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eBay holiday forecast disappoints

By Reuters
US, 17 Oct 2013

eBay yesterday gave a disappointing holiday forecast, saying the US economic environment, including consumer confidence, had deteriorated in part because of the shutdown of the US government.

Shares of the e-commerce company fell 5.7% in after-hours trading.

CFO Bob Swan told investors during a conference call that industry growth rates for e-commerce had shrunk to about 13% in the third quarter, from about 16% in the previous quarter.

"We really haven't seen any more positive signs in October," he added.

Earlier in the day, US Senate leaders announced a deal to reopen the government and avert a US debt default.

But the deal would only fund the government until 15 January, so Americans face the possibility of another government shutdown.

"We won't know until weeks from now, and I hope this deal sticks," eBay CEO John Donahoe said when asked if the end of the conflict would lift mood of shoppers.

Data firm ShopperTrak has forecast the slowest holiday sales growth since 2009, and last week, September retail sales showed US shoppers were cautious, following a disappointing second quarter for many retailers.

US consumer confidence slid last month to its lowest since May, according to a report released in late September by the Conference Board, an industry group.

eBay expects revenue of between $4.5 billion and $4.6 billion for the fourth quarter, ending 31 December, compared with the $4.64 billion estimated by analysts, according to Thomson Reuters.

Net income for its third quarter was $689 million, or 53 cents a share, up from $597 million, or 45 cents a share, a year earlier. Excluding the benefit of its sales of stakes in e-commerce companies RueLaLa and ShopRunner, eBay earned 64 cents, one cent better than expected. Revenue rose 14.3% to $3.89 billion.

For the holiday quarter, eBay expects a profit of 79 cents to 81 cents a share, while Wall Street analysts estimate 83 cents. The company kept its full-year forecasts, but CFO Swan said revenue and profits are likely to come in at the low end of eBay's forecast.

PayPal, eBay's online payments division, reported that total payments volume rose 24.7% to $43.8 billion.

eBay lagged behind rival Amazon for several years, but Donahoe has led a turnaround in recent years that focuses on mobile shoppers, international expansion and tie-ups with local physical stores. Amazon, whose shares fell 1.2% in after-hours trade on Wednesday, reports results next week.

eBay said that gross merchandise volume, or the dollar value of merchandise sold on its marketplaces, rose 12.7% to $18.4 billion in the US, excluding auto sales.

eBay said the environment in Europe and Asia was mostly stable. In July, the company said Europe was weighing on its results.

The e-commerce company's third-quarter profit was boosted by its PayPal online payments business as consumers made greater use of its PayPal service.

This summer, eBay expanded its eBay now same-day delivery service into new markets, and last month bought payments gateway Braintree for about $800 million to strengthen PayPal's presence on mobile devices.


To compete with Amazon's Prime service, PayPal is offering for a limited time free two-day shipping for items paid for with that service.

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