Samsung Electronics made an operating profit of 8.78 trillion won ($7.9 billion) in the first quarter of 2013, matching its guidance and representing a more than 50 percent improvement on its performance last year. Revenues were 52.87 trillion won ($47.6 billion), and net profit was 7.15 trillion won ($6.45 billion). The company said strong smartphone sales coupled with reduced marketing expenses helped boost its IT & Mobile Communications division to revenues of 32.82 trillion alone. However, Samsung's revenues were hit by seasonality — the company took in 6 percent less cash than in the previous quarter — and what it describes as a sluggish economy that meant lower TV and home appliance sales.
Friday, April 26, 2013
Strong smartphone sales boost Samsung to $7.9 billion profit in Q1 2013
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Nokia hits $7.7 billion in revenue for Q1 2013 with 5.6 million Lumias sold
Nokia may have seen an operating loss in Q1 2013, but the news isn't all bad. The company saw revenue of $7.7 billion and managed to sell 5.6 million Lumias, which equates to a 30 percent increase in handset sales over last quarter. As for earnings, Nokia put a shiny buff on them by trumpeting a net profit of $236 million using the non-IFRS accounting method. By stricter IFRS rules, it actually lost $150 million, but that still compares favorably to the vast billion dollar losses it made in the same quarter of 2012...
Friday, April 5, 2013
Samsung estimates $7.75 billion in Q1 profits, up 45 percent over last year
Samsung is announcing its earnings estimate for Q1 2012, and everything seems to be on the upswing. The company thinks its operating profit will land between 8.5 and 8.9 trillion won ($7.56 - $7.92 billion) for the quarter — that’s a big increase over the 5.85 trillion won the company pulled in during the same quarter last year. Revenues are also up, from 45.27 trillion won a year ago to somewhere between 51 and 53 trillion ($45.39 - $47.17 billion) this time around.
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Groupon CEO: All Is Well! Nothing to See Here! Carry On!

Andrew Mason says Groupon is “better positioned than any other company in the world to plug local commerce into the Web,” but you wouldn’t know it from the daily deals site’s latest earnings: A fourth-quarter GAAP loss of 12 cents per share — 10 cents more than Wall Street was looking for.
As Groupon’s shares tanked in after-hours trading, Mason fielded questions from analysts on the company’s earnings call, but didn’t do much to explain how the company is going to scale its core online-coupon business. Instead, he did all that he could to paint a happy face on today’s sad results, tossing out sound bites that glossed over the issues troubling the company...
Friday, February 8, 2013
How LinkedIn Delivered A Killer Quarter
LinkedIn just beat expectations for its fourth-quarter earnings—like it did last quarter.
How does CEO Jeff Weiner and his team keep doing it?
Shareholders should thank "Project Inversion."
That was an effort Weiner pushed to revamp LinkedIn's technical infrastructure and site architecture.
It's the kind of long-term investment in boring, wonky stuff that rarely gets Wall Street excited.
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Yahoo Perks Up Amid Q4 Growth And Mayer's Plan To Right The Ship
Yesterday In its fourth quarter earnings call, Yahoo reported its first revenue growth spurt in four years. The company saw 2% year-over-year growth for the first time since 2008, with a net income of $272.3 million in the fourth quarter. The numbers beat out Wall Street estimates by 30%, with shares opening at $20.87 - the highest point Yahoo's stock had seen since its 2008 era highs.
All eyes are on CEO Marissa Mayer, former Google engineer and executive, who is widely credited with jump-starting Yahoo's stock into late 2012. Confidence in Mayer has inspired a much-needed morale boost for the company, which is still struggling to find its footing among massive, savvier competitors like Google and Facebook.
Friday, October 26, 2012
Amazon Q3 2012 earnings: $13.18 billion revenue, net loss of $274 million
Amazon has just released its earnings for the third quarter of the year and it looks like it's slightly off analysts' expectations. The company reported $13.18 billion in revenue (a growth of 27 percent) and an operating loss of $28 million, with net income standing at a loss of $274 million. As Amazon notes, though, a chunk of that, some $169 million, comes from losses resulting from its investment in LivingSocial -- it says the figure is "primarily attributable to its impairment charge of certain assets, including goodwill." Expectedly, the company still isn't offering any specific numbers for device sales, noting only that the Kindle Fire HD is the number one selling product across Amazon worldwide, and that the next two bestselling products worldwide are the Kindle Paperwhite and the $69 Kindle. As for its outlook for the next quarter, the company is expecting net sales of between $20.25 billion and $22.75 billion, and operating income of anywhere from a loss of $490 million to a profit of $310 million. You can find the company's full breakdown of all the numbers at the link below.
Apple’s Fiscal Q4 2012 Results: $36 Billion In Revenue, Net Profit Of $8.2 Billion, Earnings Of $8.67 Per Share
Apple has just released its fiscal Q4 2012 earnings, and the consumer computing giant reported generating $36 billion in revenue (compared to $35 billion in Q3, and $28.27 billion in the year-ago quarter).
The company also recorded profits of $8.2 billion (compared to $8.8 billion in Q3, and $6.62 billion in Q4 2011), which works out to diluted earnings of $8.67 per share.
Friday, October 19, 2012
Why Google’s revenue is a half billion dollars less than everyone expected
The takeaway from Google’s prematurely released earnings report: They still haven’t figured out mobile. The company came up a half a billion dollars short of what analysts had projected for the quarter. Here are some explanations.
Friday, April 27, 2012
With aging hardware, Nintendo posts first yearly loss of $460 million
The next console needs to get here quickly for Nintendo. The game hardware company announced its first annual operating loss of 37.3 billion yen ($459.54 million) from 2011 to 2012. They anticipate a turnaround in numbers at the same level in the positive this year as a next generation console is expected.
Price cuts to their systems weren’t enough to keep sales from dropping 36.2%.
Nintendo intends to sell the 3DS “below cost” soon, following strong sales after a substantial price cut last year. Still, they weren’t anywhere near the numbers of the original DS, selling 13.53 million 3DS devices versus 80.2 million of the original DS. The original DS still managed to sell 5.1 million units in the last year.
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Apple Q2 2012 Earnings

