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Leading Chinese online travel agency Ctrip.com beat Wall Street estimates in Q4 but missed on Q1 guidance, sending the stock down Thursday. Fourth-quarter revenue jumped 50% from a year earlier to $444 million, the company reported , ahead of analysts’ average expectation of $438 million, in a Thomson Reuters poll. “Our philosophy is to underpromise and overdeliver,” Ctrip.com Chief Financial Officer Cindy Xiaofan Wang said. “It was another very strong quarter and it concludes the exciting year of 2015.” Earnings per American Depositary Share on a GAAP diluted basis were 3 cents, or RMB 0.19, better than the slight loss expected in Thomson Reuters’ analyst poll. ( Excluding share-based compensation charges (non-GAAP), Ctrip’s diluted earnings per ADS were 11 cents for the quarter.) Ctrip shares were down 0.4% near 42.50 in afternoon trading on the stock market today , after diving as low as 39.52 in the morning. Ctrip.com has an IBD Composite Rating of 84, where 99 is the highest. Ctrip.com guidance for the current quarter misses the average view of analysts polled by Thomson Reuters. In a statement accompanying the earnings results, the company said its top line would grow between 75% and 80% in Q1 2016, “reflecting the consolidation of Qunar’s financial results.” Goldman Sachs analyst David Jin called the Q1 guidance “soft” but maintained his buy rating with a price target of 55. A Ctrip share trade in October with Chinese Internet company Baidu ( BIDU ) gave Baidu a greater role in the online travel industry, as China Internet companies position for growth from the online-to-offline, or O2O, services niche. The share-swap deal gave Ctrip.com a larger stake in Qunar Cayman Islands ( QUNR ), which also reported earnings on Wednesday. Qunar stock was up about 1.9% near 36.20 in afternoon trading Thursday. “The deal will help the whole industry have a chance to achieve long-term profitability,” Xiaofan Wang said. “In the past, competitors have lost tons of money to compete for market share.” Alibaba Group ( BABA ) and Tencent Holdings ( TCHEY ), which reported earnings Thursday morning , have become early players in that field. American online travel giants such as TripAdvisor ( TRIP ) and OTA giant Priceline ( PCLN ) assuaged Wall Street’s concerns about a slowing global economy — neither firm reported a material impact from the signs of a slowdown. Though rival Expedia ( EXPE ) missed Wall Street expectations for Q4, the company’s executives also said they were not seeing a slowdown — but the strong dollar has continued to weigh heavily on its results. That may change in the future, Expedia executives said. RELATED: 3 Chinese Internet Stocks Make Moves After Earnings . Scalper1 News
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