Expedia.com (NASDAQ: EXPE), reported their Q4 2007 revenues on Feb 7. With annual global bookings just short of $20 billion, they are the world’s largest online travel agency. I have covered Expedia’s business offerings in the Web 3.0 series in detail. Let’s take a look at their latest financials. >>>
It has been almost two years since I last wrote about TiVO when I said that it should get out of the retail hardware business model. Its focus has now shifted to selling set-top software to multichannel operators. >>>
Baidu.com (NASDAQ: BIDU) is the leading Chinese language internet search engine. According to iResearch, Baidu has 72% share of the Chinese language web search market and is the third most popular search engine according to comScore. >>>
On February 28, T-Mobile USA reported its Q4 and full year 2007 results. Earlier coverage is available here and here. >>>
Vijay Nagarajan recently did a complete analysis on InterDigital that covers his speculation on Qualcomm acquiring it. Check out the posts The Infineon Alliance, Inside the iPhone, and The Apple Deal which look at how it is going to reap the benefits from the boom in the 3G market. >>>
On February 28, Sprint Nextel Corp. (NYSE: S) reported disappointing results for fourth quarter and full-year 2007 with a huge net loss in Q4 due to a write-down of its Nextel acquisition in 2005 for $36 billion. Earlier coverage is available here and here in which I had looked at Sprint’s troubles including the launch of iPhone. >>>
MercadoLibre (NASD: MELI), the leader in e-commerce in Latin America, announced fourth quarter earnings yesterday.
Their revenues for Q4 at $26.9 million, a year on year growth of 73.9%, were in line with market expectations. Their Marketplace revenues grew 61.5% to $21.1 million and Payments revenues grew 141.1% to $5.8 million over the same period last year. >>>
Vijay Nagarajan recently completed his deep-dive analysis on Broadcom (Nasdaq: BRCM). My earlier posts are available here and here. >>>
Last week on February 27, Nortel Networks Corporation [NYSE/TSX: NT] reported fourth quarter net loss of $844 million, or $1.70 per share. Added to the economic slowdown and low North American carrier spending, Nortel also had to deal with a change in Canadian tax profile with a $1.1 billion tax write-down. Following 2900 job cuts in 2007, it plans to save $300 million in 2008 by cutting 2100 more jobs and moving 1000 positions to high-growth, low-cost locations. Earlier coverage is available here and here. >>>
Yesterday, Dell posted its financial results for Q4 and fiscal year 2008 that ended February 1, 2008. Earlier coverage is available here and here. In my last post on Dell, I had said that its turnaround wasn’t going so badly, but that I would like to see a smartphone strategy. A smartphone isn’t on the horizon yet. Let us see how it fared this quarter. >>>