Apple's earnings numbers are out!
It's another blow out quarter for Apple, and the stock is up 7% after-hours.
It beat on revenue and earnings. It also beat on iPhone sales.
It missed on iPad sales, and the guidance was lower than expected.
Below are all the key numbers.
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Tech Companies Spent $20 Billion Acquiring Software Firms Last Quarter

This must be a good sign for the economy.
Last quarter, 375 software companies were acquired and their buyers spent a healthy $20 billion overall, 10 percent more than the year-ago quarter.
So says Berkery Noyes in its quarterly M&A report. The largest deal -- by far -- was Cisco's nearly $5 billion purchase of NDS Group.
There were three hot areas where the most deals took place...
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
U.S. online spending hit $50 billion last quarter

The holiday season triggered a healthy surge in online spending, according to stats released yesterday by ComScore.
For 2011's final quarter, online spending in the United States hit $49.7 billion, a 14 percent jump from a year ago. That marked the ninth quarter in a row of positive year-over-year growth and the fifth consecutive quarter of double-digit gains.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Apple's Profit Was Higher Than Google's Revenue Last Quarter

Good catch by Farhad Manjoo: Apple earned $13.1 billion in income in the quarter ending December 31 last year — higher than Google's $10.6 billion in revenue in the same quarter.
Apple brought in $46.3 billion in revenue in the fourth quarter, completely smashing Wall Street expectations. Google missed Wall Street's estimates for its fourth-quarter earnings and revenue.
Also, Apple is twice as valuable as Google — and its shares have shot up more than 7% on Apple's earnings announcement today.
Thursday, January 5, 2012
Netflix members watched 2 billion hours of video in Q4 2011
Netflix has proudly revealed that its customers watched roughly 10 times the amount of video content each month than users watch on Hulu.
Netflix may be down, but it’s not out. The streaming and DVD rental company announced today that its more than 20 million members worldwide watched a combined total of more than 2 billion hours of television and movies during the last three months of 2011. This equals out to an average of about 33 hours of video watching per month for each user — which isn’t hard to imagine considering the increasingly popular practice of watching entire seasons, or multiple seasons, of shows all in one sitting.
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Dell Q3 earnings: Better than expected, still not great
Dell reported better-than-expected third quarter earnings, no revenue growth and provided an anemic revenue growth picture for the fiscal year.
The PC maker reported fiscal third quarter earnings of $893 million, or 49 cents a share, on revenue of $15.36 million, flat with the year ago quarter. Non-GAAP earnings were 54 cents a share.
Guess What Was The Best Selling Smartphone In Q3

Despite being 1.5 years old, the iPhone 4 was still the best selling smartphone in the U.S. for Q3, says research group NPD, via Dan Frommer at SplatF.
That's impressive considering it was a down quarter for the iPhone, and Android is getting stronger all the time.
Monday, November 7, 2011
Apple iPhone takes 52% of third quarter industry profits
Apple commanded 52% of the smartphone market profits with the iPhone in 2011's third quarter.
In Smartphone news, the iPhone is making a lot of money for Apple—more than half the industry’s overall profits belong to the Cupertino-based company. Though Samsung has pushed way ahead of Apple for sales in the September quarter, Apple managed to command 52% of the profits with the iPhone.
Saturday, November 5, 2011
Zynga Is Still Profitable, Made $12.5 Million In Third Quarter Off $307 Million In Revenue

Zynga made $12.5 million in the third quarter this year — down 54 percent from $27 million in the third quarter last year — off $307 million in revenue, according to an updated S-1 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Groupon shares soar in early trading

Daily-deals provider Groupon has gone public at last, and its shares soared from the start.
In the opening minutes, Groupon was trading up to $29.20, a 46 percent gain on its opening price of $20 per share.
Groupon closed out its first day on the market up 30 percent to $26.11.