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Microcap & Penny Stocks : Bid.com International (BIDS) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: James W who wrote (34159)7/26/1999 6:00:00 PM
From: hsg  Respond to of 37507
 
I think BII is relatively cheap, eh?

eBay bids higher in 2Q
Online auction site beats estimates by a
penny as user base rises 46%
July 26, 1999: 5:49 p.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - eBay Inc. Monday edged out
Wall Street estimates for its second-quarter earnings
as the virtual auction house added 1.7 million
registered users to its site during the period.
For the quarter ended June 30, the San Jose,
Calif.-based company posted a pro-forma profit of
$5.1 million, or 4 cents a share. Analysts polled by
First Call expected eBay (EBAY) to earn 3 cents a
share. Revenue jumped 327 percent to $38.2 million.
The results exclude merger-related costs.
Including those items, eBay earned $816,000, or a
penny a share.
In the year-ago quarter, eBay posted a pro-forma
profit of $2.5 million, or 2 cents a share, on $8.9
million in revenue.
Prior to the earnings announcement, eBay shares
fell 3-7/16 to close at 104-3/8 on the Nasdaq stock
market. Its stock soared as high as 109-1/2 in
after-hours trading on the Instinet system before
plunging to 100 shortly after 5:30 p.m. ET.


eBay shares since going public last year

eBay saw its revenue climb 327 percent despite a
$3.9 million hit due to auction extensions and refunds
as a result of a 22-hour site outage last month.
eBay attributed much of its revenue spike to a 46
percent increase in registered users during the
quarter. The site now counts 5.6 million registered
users, up from 3.8 million at the end of the first
quarter.
The company also hosted 29.4 million auctions
during the quarter, up 28 percent from the 22.9
million auctions in the first quarter.
"We have tremendous momentum in our flagship
business," said Meg Whitman, eBay president and
chief executive officer. "Our customers now transact
well over $200 million in gross merchandise sales per
month, making this the most vibrant consumer
e-commerce site on the entire Internet."
Increased spending on operations and customer
support, however, cut eBay's gross margins to 77
percent from 88 percent in the year-ago period.
Gary Bengier, eBay chief financial officer, said the
company expects gross margins to climb above 80
percent next year.
eBay made several deals during the quarter, most
notably its $260 million acquisition of auction house
Butterfield & Butterfield. The company also acquired
German online trading community alando.de.
Whitman said eBay "will continue to invest
prudently, but aggressively," particularly in the
international person-to-person online trading market.
For the first half of 1999, eBay reported a profit of
$12.1 million, or 9 cents a share, on $72.2 million in
revenue, compared with first-half 1998 earnings of $3
million, or 3 cents a share, on $14.9 million in
revenue.