leider keine Zeit für Übersetzung:In the first quarter, Yahoo said four of its 42 Fortune 50 customers were not renewing contracts, noted Singer. Currently, roughly 30 percent of Yahoo's sales come from dot-com clients. Yahoo has told analysts to expect that figure to come down to between 15 and 20 percent by the end of the year.
If Yahoo can show that advertising is picking up and that it has a convincing strategy to leverage its consumer base through advertising or subscriptions, then its revenue and profit goals for the year may look achievable and conservative. For the full year, Yahoo is expected to earn 4 cents per share, down from 48 cents a year ago. Annual revenue is expected to fall 33 percent to $742 million from $1.1 billion last year, and then grow 22 percent to $902.6 million in 2002
More importantly, Yahoo needs to display that it can charge for its abundance of popular services.
For the second quarter, analysts expect the online media firm to break even, after earning 12 cents in the year-ago period. Quarterly revenue is expected to fall 35 percent to $175 million from $270 million in the same period a year ago.
many investors want to be convinced that Yahoo is making strides to reclaim its once-blue-chip Net media status.
Yahoo shares traded as low as $11.37 in early April. If the Nasdaq sneezes, that level may not be inconceivable.
That said, most analysts and fund managers agree that Yahoo is one of the survivors of the Internet and they stand ready to open their wallets to buy the stock in due time.
also wenn die auch ne schlechte Voraussage machen und erst Mitte nächstes Jahr ins Plus kommen,sind sie fällig.
Und zu Motorola:
Seid auf das Schlimmste gefasst,mehr Verlust und mehr Arbeitsplatzabbau,sagen Analysten
Don't expect any miracles out of Motorola Corp. Wednesday when it reports its second loss in as many quarters, analysts said. In fact, prepare for the worst: more losses and maybe even more job cuts.
That's because the world of wireless technology is not showing any signs of improvement, analysts said, making a second half recovery a moot point. Motorola will report its second-quarter results after the bell Wednesday.
There's no question whether Motorola (MOT: news, msgs, alerts) will post a loss for the second quarter, but how much. During its first-quarter call, Motorola's executives couldn't fathom a guess on the second quarter results, except to say it would be "a few cents larger" than the 9 cents a share Motorola lost in the first quarter.
Analysts reporting estimates to First Call/Thomson Financial have reached a consensus of a loss of 12 cents a share on $7.9 billion in revenue.
Motorola said then too that it expected to break even in the third quarter and be profitable again in the fourth quarter. That has analysts projecting a gain of 11 cents a share for the fourth quarter, but a full-year loss of 10 cents on sales of $33.9 billion.
As the world's No. 2 maker of cell phones, Motorola has been hard hit by the sales slowdown and inventory glut for replacement handsets.
If Yahoo can show that advertising is picking up and that it has a convincing strategy to leverage its consumer base through advertising or subscriptions, then its revenue and profit goals for the year may look achievable and conservative. For the full year, Yahoo is expected to earn 4 cents per share, down from 48 cents a year ago. Annual revenue is expected to fall 33 percent to $742 million from $1.1 billion last year, and then grow 22 percent to $902.6 million in 2002
More importantly, Yahoo needs to display that it can charge for its abundance of popular services.
For the second quarter, analysts expect the online media firm to break even, after earning 12 cents in the year-ago period. Quarterly revenue is expected to fall 35 percent to $175 million from $270 million in the same period a year ago.
many investors want to be convinced that Yahoo is making strides to reclaim its once-blue-chip Net media status.
Yahoo shares traded as low as $11.37 in early April. If the Nasdaq sneezes, that level may not be inconceivable.
That said, most analysts and fund managers agree that Yahoo is one of the survivors of the Internet and they stand ready to open their wallets to buy the stock in due time.
also wenn die auch ne schlechte Voraussage machen und erst Mitte nächstes Jahr ins Plus kommen,sind sie fällig.
Und zu Motorola:
Seid auf das Schlimmste gefasst,mehr Verlust und mehr Arbeitsplatzabbau,sagen Analysten
Don't expect any miracles out of Motorola Corp. Wednesday when it reports its second loss in as many quarters, analysts said. In fact, prepare for the worst: more losses and maybe even more job cuts.
That's because the world of wireless technology is not showing any signs of improvement, analysts said, making a second half recovery a moot point. Motorola will report its second-quarter results after the bell Wednesday.
There's no question whether Motorola (MOT: news, msgs, alerts) will post a loss for the second quarter, but how much. During its first-quarter call, Motorola's executives couldn't fathom a guess on the second quarter results, except to say it would be "a few cents larger" than the 9 cents a share Motorola lost in the first quarter.
Analysts reporting estimates to First Call/Thomson Financial have reached a consensus of a loss of 12 cents a share on $7.9 billion in revenue.
Motorola said then too that it expected to break even in the third quarter and be profitable again in the fourth quarter. That has analysts projecting a gain of 11 cents a share for the fourth quarter, but a full-year loss of 10 cents on sales of $33.9 billion.
As the world's No. 2 maker of cell phones, Motorola has been hard hit by the sales slowdown and inventory glut for replacement handsets.