eBay
trims 2014 revenue outlook amid economic fears
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[October 16, 2014]
By Deepa Seetharaman
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - EBay Inc trimmed
its full-year revenue forecast on Wednesday, signaling a
weaker-than-expected holiday shopping season for the e-commerce company
as it prepares to split from its fast-growing payments arm, PayPal.
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EBay's report comes as weak economic data from the United States and
China fan fears of a global slowdown, forcing investors to
re-examine the world economy only just emerging from one of the
worst recessions in history.
"We've gotten indications from some luxury retailers over the last
couple of days that times have been more challenging," said Scott
Kessler, equity analyst at S&P Capital IQ.
"There are a lot of question marks when it comes to the sentiment on
spending of consumers as we approach the holiday shopping season."
EBay shares fell more than 3 percent in after-hours trading.
U.S. retail sales, which account for about one-third of consumer
spending, recorded their first decline since January last month.
Some analysts expressed concern over eBay's marketplaces division,
which grew less than some forecast.
Kessler added that eBay's notable exposure to Europe might have also
played a role in depressing its outlook.
EBay earned 68 cents per share in the third quarter, in line with
the average analyst estimate of 67 cents per share, according to
Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
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The results comes weeks after eBay announced it was spinning off its
PayPal payments unit in 2015.
EBay cut its full-year revenue outlook to between $17.85 billion and
$17.95 billion from its previous range of $18 billion to $18.3
billion.
The company also forecast fourth-quarter revenue of less than $5
billion, falling short of the $5.2 billion expected by Wall Street.
EBay expects fourth-quarter earnings per share between 88 cents and
91 cents, while Wall Street expected 91 cents.
(Reporting by Deepa Seetharaman; Editing by Chris Reese and Andre
Grenon)
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