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*~1Best~*

01/27/09 6:24 PM

#13901 RE: *~1Best~* #13899

Trading at 11.89 + 6.54% ~ Yahoo Posts Higher Profit, Outstrips Forecasts

YAHOO, YHOO, EARNINGS, FOURTH-QUARTER, 4Q, Q4, INTERNET, TECHNOLOGY, CAROL BARTZ, JERRY YANG,
Reuters
| 27 Jan 2009 | 04:55 PM ET

Yahoo posted a higher fourth-quarter profit on Tuesday, beating Wall Street forecasts after several months of cost-cutting initiatives in the face of a weak advertising market.

The Silicon Valley -based Web pioneer said adjusted net profit for the fourth quarter rose to $238 million, or 17 cents per share, from $205.7 million, or 15 cents per share, a year earlier.

Analysts on average had expected a profit of 13 cents per share, according to Reuters Estimates.

Yahoo shares , which rose 1.5 percent to $11.34 on the Nasdaq Tuesday, tacked on another 3 percent in extended trading.

But including write-downs and one-time charges associated with its restructuring, the company swung to a net loss of 22 cents.

Video: CNBC's Jim Goldman parses Yahoo's earnings.

Gross revenue, including payments to affiliated websites that carry Yahoo ads, rose 1 percent to $1.81 billion. Net revenue was $1.375 billion, compared with the average Wall Street forecast of $1.371 billion.

Yahoo said it expects first-quarter earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) of $365 million to $415 million, compared with an average forecast of $485 million. It also estimated revenue of $1.525 billion to $1.725 billion.

Yahoo, the leading provider of online display advertising, has been under pressure for nearly 12 months as it held fruitless merger or partnership talks with Microsoft, Google and Time Warner's AOL.

During that time Yahoo has lost market share in search advertising, while display ad sales have been badly hit industrywide by the U.S. recession.

Carol Bartz replaced Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang as chief executive earlier this month. Yang had been CEO for 18 months.


URL: http://www.cnbc.com/id/28873341/
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*~1Best~*

01/27/09 8:37 PM

#13902 RE: *~1Best~* #13899

Market Insider: Wednesday Look Ahead

MARKET INSIDER, BLOGS, PATTI DOMM, STOCKS, MARKETS, WALL STREET, OBAMA, INAUGURATION, OIL,
Posted By: Patti Domm | Executive Editor
cnbc.com
| 27 Jan 2009 | 08:17 PM ET

The Fed takes center stage Wednesday in a market that will see another deluge of earnings news.

Traders are also watching for more news on the Obama Administration's plans for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) and the proposal to develop a "bad bank" to hold toxic assets. CNBC's Steve Liesman clarified some aspects of that so-called "aggregator" bank in a report late Tuesday that said the plan is likely to be unveiled next week and could involve the purchase of common equities by the government.

Stocks Tuesday rose for a third day, with the financials up 3.5 percent. Financial stocks rose even more after hours on the CNBC report.

The Dow Tuesday rose 58 points to 8175, while the S&P 500 rose 9 points to 845.

"The market's acting fine with everything we've got going on," said Tim Smalls of Execution LLC. "What remains to be seen is what we'll see with the banks, what we'll see with the stimulus package."

The House of Representatives take up the $825 billion fiscal stimulus package Wednesday.

Smalls said the market showed some resilience when it rose off the 803 level on the S&P 500 last week. "Now we're trading 100 points above the low. That's not a bad little cushion. Are we out of the weeds? No. Are we going to test the lows? We may already have," he said.

"If we get through this week without a big sell off, or a big debacle, I'll take it."


Earnings reports Wednesday morning include AT&T, Boeing, ConocoPhillips, Wells Fargo, Hess, Baker Hughes, Wellpoint, General Dynamics, Legg Mason, Stanley Works and Southern Co. After the bell, Allstate, Murphy Oil, and Starbucks report.

In other corporate news, Bank of America holds a board meeting in Charlotte, N.C. The fate of CEO Ken Lewis is the topic of much speculation on Wall Street after the departure of Merrill Lynch CEO John Thain last week. Thain, who spoke to CNBC's Maria Bartiromo, denied that Merrill suprised Bank of America officials ahead of their merger with deeper losses and said they were made aware of what was going on at Merrill.

The Federal Open Market Committee is expected to release a statement Wednesday at 2:15 p.m., after its second day of meetings. However, there is little it can do in the way of rate cuts since it moved the Fed Funds target rate to a range of 0 to 0.25 percent at its last meeting.

Traders though say there could be some clarity from the Fed on some of its programs, including its plan to buy Treasurys.

Meanwhile, buyers jumped into Treasurys today as the government auctioned $40 billion in two-year notes. "We thought we'd get some cheap notes going into the FOMC. They actually came in pretty well. People had to cover shorts," said Michael Franzese, head of government trading at Standard Chartered.


The yield on the 10-year fell to 2.519 percent and the two-year fell to 0.809 percent.

Oil took a deep dive Tuesday, losing $4.15 per barrel, or 9 percent to $41.58 on concerns about weak demand. EIA inventory data is released at 10:30 a.m.

Business and government leaders continue to meet Wednesday in Davos, Switzerland at the World Economic Forum.

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URL: http://www.cnbc.com/id/28881904/