JohnDonahoe posts
FeedPosted Apr 22nd 2009 5:45PM by Michael Fowlkes (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the Bell, Major Movement, Earnings Reports, Good news, Products and Services, Competitive Strategy, eBay (EBAY), Technology, Recession

Shares of the popular internet auction site
eBay, Inc. (NASDAQ:
EBAY) are moving strongly higher today following its first quarter earnings numbers that came in well
above analyst estimates.
As we discussed in our earnings preview, we knew that it was going to be
a tough quarter for the company, which had sales drop in the face of declining consumer sales. Despite this, the company was able to post first quarter earnings of 39 cents per share, which is handily above the 32 cents per share that analysts were expecting to see. It earned 42 cents per share during the same period last year.
Continue reading eBay jumps following first quarter earnings
Posted Apr 3rd 2009 11:40AM by Peter Cohan (RSS feed)
Filed under: eBay (EBAY), Motorola (MOT), Citigroup Inc. (C), American Express (AXP), Financial Crisis
There could be an opportunity to tweak the way we pay CEOs of big public companies. I hope this doesn't sound too harsh. But when you consider that the average 2008 compensation for the 10 highest paid public company CEOs was $40.7 million, while their companies lost half, or $30 billion, worth of their stock market value -- I wonder whether some change may be in order.
The year 2008 put a big exclamation mark on, hopefully, the end of an eight-year sentence of stabbing common shareholders in the back. Of the 10 highest paid CEOs, here are the four who destroyed the most stock market value while getting well above average pay. The companies are listed in descending order of the percentage destruction in stock market value, along with the CEO's 2008 compensation and loss in stock market capitalization:
-
Citigroup (NYSE:
C) paid CEO Vikram Pandit $38.2 million while its stock fell 78% destroying $124 billion in stock market value
-
Motorola (NYSE:
MOT) CEO Sanjay Jha made $104 million while overseeing a 75% stock plunge which wiped out $27.9 billion in stock market value
Continue reading Pay for performance? Try pay for failure: CEOs paid millions to lose billions
Posted Jan 29th 2008 4:47PM by Gary Sattler (RSS feed)
Filed under: Management, Consumer Experience, eBay (EBAY)
As an active seller on eBay (under my wife's account), I feel these matters need to be brought to the proper authority.Dear Mr. Donahoe,
It is with due respect and great interest that I witness your taking of the helm at
eBay Inc. (NASDAQ:
EBAY). Please take good care of her because many people, including myself, do love her dearly. There are just a few things which I believe need to be addressed in the pursuit of eBay's future success. Please give the following matters some of your earnestly deserved attention.
In my view, eBay's feedback system is broken. It sometimes becomes a tool of unwarranted attacks. Unsavory characters sometimes use it to extort compliance from unseasoned and defenseless buyers. This needs to be stopped. Please put some of your best people on this concern so it may be resolved. It's an issue of trust sir, and must be corrected for the health of the market place.
When considering changes in fee structure, could you do the sellers just one small benefit? Could you make it so the sellers get to keep a bit more of the profit from their work? It is understood that eBay as a corporation is in business to make money and I believe the sellers do honestly respect that. However, I assume that they also are in business to make money, please respect that position in kind. I believe that if you can see your way clear to letting the sellers keep a bit more of the profits, they in turn shall increase their presence in the market place. I'd expect that they'd gladly give you record breaking volume when given the proper incentive to do exactly that.
Continue reading A letter to John Donahoe at eBay
Posted Jan 24th 2008 3:36PM by Michael Fowlkes (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Forecasts, Products and Services, Management, Consumer Experience, Competitive Strategy, eBay (EBAY), Amazon.com (AMZN), Marketing and Advertising

When we took a look at
eBay (NASDAQ:
EBAY)'s
fourth-quarter earnings last night, we also made note that long-time CEO Meg Whitman would be stepping down, to be replaced by John Donahoe. We wondered what changes Mr. Donahoe would be bringing to his new position, and some of those answers have come quicker than we expected, as
Donahoe has already announced a few changes that we can expect to see.
One thing consistently on the mind of eBay users is the website's fee structures. Since last year, users have been openly voicing their disappointment with what they consider to be abnormally high selling fees, and it seems like Donahoe will quickly look to address these concerns.
Donahoe said that within a few weeks, we will be seeing a brand new fee structure from eBay. In response to what users are demanding, eBay is planning to lower its upfront listing fees, but at the same time will be raising final selling fees. These final fees are only paid once an item has been successfully sold, and I am sure that users will not like to hear this too much, but they should be happy to hear that the initial listing fees are going to be reduced.
Continue reading New eBay CEO John Donahoe looks to make a quick impression
Posted Jan 23rd 2008 6:38PM by Michael Fowlkes (RSS feed)
Filed under: Earnings Reports, Forecasts, Bad News, From the Boards, Press Releases, Products and Services, Management, Insiders, Consumer Experience, Competitive Strategy, eBay (EBAY), Amazon.com (AMZN), Marketing and Advertising

Shares of e-commerce giant
eBay Inc. (NASDAQ:
EBAY) are trading around 7% lower in after hours trading today following its
fourth quarter earnings release shortly after the market close.
As I looked at in my
earnings preview, the company has been struggling to keep up with the competition in its auction business. Two key components that have hurt eBay's auction business are (1) raising fees that have left some of the company's long term users looking for other venues to do their business, and (2) large number of fraudulent items on the site.
The company announced that its fourth quarter numbers were actually better than Wall Street had expected, with earnings per share of 45 cents per share, easily topping the
41 cents that analysts had been expecting to see.
Continue reading eBay falls on weak forecast, CEO Meg Whitman steps down
Posted Jan 22nd 2008 8:00AM by Zac Bissonnette (RSS feed)
Filed under: Management, eBay (EBAY)
The Wall Street Journal is reporting [subscription required] that eBay (NASDAQ: EBAY) CEO Meg Whitman could be preparing to retire, possibly within the next few weeks.
John Donahoe, who has been president of eBay's auction business since 2005, is sought to be the most likely candidate to succeed Ms. Whitman, who has been CEO for nearly 10 years.
Overall, Ms. Whitman has done an admirable job as CEO of the company, as evidenced by the stock's strong performance since its IPO. But over the past five years, shares of eBay have provided essentially flat performance as the company struggles to find ways to deal with slowing growth in the auction business.
Shortly after joining the company, Whitman said that no CEO should stay more than 10 years because a fresh perspective is needed at that point. With her 10 year anniversary approaching in March, she could be staying true to her word.
If she does in fact retire, look for her to stay active working on the presidential bid of Mitt Romney, whom she worked with at Bain Capital.