'earning'에 해당되는 글 4건

  1. 2009.04.21 Earnings Preview: EBay to report 1Q results by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.11.26 Hollywood's Top-Earning Couples by CEOinIRVINE
  3. 2008.11.14 Top-Earning Female Athletes by CEOinIRVINE
  4. 2008.10.24 Microsoft's Earnings Don't Disappoint by CEOinIRVINE 1

Online marketplace operator eBay Inc. reports its first-quarter results Wednesday. The following is a summary of key developments and analyst commentary related to the period.

OVERVIEW: During its first quarter, San Jose, Calif.-based eBay continued to weather the global economic downturn and acknowledged that its marketplace business - which it has been struggling to improve - has a way to go. The company also talked up its online payments business, PayPal, and predicted that business will double in size by 2011.

Speaking during a day of analyst briefings in March, Chief Executive John Donahoe and other executives laid out changes to eBay's marketplace business, including focusing more on the market for offseason or liquidation-ready items, refining onsite search capabilities and working even more on cultivating buyers' trust.

EBay also said it expects PayPal, which is its second-largest business, to process between $100 billion and $120 billion in annual payments by 2011. In 2008, the service, which has 70 million active user accounts, processed $60 billion in transactions.

BY THE NUMBERS: In January, eBay forecast first-quarter earnings of 21 cents to 23 cents per share - or 32 cents to 34 cents per share when excluding items. The company also predicted $1.80 billion to $2.05 billion in revenue.

At the time, this was well below what analysts polled by Thomson Reuters were anticipating. Now, however, they expect eBay to report first-quarter adjusted earnings of 33 cents per share on $1.94 billion in revenue.

ANALYST TAKE: In a note to clients, Jefferies & Co. analyst Youssef Squali predicted the company's results will meet "muted expectations" and that management will maintain a cautious outlook for the rest of the year due to weakened consumer demand and eBay's ongoing work to improve its marketplace.

Squali rates eBay shares "Buy" with a $20 price target.

WHAT'S AHEAD: EBay is increasingly trying to focus on its marketplace and payment businesses and shed parts of the business that don't really fit in. This month, the company agreed to pay up to $1.2 billion to buy all outstanding common shares and American Depositary Shares of South Korea's biggest online marketplace, Gmarket.

Just two days earlier, eBay had said it plans to separate Internet communications service Skype from the rest of the company through an initial public offering in 2010. EBay bought Skype for $2.6 billion in 2005, but later wrote down much of its value - essentially an acknowledgment that the company had hugely overvalued it.

STOCK PERFORMANCE: Shares declined 10 percent during the quarter to close at $12.56 on March 31. The stock has since rebounded and traded at $13.94 in afternoon trading Monday, down 45 cents.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

'IT' 카테고리의 다른 글

Top 10 Firefox Add-ons for Linux Users  (0) 2009.04.21
Obama Appoints Virginia's Chopra As National CTO; Silicon Valley Approves  (0) 2009.04.21
Earnings Preview: Apple Inc.  (0) 2009.04.21
Making iPhone Apps Pay  (0) 2009.04.18
Gaming Apple's App Store  (0) 2009.04.18
Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

Hollywood's Top-Earning Couples

Lacey Rose and Lauren Streib

For these Tinseltown celebrities, one plus one equals millions.






Hollywood's Top-Earning Couples

Lacey Rose and Lauren Streib, 11.19.08, 04:00 PM EST

For these Tinseltown celebrities, one plus one equals millions.

What happens when you marry an $82 million hip-hop brand and an $80 million R&B empire? You get Hollywood's best-paid power couple.

Thanks to a monster year filled with music, movies, fashion and endorsement deals, Jay-Z and his new bride, Beyoncé Knowles, collectively raked in $162 million between June 1, 2007 and June 1, 2008. The jaw-dropping sum garners them bragging rights atop our first annual ranking of Hollywood's Top-Earning Couples, a list that also includes A-list pairings Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman, David and Victoria Beckham, Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes and Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner, among others.

