China's Tencent Holdings posted a weaker-than-expected 7% rise in fourth-quarter revenue on Wednesday as its gaming revenue shrank, and said it was expecting to at least double its share buybacks this year.
China's Tencent Holdings posted a weaker-than-expected 7% rise in fourth-quarter revenue on Wednesday as its gaming revenue shrank, and said it was expecting to at least double its share buybacks this year.The world's largest video game company and operator of the WeChat messaging platform reported revenue of 155.19 billion yuan ($21.56 billion) for the three months ended Dec. 31.
That compared with the 157.2 billion yuan average of 23 analyst estimates compiled by LSEG.
Tencent's core gaming suffered a notable slowdown in the fourth quarter. Gaming revenue in China declined 3% to 27 billion yuan, while international gaming revenue increased only 1% to 13.9 billion yuan, or declined by 1% when excluding fluctuations.
The company also said intends to at least double the size of its share repurchases from HK$49 billion in 2023 to over HK$100 billion ($12.78 billion) in 2024. Its had fallen some 16% over the past year to Tuesday's close.
For all of last year, Tencent's revenue rose 10% to 609 billion yuan, which trails expectations at 612.2 billion yuan.
Still, this marks a year of recovery for Tencent, which reported its first annual revenue decline in 2022 as it was hit by Beijing's sweeping crackdown on the tech sector. By comparison, it saw revenue growth in every quarter last year.
Revenue from online ads rose 21% to 29.8 billion yuan as the Shenzhen-based giant continues to expand its ad capability.
Revenue from fintech and business services grew 15% to 54.5 billion yuan as the firm continued its expansion in those areas.
Net income for the quarter declined 74% compared with the same period last year, but the decline was attributed to Tencent's of its Meituan stake.
Excluding the impact of investment-related transactions, Tencent said its quarterly profit grew 44% year-on-year to 42.68 billion. ($1 = 7.1995 Chinese yuan renminbi) ($1 = 7.8230 Hong Kong dollars)
Source: Stocks-Markets-Economic Times