Google beats estimates as shares jump 8%

Web search leader Google has beat Wall Street expectations with a 79 per cent jump in revenue tied to taking market share gains…

Web search leader Google has beat Wall Street expectations with a 79 per cent jump in revenue tied to taking market share gains from rivals such as Yahoo.

Google, recovering from a series of recent stumbles, saw its shares jump 8 per cent after it reported net income of $592 million, or $1.95 per diluted share - up 60 per cent from the year-earlier quarter's $372 million, or $1.29 per share.

Spectacular gains in the stock occurred after its initial public offering in 2004, based on a track record of outpacing Wall Street forecasts. But weak growth in Britain late last year led to its first disappointing quarter and shares fell.

Revenue rose to $2.25 billion - slightly above Wall Street forecasts, which ranged from $2.05 billion to $2.24 billion, according to Reuters Estimates. Revenue included $723 million in traffic acquisition costs, the cut affiliated websites take for running Google advertising on their own sites.

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"We know that we gained [market] share on an absolute basis," chief executive Eric Schmidt said. "It looks like we gained share faster than all others," he noted of industry research figures for the US search market.

The first-quarter net profit includes charges of $115 million for stock-based compensation, and to cover legal fees of $30 million to settle a lawsuit that concerned the abuse of Google's pay-per-click advertising system by outside parties. These were partly offset by tax benefits of $39 million.