Barclays Analyst Predicts YouTube Profitability

By bassist - Last updated: Thursday, January 14, 2010 - Save & Share - Leave a Comment

In a financial sense, Google’s acquisition of YouTube has never made a lot of sense; the site, which sold for $1.65 billion, hasn’t even turned a profit on a quarter-to-quarter basis yet.  But according to a prominent analyst, that’s about to change.

Doug Anmuth, who works for Barclays Capital, said today in a note, “[I]n 2010 we believe YouTube will start contributing positively to EPS. . . .  [W]ith YouTube monetizing more than 1 billion video views every week, and with strong sell-out rates on its home-page from larger advertisers – we note 90% of the top 50 Ad Age have advertised on YouTube – we believe the site can profitably take share of the branded display & video market.”

Anmuth then shared a couple of concrete numbers, continuing, “We project YouTube to generate $700 million in revenue in 2010, up 55% Y/Y.”

While $700 million might be good or bad, depending on what scale it’s measured on (remember, Google’s market cap is in the neighborhood of $190 billion), the 55 percent figure is great.  Entities that have been around for more than a few years don’t often pull off that sort of dramatic improvement, and it would be even more impressive given the current economic climate.

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