LinkedIn’s 3Q Results Top Analyst Views, Propelling Stock

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) —

LinkedIn is behaving like an extremely productive worker who always seems to get the job done while still yearning to be more like flashier peers.

After the professional-networking service delivered another outstanding performance in the third quarter Thursday, its shares soared 11 percent on Friday, closing at $240.87.

LinkedIn has been a Wall Street star since its stock debuted in May 2011, its service establishing itself as a digital rolodex for ambitious workers and talent-hungry employers.

The formula has enabled LinkedIn to expand its audience and boost its revenue at a clip that has increased the company’s market value fivefold since the initial public offering.

True to form, LinkedIn’s results for the three months ending in September exceeded the projections that steer investors’ perceptions. The company’s revenue forecast fell within the range of analysts’ predictions, a conservative habit that LinkedIn has adopted in an apparent attempt to make it easier to deliver pleasant surprises.

LinkedIn’s revenue for the latest quarter rose 37 percent from last year to $780 million. That topped the estimate of $757 million among analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research.

The Mountain View, California, company lost $40.5 million, or 31 cents per share, widening from a setback of $4.3 million, or 3 cents per share, at the same time last year.

If not for expenses for employees’ stock compensations and accounting costs for past acquisitions, LinkedIn said it would have earned 78 cents per share. That figure easily surpassed analysts’ estimates of 47 cents per share.

The service ended September with 396 million accountholders, a gain of 16 million since June. LinkedIn CEO Jeff Weiner said the network topped the 400 million mark this month.

“LinkedIn’s value proposition is simple: connect to opportunity,” Weiner said.

For all its success, LinkedIn has had trouble getting its accountholders to visits its service as frequently and stick around for as long as people do at Facebook’s social networking site or even other popular communications channels such as Pinterest.

That shortcoming has prompted LinkedIn to add more content offering professional advice and to tinker with its mobile applications in an attempt to make its service even more compelling. By luring in more people for longer periods, LinkedIn hopes to boost its ad revenue.

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