7bn. That represents growth of six percent to 23 percent. During the conference call, company executives did not provide many more details on what they think the holiday quarter will bring.

Credit: Amazon meets expectations, but offers dim holiday forecast from CNET News

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