National Post

FINANCIAL POST

SHARES FALL AS SCANDALS EAT AT FACEBOOK Q2 RESULTS.

- SArAh Frier

SAN FRANCISCO • Facebook Inc. saw the first signs of user disenchant­ment in the midst of public scandals over privacy and content, with second-quarter revenue and average daily visitors missing analysts’ projection­s. The shares declined more than 20 per cent in extended trading.

The company said it had 1.47 billion daily active users in June, compared with the 1.48 billion average of analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Revenue, fueled by mobile advertisin­g sales, increased 42 per cent to US$13.2 billion. Analysts projected US$13.3 billion.

The company’s user growth fell short of expectatio­ns in the same quarter that chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg testified for 10 hours in U.S. Congress on data privacy issues. It also came as Europe implemente­d strict new data laws, which Facebook had warned could lead to fewer daily visitors in that region. The company also was bombarded by public criticism over its content policies, especially in countries such as Myanmar and Sri Lanka where misinforma­tion has led to violence.

“The core Facebook platform is declining,” said Brian Wieser, an analyst at Pivotal Research Group.

The company’s user base was unchanged in its biggest market, the U.S. and Canada, at 185 million daily users, while declining in Europe to 279 million daily users. Overall, average daily users increased 11 per cent from the period a year earlier.

The Menlo Park, Calif.based company reported net income of US$5.11 billion, or US$1.74 a share, compared with analysts’ average estimate of US$1.71 a share, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The quarter marked the first time Facebook had missed analysts’ revenue projection­s since 2015.

Facebook’s shares had earlier closed in New York at US$217.50, a record high, and had gained 23 per cent this year.

The social network, in spite of the drama of the past few months, still holds one of the world’s most valuable sets of data on what people are interested in, and makes that audience easily available to advertiser­s. But the company’s ad growth engine contended with disruption­s in its most lucrative markets. In Europe, Facebook had to respond to new privacy rules. In North America, an effort to get all political advertiser­s to verify their identities may have halted some purchases as the company worked through its broad definition of what’s considered “political.”

The company remains in a dominant position in mobile advertisin­g alongside Alphabet Inc.’s Google. Facebook said mobile made up 91 per cent of ad revenue in the recent period, compared with about 87 per cent a year earlier.

As Facebook gets bigger, reaching a majority of the world’s internet-connected population, it’s becoming more reliant on properties other than the company’s main social network to fuel growth. It owns three other properties with more than 1 billion users: WhatsApp, Messenger and Instagram. Instagram’s business model is so far the most mature, and likely contribute­d meaningful­ly to the company’s revenue in the quarter, analysts have said, though Facebook doesn’t break out sales for the app.

Facebook has said it will increase spending to make investment­s in video content, and on new bets like artificial intelligen­ce and virtual reality. The company is also rapidly expanding its real estate around the world to accommodat­e a hiring spree, which includes thousands of new workers to help combat foreign election manipulati­on on the site. In 2016, Russia ran a campaign on Facebook to cause political unrest in the U.S. around the presidenti­al election. The company said headcount was 30,275 as of June 30 — an increase of 47 per cent year-over-year.

INSTAGRAM’S BUSINESS MODEL IS SO FAR THE MOST MATURE.

The company has been working to convince users it has their best interest at heart, after reports of Russia’s interferen­ce and disclosure­s that a political consulting firm gained access to private personal informatio­n. Zuckerberg in January said he was going to adjust the news feed to make sure people spend more time on Facebook with meaningful content from their friends and family members — a move the company has said would decrease user engagement with the site.

 ?? LOIC VENANCE / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Facebook said mobile made up 91 per cent of ad revenue, compared with about 87 per cent a year earlier.
LOIC VENANCE / AFP / GETTY IMAGES FILES Facebook said mobile made up 91 per cent of ad revenue, compared with about 87 per cent a year earlier.

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