Online commerce veteran eBay (EBAY 0.33%) reported fourth-quarter results after the closing bell on Wednesday, Feb. 3. The company beat Wall Street's estimates across the board and eBay's stock gained 11% in the after-hours trading session.

By the numbers

eBay's fourth-quarter sales rose 28% year over year to $2.9 billion. Adjusted earnings landed at $0.86 per diluted share, up from $0.66 per diluted share in the year-ago period. The analyst consensus pointed to earnings near $0.83 per share on revenue in the neighborhood of $2.7 billion.

The company managed transactions worth a cool $100 billion of gross merchandise volume in fiscal year 2020, a 17% year-over-year increase. The number of active buyers rose by 7% to 185 million active accounts.

A young couple lying on the floor, using a laptop and a credit card.

Image source: Getty Images.

Looking ahead to the first quarter of fiscal year 2021, eBay expects revenue to grow by approximately 36% year over year to $2.96 billion. Adjusted earnings should stop near $1.06 per share, 38% above the result in the first quarter of 2020. Here, the average Street projection points to earnings of roughly $0.86 per share on sales in the vicinity of $2.53 billion.

The story behind the numbers

eBay's results reflected strong growth in international transaction volumes.

"In the US, one in 10 online shoppers bought something on eBay," eBay CEO Jamie Iannone said in the earnings call. "In Germany that number was one in seven and in the UK it was one in four."

The business growth was also remarkably steady. More than 100 days in 2020 saw transaction volumes exceeding the peak traffic of fiscal year 2019, and the e-commerce platform managed this heavy traffic while also delivering the highest availability of the last six years.

The stock has now gained 72% in 52 weeks, and is trading at just 17 times forward earnings.