Brazil’s UOL Reaches 1 Million Users

Published: 28 April 2001 y., Saturday
However, the company has yet to turn a profit. Brazil's dominant Internet company, Universo On Line, announced that it has become the first Latin American ISP to reach 1 million clients, or about 10 percent of the region's total Internet accounts. The figure places UOL among the 20 biggest ISPs worldwide, according to general director Caio Tulio Costa. UOL, whose largest shareholders are Brazil's Folha newspaper and the giant editorial house Abril, launched five years ago and established itself as the leading Internet portal and service provider in Brazil, which accounts for about half of the total Internet users in Latin America. According to the company's audited figures, UOL has 46 million page views per day and over 10 million unique visitors per month, with traffic growth of about 50 percent over the past 12 months. But despite its smashing success, UOL has yet to turn a profit. In June 1999 the company embarked on a costly regional expansion, hoping that would help it go public on the Nasdaq in 2000. But the market crash put those plans on hold, and the company has turned its focus on achieving profitability instead.Last year, UOL's revenues were slightly below $100 million. UOL has recently announced a sweeping alliance with telephone operator Portugal Telecom that should help it extend its lead in Brazil. PT Multimedia, a unit of Portugal Telecom, agreed to pay $100 million in cash and sell its Zip.Net online unit to UOL for a 17.9 percent stake in UOL. Zip.Net is Brazil's fourth-most popular portal, with about 500 million monthly page views.
Šaltinis: thestandard.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Latvian Association of the Internet.

The representatives of the Latvian firms, business of which is connected with the Internet, have founded the Latvian association of the Internet. more »

Intel's new chip to be called Pentium 4

Intel will call Willamette, its next-generation processor, the Pentium 4. more »

FBI Intervenes in Planned Sale Of Internet Service to Japanese

The FBI is raising national security concerns about a Japanese telecommunications giant's planned acquisition of a U.S. Internet company. more »

Shopping portal cancels free Net access

Online shopping portal WorldSpy has pulled the plug on a rare Web freebie: no-charge, advertising-free Internet access. more »

Hacker compromised astronaut safety

The lives of space shuttle astronauts were put at risk by a computer hacker who overloaded Nasa's communication system in 1997. more »

The plans for Web-based software services

Microsoft unveiled its long-awaited vision for the future of computing and a new strategy for enabling its Windows software for the Web. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Microsoft brewing Java-like language

Microsoft unveiled a new, Java-like software programming language intended to simplify the building of Web services using its software. more »

Intel targets Crusoe with low-power notebook chips

Chip giant Intel unveiled five new notebook processors, including two low-power chips designed to compete against Transmeta's Crusoe. more »