"Naturally, powerful people tend to gravitate toward other powerful people," explains clinical psychologist and celebrity researcher Jim Houran, for reasons that range from proximity (stars hang around other stars) to familiarity (people are attracted, at least initially, to others like them) to clearer expectations (shared priorities make it easier for celebrities to relate). No matter how they get together, the results are good for the bottom line.

Take Will and Jada Pinkett Smith. They hauled in some $85 million over the past year, making them No. 2 on our list. Though Jada's resume continues to grow, Will's the family breadwinner. He raked in $80 million in the year ending June 2008, thanks to another set of top-performing blockbusters: I Am Legend, The Pursuit of Happyness and this past summer's Hancock. Together the flicks banked $1.2 billion at the worldwide box office, making him Hollywood's most bankable star.

Jada pulled in $5 million during the same 12-month period, thanks to roles as an actress (The Women), producer (The Human Contract) and businesswoman (a stake in beauty line Carol's Daughter). 

Third: David and Victoria Beckham. Conquering fans on both sides of the Atlantic, the power couple brought in $58 million over the year-long period.

Becks' share was $50 million, proving the much-covered move to America has paid off for the British soccer star. Though his Los Angeles Galaxy salary was $5.5 million, the sum more than doubled when his cut of the team's ticket, merchandise and sponsorship revenues were factored in. He also pulled down a cool $35 million from lucrative endorsement deals with Motorola (nyse: MOT - news - people ), Adidas (other-otc: ADDDY.PK - news - people ), Coty and PepsiCo (nyse: PEP - news - people ), among others.





'Business' 카테고리의 다른 글

BHP Bails On Rio Tinto  (0) 2008.11.26
Fed And Treasury To The Rescue. Again.  (0) 2008.11.26
The Car of the Future -- but at What Cost?  (0) 2008.11.26
A Market-Oriented Economic Team  (0) 2008.11.26
Obama Goes After Farm Subsidies  (0) 2008.11.26
Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

Top-Earning Female Athletes

US News 2008. 11. 14. 07:17
pic
In Pictures: Top-Earning Female Athletes

 

They've come a long way, baby. A handful of them, anyway.

When it comes to making money in sports, women are narrowing the gap with men, at least at the top of the pyramid. For women, the highest-paid athletes come almost exclusively from tennis and golf, where prize money and endorsement dollars flow overwhelmingly to the brightest stars.

In contrast, women's basketball and soccer are still a long way from producing the next LeBron James or David Beckham.

In Pictures: Top-Earning Female Athletes

Golfers Annika Sorenstam, Michelle Wie and Lorena Ochoa have broken into eight-figure earnings territory, a testament to the LPGA's efforts to globalize. The women's tour not only has top golfers from numerous countries (Sorenstam is from Sweden, Ochoa from Mexico, while Wie is Korean-American, born in Hawaii), but has made a point to broaden its international appeal by holding more events for players in their home markets.

"The tour has a much more international flavor to it," says David Carter of the Sports Business Group, an industry consultant.

Women's tennis has been on the upswing a lot longer, dating back to Billie Jean King's victory over Bobby Riggs in a 1973 match appropriately named "The Battle of the Sexes."

The publicity from that match led to the Women's Tennis Association's first major national television contract, just in time for Chris Evert to blossom as the first TV star of the women's game.

A little bit later, when attendance and television ratings held firm for the prime years of Martina Navratilova, Hana Mandlikova and Pam Shriver, it was clear that the public was ready for strong, hard-hitting women, and an international players roster helped ensure a wide audience.

Today, the four highest-paid female athletes in the world are from the tennis circuit: Maria Sharapova (Russia), Serena and Venus Williams (U.S.) and the newly retired Justine Henin (Belgium).

No question, the compelling rivalries of the past decade, particularly between the Williams sisters, have done a lot to overcome occasional obstacles like the 1993 stabbing of Monica Seles, the downfall (and brief return) of Jennifer Capriati and the degeneration of over-marketed Anna Kournikova into a caricature of herself.

Will women's team-sport athletes ever catch up to men? Probably not any time soon, given the lack of depth that's tied to a shorter history of organization and development.

