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Shanda posts loss, shares plunge
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-02-28 15:44

Shanda Interactive Entertainment Ltd. , China's top online game operator, on Monday said it swung to a quarterly loss and missed Wall Street revenue targets as online game sales flagged, sending shares down after hours as much as 23 percent.

Shanda, which arrived early to the market, has seen the popularity of its online game "The Legend of Mir II" fade in popularity and has begun offering a free-to-play model for some of its major multi-player online role-playing games as it also has been grappling with increased competition.

The Shanghai company had a net loss of 538.9 million yuan ($66.8 million) or 7.58 yuan (94 cents) per American Depositary Share, compared with year-earlier net income of 231.4 million yuan.

A year earlier the company posted net income of 231.4 million yuan or 3.12 yuan per ADS.

The company said the loss was primarily due to a noncash impairment charge of 521.5 million yuan ($64.6 million), or 90 cents per ADS, to reflect the fair value of Shanda's 38 percent stake in South Korean game developer Actoz.

Net revenue fell 16.3 percent to 360.5 million yuan ($44.7 million) as online game revenue, including multi-player online role-playing games and casual games, fell just over 20 percent year over year.

Analysts, on average, had expected the company to have revenue of $58.4 million, according to Reuters Estimates.

China is one of the world's top online gaming markets, generating revenue of nearly $600 million in 2005, and is expected to grow to $758 million this year, according to an estimate from DBS.

Rival The9 Ltd. recently reported a more than tenfold year-on-year gain in fourth-quarter profit, largely on the strength of "World of Warcraft," the blockbuster online game marketed by a unit of Vivendi Universal S.A. , which The9 hosts in China.

Shares of Shanda, which closed at $16.93 on the Nasdaq, fell 19.7 percent to $13.60 in extended trade on Inet.



 
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