- Vodafone's Sales in Line; Reiterates Outlook
- Dow 9000: What Does It Mean and Where Next?
- Friday Look Ahead: Bull Could Take a Rest
- CIT May Sell Aviation-Finance, Rail-Finance Ops: WSJ
- Samsung Electronics Quarterly Profit Beats Forecasts
- Hynix Loss Narrows Sharply on Better Chip Market
- Top States for Business 2009—and the Winner Is ...
- Microsoft's Sharp Revenue Drop Sends Shares Tumbling
- AmEx Shares Fall as Topline Misses Forecast
- Art Cashin: Here's What's Driving the Rally
- Microsoft Slumps; Time to Buy?
- Matsui, Giambi, Reggie & LeBron Buy A Piece Of Yankee Stadium
- Time to Play Real Estate — with REITs: Strategist
- Lilly's Side-Effect Slip-Up
- GM Puts New Leaders in Place
- Shadow Housing Inventory? Only the Banks Know
- Microsoft Outlook Will Be ‘Really Good’: Analyst
- Market Has Another 10-15% Upside: Strategist
- UK agency fines EDF Energy Networks 2 mln pounds
- Report: Calif. needs to think small to save water
- Danone H1 profit up 44 percent
- Gov't considers 7 states for mercury site
- Vodafone Q1 revenue up 9.3 percent
- Merck Q2 net profit falls 48 percent to euro109 M
- Sweden's Saab posts Q2 drop in profits
- Price fixers face jail under Australia law change
- Vietnam's trade deficit narrows, inflation eases
BEIJING - Baidu Inc., which operates China's leading Internet search engine, said Friday its quarterly profit rose 44.6 percent from a year earlier on strong growth in revenue and numbers of advertisers.
Net income for the three months ending June 30 was 383.3 million yuan ($56.1 million), or 11.02 yuan ($1.61) per share, the Beijing-based company said. Revenue rose 36.7 percent from a year earlier to just under 1.1 billion yuan ($160.7 million).
"Our focus on execution drove another strong quarter for Baidu," Robin Li, Baidu's chairman and CEO, said in a statement.
Consumer-oriented companies such as Baidu have seen business rebound as Beijing's 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) economic stimulus pumps money into the economy and helped to boost retail spending.
The number of active online marketing customers rose to 203,000, up 12.2 percent from a year earlier and 9.7 percent from the previous quarter, Baidu said. It said revenue per online marketing customer rose 22.7 percent from the same period of 2008.
China has the world's biggest population of Internet users, with 338 million people online by the end of June, though its market is still smaller in financial terms that those of the United States, South Korea and some other countries.
Baidu forecast revenue of 1.2 billion to 1.3 billion yuan ($184 million to $189 million) for the next quarter, a 15 to 18 percent increase over a year earlier.
___
On the Net:
Baidu Inc.: http://www.baidu.com