It could happen one day, though, Carter thinks, given the consistent, incremental growth of women's sports and the national trend that has more women in charge of family budgets and entertainment spending.

"The chance does exist, especially as women's sports get more coverage in the Olympics," he says.

Olympians and WNBA stars like Diana Taurasi and Lisa Leslie don't get the same money from Nike that LeBron does, but they're in the stable. How effectively their personalities are marketed may determine whether the basketball stars of the next generation make their millions or leave the big money to tennis and golf.

ALT
© Gabriel Bouys/AFP/Getty Images
Top-Earning Women Athletes
Tennis players like Maria Sharapova and the Williams sisters top the list.

Maria Sharapova

Tennis

$26 million

There's nothing like the combination of talent and good looks to woo corporations looking to spend endorsement dollars. Sharapova's Australian Open title this year was her third Grand Slam win, along with 16 other singles titles. She's recently added Sony to an endorsement portfolio that includes Pepsi, Colgate-
Palmolive, Nike and Motorola.



ALT
© AP Photo/Francois Mori
Top-Earning Women Athletes
Tennis players like Maria Sharapova and the Williams sisters top the list.

Serena Williams

Tennis

$14 million

The younger of the storied Williams sisters, Serena has bounced back with a vengeance with three tournament wins this year, matching her combined total from 2005 to 2007. Her endorsement stable includes Hewlett-Packard, Nike and Kraft.

ALT
© AP Photo/Ana Niedringhaus
Top-Earning Women Athletes
Tennis players like Maria Sharapova and the Williams sisters top the list.

Venus Williams

Tennis

$13 million

Big sister Venus defeated Serena at this year's Wimbledon final, showing she's got plenty left in the tank. She's parlayed success on the court into her own fashion line, EleVen, a collection of casual and performance footwear and apparel.

ALT
© Mark Renders/Getty Images
Top-Earning Women Athletes
Tennis players like Maria Sharapova and the Williams sisters top the list.

Justine Henin

Tennis

$12.5 million

After ringing up $5 million in prize money during a white-hot 2007, Henin walked away from the sport this past spring, just before her 26th birthday.

ALT
© AP Photo/Claude Paris
Top-Earning Women Athletes
Tennis players like Maria Sharapova and the Williams sisters top the list.

Michelle Wie

Golf

$12 million

A limited schedule this year (injuries, college enrollment) didn't hurt Wie's endorsement career. But if the teen sensation wants to extend her deals with Nike and Sony, she'll need to spend more time on the course in 2009.

ALT
© Scott Halleran/Getty Images
Top-Earning Women Athletes
Tennis players like Maria Sharapova and the Williams sisters top the list.

Annika Sorenstam

Golf

$11 million

The Swede has racked up more career prize money than any female golfer in history--some $22 million. The eight-time player of the year has 72 LPGA tournament wins to her credit, including 10 majors. Sorenstam has announced she'll retire from the tour after the ADT Championship in November, just after she turns 38.

ALT
© Scott Halleran/Getty Images
Top-Earning Women Athletes
Tennis players like Maria Sharapova and the Williams sisters top the list.

Lorena Ochoa

Golf

$10 million

Six tournament wins so far this year have netted Ochoa $1.8 million in prize money to go along with major endorsement deals with Audi and Lacoste.

ALT
© AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez
Top-Earning Women Athletes
Tennis players like Maria Sharapova and the Williams sisters top the list.

Danica Patrick

Auto Racing

$7 million

Patrick's Indy series win in April should set her up for more riches to come, provided she avoids becoming a one-hit wonder.

ALT
© AP Photo/Dita Alangkara
Top-Earning Women Athletes
Tennis players like Maria Sharapova and the Williams sisters top the list.

Ana Ivanovic

Tennis

$6.5 million

The 20-year-old Serb has shot up to No. 1 in the world after winning the 2008 French Open. She counts Adidas, Yonex (rackets) and Juice Plus among her major endorsements.

ALT
© AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki
Top-Earning Women Athletes
Tennis players like Maria Sharapova and the Williams sisters top the list.

