Skip to main content

Yahoo’s income drops 5 pct during fourth quarter

Scott Thompson
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Although many earnings announcements may have been lost in the wake of Apple’s $46.3 billion quarter, struggling Internet giant Yahoo also posted its earnings for the quarter ended December 31, 2011—and they weren’t nearly so rosey. The good news is that Yahoo managed to earn some $312 million during the quarter; the bad news is that figure is a five percent decrease from the same period in 2010. Although income from operations increased a bit year over year, Yahoo attributed the overall decline in revenue from decreasing revenues garnered from its search agreement with Microsoft. Measured by Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), Yahoo’s revenue for the quarter was $1.32 billion, and its revenue for the year some $4.98 billion—and that full-year figure represents a 21 percent decline compared to 2010.

“Yahoo continued to make progress in the quarter with operating income increasing ten percent year over year,” said newly-appointed Yahoo CEO Scott Thompson, in a statement. “In 2012 we will be aligning resources behind key areas of focus to enable us to move aggressively in market and grow our business, bringing innovative new products and experiences to both our users and advertisers.”

Recommended Videos

The bright spot in Yahoo’s financials was income derived from its own operations, which increased a comparatively swarthy ten percent compared to the same quarter a year ago. However, Yahoo’s overall income was down due to the portion of search advertising revenue that the company has to hand over to Microsoft. And Yahoo’s share of the online advertising business is slipping: according to e, Yahoo’s overall share of online advertising revenue dropped from 13.3 percent in 2010 to 11 percent in 2011—over the same period, Google managed to increase its share by an almost equivalent amount.

Thompson’s move into Yahoo’s CEO role was followed quickly by the departure of Yahoo co-founder (and one-time CEO) Jerry Yang. In a conference call with analysts, Thompson indicated that Yahoo’s “highest priority” at the moment was shoring up its display advertising business. In part, Thompson envisions doing that by leveraging one of Yahoo’s crown jewels—its base of more than 700 million users around the world. If Yahoo can convince those users to interact more with Yahoo services, it’s advertising business should be on solid footing—and that’s a far better position to be in than having to attract millions of new users to a service.

However, Thompson declined to comment on the possibility Yahoo may shed its stakes in Yahoo Japan and China’s Alibaba to fuel a turnaround.

Topics
Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
You can now try out ChatGPT Search for free
The ChatGPT Search icon on the prompt window

As part of its "12 Days of OpenAI" event, OpenAI has yet another update for ChatGPT, this time bringing its Search feature over to the free tier. The Google Search alternative was previously only for paid subscribers in the ChatGPT Plus or Pro tiers.

"We rolled it out for paid users about two months ago," Kevin Weil, OpenAI's chief product officer, said during Monday's livestream. "I can't imagine ChatGPT without Search now. I use it so often. I'm so excited to bring it to all of you for free starting today."

Read more
No, the Nvidia App isn’t killing your PC’s performance
The Nvidia app on the Windows desktop.

When I heard that the new Nvidia App could reduce performance by up to 15%, I was shocked. If this is the first you're hearing about it, I'm sure you're shocked, too. The news stems from Sebastian Castellanos, who posted on X about a big performance drop with the Nvidia App installed in both Black Myth: Wukong and The Talos Principle 2. Some news outlets ran with the claim, including Tom's Hardware and Dark Side of Gaming, showing original testing that backed up the performance loss.

The only problem? The Nvidia App isn't to blame.

Read more
This gaming PC with RTX 4070 is on sale for less than $1,000
The iBuyPower Y40 gaming PC with a keyboard and mouse.

A budget of $1,000 usually isn't enough for a fantastic gaming machine, but Walmart is making it happen with this offer for the iBuyPower Y40. The gaming desktop, which is powered by the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 graphics card, is currently available for only $999, following a $601 discount on its sticker price of $1,600. This is one of the most attractive gaming PC deals that we've found in recent memory, even with Black Friday less than a month behind us, so you're going to want to take advantage of it before the stock is sold out.

Why you should buy the iBuyPower Y40 gaming PC
The iBuyPower Y40 gaming PC is packed with components that will let you play the best PC games without any issues. In addition to the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4070 graphics card, it's equipped with the AMD Ryzen 7 7700 processor and 16GB of RAM, which is the best place to start for a gaming desktop according to our guide on how much RAM do you need. The gaming PC also comes with a liquid-cooling system, so it won't suffer from overheating if your gaming sessions last for several hours at a time.

Read more