Silicon Valley's Mouthwatering Tax Break – The WallStreet JournalA couple professors are complaining that Google, Facebook, Yahoo, Twitter, and other companies are feeding their employees. Google Tops Facebook in UK Digital Ad Revenues...
Google Is Ready to Go 'Gangnam' in Asia – The WallStreet Journal Google will take 73.7 percent of U.S.search ad revenues, while Microsoft will reach 9.3 percent, Yahoo will have 6.2 percent, and AOL will account for 1.1 percent.
For a Fortune 100 company with billions of WallStreet dollars at its disposal, this may be OK. Strong technology support, in the form of tighter analytics, PPC, phone, email, backlink and social media data integration, combined with real business...
Like' Button Follows Web Users - WallStreet JournalMUST READ: Like button tracks logged in users across the web. LinkedIn: Biggest Internet IPO Since Google - WallStreet JournalLinkedIn raise $352.8 million from its IPO, which also makes it 5th...
Further proof that after acquiring 48 companies last year, a company record, Google will "continue to be aggressive" this year in targeting "small start-ups that can be a source of new technology, talented engineers and revenue," as David Lawee...
Thanks to Goldman Sachs' latest cash infusion of about $450 million with a commitment to raise another $1.5 billion, Facebook has become the lightning rod for debate over whether these new Internet hotshots possess the profit-generating muscles to...
News Corp.said search and advertising revenues at MySpace declined $70 million in the quarter compared to the same period a year earlier," the WallStreet Journal noted. The retailer has also boosted its office space in both cities," the Wall...
After Yahoo's core business was deemed worth "less than nothing" by ThinkEquity analyst Aaron Kessler, CEO Carol Bartz made her case to WallStreet yesterday afternoon, seeking more time from investors.
Second-quarter net profit amounted to 15 cents per share, up from 10 cents a year ago, and one cent above WallStreet analysts EPS forecast of 14 cents. Chief Financial Officer Tim Morse was quoted by Bloomberg as saying that the company's revenues...
Business Insider has polled a number of WallStreet analysts and the title of its article summing up their opinions is pessimistic: Analyst Says Q2 Earnings Might Be Terrible, Will Sink Tech. Too Much WallStreet Jargon?
The WallStreet Journal was the first to report on the anticipated sale and had quoted unnamed sources familiar with the matter as saying it was "an exceptionally uninspiring number" with almost total "value destruction.
WallStreet is reacting favorably. While revenues in their Search division were up 3%, IAC had to report a loss of $1 billion. Despite loss, they beat the Street. IAC, the parent company of Ask.com, today reported its Q4 2009 earnings.
WallStreet rewards the unexpected. WallStreet seemed pleased with this first post spin-off report. Ad revenues came in at $471.6 million, declining $512.5 million year-over-year, an 8% drop. AOL posted its first quarterly earnings since being...
While Sohu tried to paint the picture as being on target with their guidance, WallStreet wasn't thrilled with the numbers. WallStreet also may be skittish on Chinese Internet companies as Google's recent ultimatum has raised serious questions on...
WallStreet likes the earnings and seems to be hopeful about the prospect of what's to come. Revenues came in at $1.7 billion, which was down 4% compared to a year ago but up 10% compared to the third quarter.
While the software giant suffered revenue losses, they weren't quite as bad as predicted by WallStreet. Overall, Microsoft's revenues came in at $12.39 billion for the quarter, down 14% from the same quarter last year.
But after hours trading on WallStreet was punishing GOOG: Revenues increased by 3% year-over-year, coming in at $5.52 billion. Revenues shared with partners, primarily Adsense partners, totaled $1.45 billion in the second quarter, which was down...
Search query growth was strong, revenues were up in most verticals, and we successfully contained costs,” said Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google. Adjusted earnings (see below) translated to $5.10 a share, whereas the Street predicted $4.95.
But Google beat WallStreet in Q1. Google says that the improved quality of their ad product decreased clicks but improved revenues. During their conference call announcing second quarter results, comScore addressed whether or not a new Google...
The growth rate is not good enough for WallStreet, however, as the stock was down nearly 5% at the time of this post. Google wasn't the only one reporting second quarter revenues yesterday. Microsoft also dished, though they label the same period...