Microsoft has finally reached a long-sought and expensive goal — its Bing search engine now ranks second behind Google in the internet\'s most lucrative market. Bing and Microsoft\'s other websites fielded 2.75 billion search requests in the US in December, catapulting in front of Yahoo for the first time in the jockeying for runner up to Google, according to statistics released on Wednesday by comScore. Bing\'s December volume translated into a 15.1 per cent share of the US search traffic, comScore said. Yahoo processed 2.65 billion search requests, representing 14.5 per cent of the US market. Google remained internet\'s go-to place for information, with 12 billion US requests in December. That works out to a 65.9 per cent market share. Other research firms track the internet search market. But comScore\'s numbers matter most to industry analysts and the companies trying to attract queries so they can make more money from the ads appearing alongside the results. Google\'s dominance of online search is the main reason it has established itself as the internet\'s most profitable company. Analysts have expected Microsoft and Yahoo to flip their positions in internet search since they announced a partnership in July 2009. The ten-year agreement has enabled Yahoo to save money by relying on Microsoft to provide the bulk of its search technology. Huge cost Microsoft wanted the deal so it would have billions more search requests to analyse each year, giving it a better chance to learn about people\'s tendencies and preferences. Pursuing Google has come at a huge cost for Microsoft, which still makes most of its money from the Windows operating software and other software it sells for personal computers. Microsoft\'s online division, which is anchored by Bing, has suffered operating losses of about $7 billion (Dh25.7 billion) since June 2008. Even though it leans heavily on Microsoft\'s technology, Yahoo hasn\'t totally abandoned search. It still offers some unique features within its results in hopes of persuading more people to search on its website instead of going directly to Bing. The main reason: Yahoo still gets 88 per cent of the ad revenue from searches conducted on its website and receives nothing from queries entered on Bing. The efforts haven\'t been enough to prevent a steady slide in searches at Yahoo. The company\'s share of the US search market stood at about 19 per cent when it joined forces with Microsoft, according to comScore.