Opera Software Q2 2013 Financial Results

By | August 21, 2013


Opera Software Q2 2013 Financial ResultsEverything is improving but the desktop.

After rebooting its web browsers, I am sure you are all wondering how exactly it did affect the overall Opera growth, especially on desktop.

Well, today we have the answer.

Financial Highlights

– Revenue growth of 40%
– Record revenue and profit
– Strong revenue growth from Mobile Operators, Mobile Consumers and Mobile Publishers & Advertisers

Opera Software Q2 2013 Financial Results

Opera Software Q2 2013 Financial Results

Revenue: Mobile Consumers – Opera Owned and Operated Properties 2Q13

Opera Software Q2 2013 Financial Results

– Revenue growth driven primarily by mobile search, advertising and license revenue
– 251M users by end of 2Q13, up more than 51M compared to end of 2Q12
– 20.7B ad requests from owned & operated properties in 2Q13, up 590% versus 2Q12. Application downloads from OMS of 119 million in 2Q13, up 59% compared to 2Q12
– Revenue growth: 248% versus 2Q12

Revenue: Mobile Publisher & Advertisers – Opera Publisher Network Members 2Q13

Opera Software Q2 2013 Financial Results

– Revenue growth driven by both premium advertisers, including American Express, Home Depot, Mazda, Microsoft, Paramount, and Unilever, and performance advertisers such as Candy Crush and Netspend
– AdMarvel managed 171.5B ad impressions in 2Q13, up 61% vs. 2Q12
– 13,000+ websites and applications enabled in 2Q13, up from 12,000+ in 2Q12 and total reach of 350m+ in 2Q13 up from 140m+ in 2Q12
– Revenue growth: 106% versus 2Q12

Revenue: Desktop Consumer 2Q13

Opera Software Q2 2013 Financial Results

– Solid ARPU with lower search revenue, partly offset by higher content and advertising revenue
– Desktop users at 52 million, down 5% versus end of 2Q12
– Overall revenue growth: -10% versus 2Q12

Opera Software Q2 2013 Financial Results

Overall, it looks like the things are rosy everywhere but in the desktop department, which still has some catching up to do.

For a complete report, head over to the following page.


About (Author Profile)


Vygantas is a former web designer whose projects are used by companies such as AMD, NVIDIA and departed Westood Studios. Being passionate about software, Vygantas began his journalism career back in 2007 when he founded FavBrowser.com. Having said that, he is also an adrenaline junkie who enjoys good books, fitness activities and Forex trading.

Comments (13)

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  1. Rafael Luik says:

    “After rebooting its web browsers, I am sure you are all wondering how exactly it did affect the overall Opera growth, especially on desktop.

    Well, today we have the answer.”
    No we won’t. Opera 15 launched July 2nd, it isn’t part of Q2.

  2. yoyo says:

    Well I Just hope web pages do not advance fast so I can Opera 12.15 for long time.

    • cobrazombie says:

      Word. Opera 15 is a shell of the real Opera browser. Sure, they’ll add in features again later — but which features, and what will be left out?

  3. RingMyDingDong says:

    I have a bad feeling Opera will abandon Opera Desktop in the future…

    just take a visit at Opera forum, nobody seems to like Opera 15, 17

    • sato says:

      actually: I do like Opera 15. Not for my personal daily use (still 12.15 because of tab stacking), but it’s the first opera version i can recomment to “normal” (non-hardcore) users.

      Opera 16 will bring some much-needed features back, I especially welcome having duckduckgo as a search engine again.

      All in all: the switch to blink was a little late, Opera ought have switched to webkit with version 10… but better late then never!

      (i used to have Opera Mail/M2 for my mails for 5 years but I really got used to thunderbird quite fast. Didn’t imagine that could happen ;-P).

    • jayjarn says:

      Why would Opera abandon a profitable product? Even if it only has 50M users, those users are highly profitable (unlike say, Opera Mini). It’s basically free money.

  4. Licj says:

    I’m glad they’re doing good, they don’t even need the desktop users.