Paula Creamer

Golf

$6 million

Creamer's victory in the 2005 Sybase Classic made her, at 18, the youngest LPGA event winner in 53 years. She's signed on with Adidas, NEC and Taylor Made.

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l

As they waited for Microsoft's Oct. 23 quarterly earnings call to begin, analysts and others were treated to a rousing rendition of the theme from The Lone Ranger. Nostalgia for the heroic masked avenger might seem ill-suited to these dour economic times. And yet while the software giant didn't exactly come to the rescue of worried investors, its results left many feeling reassured.

As other tech bellwethers have done, Microsoft has cut its forecasts and is having difficulty predicting the future. Still, the company's fiscal first-quarter numbers show the floor is not falling out from under global IT spending. Microsoft (MSFT) not only beat analysts' revenue and profit expectations in the period that ended in September, but its forecast for this quarter is based on an assumption that the recession will be mild.

Redmond (Wash.)-based Microsoft expects PC sales to grow a respectable 10% to 12% this yearend shopping season. "It's important to keep things in perspective," Chief Financial Officer Chris Liddell told analysts who asked for details on the depths of the slowdown. "We still see revenue growth."

Office Sales Remain Strong

First-quarter sales grew 9%, to $15.06 billion, beating analysts' expectations for $14.8 billion. Profit rose 2%, to $4.37 billion. Liddell said conditions "clearly deteriorated" as the credit crisis worsened in September, but didn't say by how much. Still, sales of server software used by corporations grew 18%, and sales of the Office productivity program remained brisk as well.

Microsoft showed surprising strength in its consumer-products division. While sales fell from last year, when the company benefited from blockbuster sales of the Halo 3 game for its Xbox console, sales exceeded Microsoft's expectations and profit rose to $178 million, from $167 million. Even Microsoft's beleaguered Internet business had good news. While losses nearly doubled, to $480 million, sales grew a respectable 15% despite a difficult online ad market.

Underscoring the difficulty of assessing a weakening spending environment, Liddell gave a wide range of forecasts for the first half of 2009. But even that range is more optimistic than might be expected. For example, Microsoft's worst-case scenario calls for sales of $64.9 billion in fiscal 2009. That's 2.55% short of analysts' consensus expectations for the year. Apple (AAPL), which has a reputation for setting low financial targets that it almost always beats, indicated on Oct. 21 that sales in the current quarter could fall 14% below consensus estimates. Networking equipment maker Juniper Networks (JNPR) said two days later that current-quarter sales might fall to $921 million, 4.7% below analysts' estimates.

Emerging Markets Are a Wild Card

Even if the country suffers from what Liddell described as a "deep recession," Microsoft will grow 7% for its fiscal year, compared with 18.2% for the year that ended in June. If the company's more positive forecast pans out, Microsoft will grow 10%. Liddell expects overall tech spending to stay in the black as well.

One wild card is emerging markets. Russia was the company's fastest-growing market for PCs in the past year. Liddell told BusinessWeek that while the market will slow, it will still grow at a double-digit pace. But turmoil in fast-growing countries is particularly hard to forecast. "It's a real threat that emerging markets will slow down in 2009," says Technology Business Research's Allan Krans.

As upbeat as Microsoft's predictions were, the company is taking precautions just in case. It plans to cut $500 million in operating expenses, partly by slowing hiring and trimming travel expenses. The company also will slow spending on construction of new data centers, server-packed facilities that handle Microsoft's own needs as well as the so-called cloud computing demands of outside customers.

Plenty of Cash on Hand

"It's a surprising thing to do, since they say they're betting the future on cloud computing," Krans says. At a technical conference for its software partners starting Oct. 27, Microsoft is expected to make a host of announcements about its plans to meld typical corporate IT operations with online services that will be doled out from Microsoft's own data centers.

If Microsoft comes across as confident, it's probably because the company can afford to be. It's got $20.7 billion in cash in the bank, and a business model based in large part on multiyear software licenses. That makes for much steadier revenue growth than relying on product sales


 

Posted by CEOinIRVINE
l