Baidu posts 87 percent profit gain, shares surge
SEATTLE (Reuters) - Baidu.com Inc (BIDU.O), China's top search engine, said on Wednesday its quarterly profit rose 87 percent and forecast another surge in revenue, boosted by Internet traffic growth ahead from the Beijing Olympics.
Baidu shares rose 11 percent in after-hours trading.
Beijing-based Baidu posted a second-quarter profit of 265 million yuan ($38.6 million) for the three months ended June 30, compared with 141.9 million yuan a year earlier.
The result beat the average expectation for net profit of $35.5 million, according to eight analysts polled by Reuters Estimates.
Baidu's stock, which has risen almost 31 percent in the quarter, closed down 1.25 percent at $288.70 on Wednesday before the results were announced. In extended trading, Baidu shares rose to $319.77.
Revenue doubled to 802.6 million yuan ($117 million) in the quarter, compared with 401.3 million yuan a year earlier.
The company forecast revenue in the current quarter in a range between $905 million yuan ($132 million) and $935 million yuan ($136 million), representing a rise of between 82 percent to 88 percent from a year earlier.
Analysts, on average, are forecasting third-quarter revenue of $135.76 million, according to Reuters.
While Baidu is not a direct beneficiary of the Olympics, it will benefit from higher Internet usage during and after the event and is likely to double its revenue this year, CLSA analyst Eli nor Leung wrote in a research note.
Baidu dominated China's Web search market in the second quarter, with market share of nearly 63 percent, according to data firm research. Google Inc (GOOG.O) had 26 percent and Yahoo China was third with nearly 8 percent of the 1.3 billion yuan ($190.6 million) market, it said.
Growth in China's Internet market will slow until 2010, but still keep growing at more than 30 percent annually. It is expected to hit 137.5 billion yuan in 2010, with 600 million Web users, according to research firm Analysis International.
($1=6.8591 yuan)
(Reporting by Sophie Taylor and Dai Wakabayashi in Seattle; editing by Jeffrey Bunkie)
© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved

