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Baidu shares plummeted this week, leading the company to conduct a US$1 billion buy back. Photo: Simon Song

China’s Baidu to buy back US$1 billion shares after stock price tumble

Baidu

Baidu, China’s biggest internet search engine company, said on Thursday it will buy back shares worth US$1 billion after the company’s stock price slid following a weak earnings report earlier this week.

The repurchases will take place over the next 12 months and be funded from the company’s existing cash balance, New York-listed Baidu said in a statement.

Baidu shares have fallen 14 per cent since July 27, when it reported lower-than-expected second-quarter profit. The company’s plan to spend aggressively on connecting online smartphone users to offline services raised investor concerns on margins, triggering the shares’ worst two-day drop since late 2008.

“The buyback demonstrates Baidu’s confidence in the O2O (online-to-offline) opportunity, and in our ability to capture it,” a Baidu spokesman said.

The Chinese company has been investing heavily to diversify away from its bread-and-butter search advertising business, which is less profitable on smartphones than on PCs, especially as there are more mobile internet users than PC users in the country.

Baidu said last month it would invest US$3.2 billion in linking mobile internet users to nearby offline services such as buying cinema tickets, booking taxis, getting restaurant deals.

But these ‘O2O’ services are eroding the healthy margins Baidu enjoyed from its core search business.

Chief financial officer Jennifer Li told analysts earlier this week the company’s “O2O and Others” business had a negative impact on overall margins of 25.3 percentage points.

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