Fiji Sun

Meta shares surge nearly 20% as Zuckerberg pledges to make 2023 a ‘year of efficiency’

- Feedback: selita.bolanavanu­a@fijisun. com.fj

For years, Facebook and its CEO Mark Zuckerberg invested heavily in growth, including in areas like virtual reality with unproven potential. But after a brutal year in which the company lost more than $600 billion in market value, Zuckerberg has started speaking Wall Street’s language — and they are rewarding him for it.

Facebook-parent Meta on Wednesday posted its third straight quarterly decline in revenue and a sharp drop in profit for the final three months of 2022, as it confronted broader economic uncertaint­y, heightened competitio­n in the social media market and incurred significan­t charges from a recent round of layoffs.

But the company nonetheles­s outperform­ed Wall Street analysts’ expectatio­ns for sales. Moreover, it pledged to focus on “efficiency,” lowered its forecast for capital expenditur­es in the year ahead and announced plans to boost its share repurchase plan by $40 billion. All of that helped send shares of Meta up nearly 20per cent in afterhours trading Wednesday.

Meta reported nearly $32.2 billion in revenue for the quarter, down 4% from the year prior but ahead of the $31.5 billion analysts had projected. The social media giant’s quarterly net income was just shy of $4.7 billion, down 55% from the same period in the prior year and below analysts’ expectatio­ns.

Meta announced plans to lay off around 11,000 employees in November. The company also currently has a broad hiring freeze in place and plans to limit hiring throughout the year, Meta CFO Susan Li said on a call with analysts Wednesday.

In its earnings report, Meta said it has cut its guidance for capital expenditur­es for 2023 down slightly to between $30 billion and $33 billion, citing plans for lower data center constructi­on spending. It also added that “substantia­lly all of our capital expenditur­es continue to support the Family of Apps,” a term that refers to Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, perhaps in an effort to reassure investors skeptical of its plan to center its business model around the future version of the internet it calls the metaverse.

For the first quarter of 2023, Meta expects revenue between $26 and $28.5 billion, the upper end of which would represent an increase from the year-ago quarter and would break Meta’s streak of consecutiv­e quarterly revenue declines. The guidance is somewhat better than Snapchat-parent Snap’s from earlier in the week, which said it expects first quarter revenue to fall between 2% and 10% compared to the previous y Meta’s user numbers also marked a bright spot from Wednesday’s report. Facebook now has 2 billion daily active users, and Meta’s family of apps grew its daily active people by 5% year-over-year to 2.96 billion, a welcome sign for the company following concerns about stagnant user growth last year.

The company’s core advertisin­g business fell just over 4per cent to nearly $31.3 billion, a “better-than-expected” result that “should refute concerns over the state of the digital advertisin­g industry,” said Jesse Cohen, senior analyst at Investing.com. Li said that ad revenue growth from its top advertisin­g verticals, online commerce and consumer packaged goods, remained negative during the December quarter but fell at a slower rate than in the previous quarter.

Still, Meta’s average price per ad fell 22 per cent year-over-year during the December quarter, and 16 per cent overall in 2022, as the company grapples with Apple’s app tracking changes and increased competitio­n from the likes of TikTok.

The company also lost a total of more than $13.7 billion in its “Reality Labs” unit which houses its metaverse efforts. Fourth quarter Reality Labs revenue fell 17per cent to $727 million, due to lower sales of its Quest 2 headset, the company said.>CNN

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