Yahoo Inc.’s financial funk deepened at the end of 2007, prompting the slumping Internet icon to draw up plans to lay off 1,000 workers.
Yahoo disclosed the forthcoming 7% reduction in its 14,300-employee workforce during a Tuesday conference call to review a 23% decline in its fourth-quarter profit.
Yahoo didn’t specify which areas of its operations will be trimmed but indicated further details will be released by mid-February.
“This is a necessary step in our transformation,” Yahoo chief executive Jerry Yang said during the conference call.
Yahoo earned US$205.7 million, or 15 cents per share, during 2007’s final three months, a 23% drop from net income of $268.7 million, or 19 cents per share, at the same time in 2006.
Revenue for the period totalled $1.83 billion, an improvement of 8% over $1.7 billion in 2006.
After subtracting commissions paid to its advertising partner, Yahoo’s revenue fell to $1.4 billion, in line with analyst estimates.
Yang signalled the company has challenges ahead. “While we will continue to face headwinds this year, we believe that the moves we are making will help us exit 2008 stronger and more competitive and return to higher levels of operating cash flow growth in 2009,” Yang said in a statement.
Excluding ad commissions, Yahoo estimated its revenue this year will range from $5.35 billion to $5.95 billion.
Last year marked the first time Yahoo’s earnings have dropped from the previous year since the company lost $93 million in 2001 during the aftermath of the dot-com bust.
Unlike in 2001, Yahoo hasn’t stopped making money. But the company’s 2007 profit fell 12% to $660 million even though advertisers spent more than ever on the Internet, where Yahoo still draws one of the web’s largest audiences.
The bulk of that additional ad revenue has been pouring into Internet search leader Google Inc.
Yahoo has been struggling to attract teenagers and young adults who are gravitating to more trendy online hangouts like Facebook.com and News Corp.’s MySpace.com.