Ebay revenues up 23 per cent

EBay posted stronger-than-expected quarterly revenue and earnings as more consumers shopped on its online marketplaces and used…

EBay posted stronger-than-expected quarterly revenue and earnings as more consumers shopped on its online marketplaces and used its PayPal payment service.

The group said second-quarter revenue jumped 23 per cent to $3.4 billion, while profit climbed 16 per cent to $730 million, or 56 cents per share.

EBay's third-quarter revenue and profit forecasts were slightly below analyst expectations. But the e-commerce giant stuck with its full-year guidance from earlier this year.

"We are increasingly confident in our outlook for 2012," chief financial officer Bob Swan said during a conference call with analysts.

READ MORE

EBay shares have slipped in recent weeks on concern a weak European economy might dent buying and selling on the company's online marketplace - and lucrative cross-border transactions in particular.

However, eBay said its Marketplaces business generated its strongest organic growth since 2006 - and highlighted strong growth in Europe and the Asia-Pacific region.

Shares of eBay rose 5.1 per cent to $42.53 in extended trading after the results.

EBay shares have gained more than 30 per cent so far this year, outpacing those of rival Amazon.com, on optimism that growth has resumed at the Marketplaces business and on an expansion of PayPal from its online roots into physical stores.

EBay's online marketplaces, the largest in the world, have lagged the growth of e-commerce and Amazon.com for several years. But under chief executive John Donahoe, eBay has invested a lot to improve the buying experience on the sites, partly by prodding sellers to provide more services such as free shipping and easier returns.

Earlier this year, Mr Donahoe said Marketplaces had turned the corner.

eBay said yesterday second-quarter gross merchandise volume, or GMV, on its US marketplace was $6.24 billion, excluding vehicle sales. That was up 14 per cent from a year earlier.

EBay executives said the company is seeing an increase in purchases by existing customers and growth in new users.EBay active users totaled 104.8 million at the end of the second quarter, up 8 per cent from a year earlier. The number of active registered PayPal accounts rose 13 per cent to 113.2 million in the same period, the company reported.

Mr Donahoe said the company's mobile tools and services drove much of this growth. EBay and PayPal's mobile businesses will each handle $10 billion worth of transactions this year, more than double a year earlier.

"Three or four years ago, you could only access eBay with a desktop or laptop," Mr Donahoe said. "Now you can access eBay anytime with a smartphone."

In the second quarter, about 600,000 shoppers made their first purchase on eBay with a mobile device, the chief executive noted.

"Mobile is a movement that consumers want and we've invested heavily in that," Mr Donahoe said. "We want to pour kerosene on that fire to keep it going."

Reuters