Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Facebook warns of slowing revenue growth

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SAN FRANCISCO/BENGALURU: Facebook Inc. said on Wednesday that growth would continue to slow as its business matured and it reported a surge in quarterly expenses, disappoint­ing Wall Street expectatio­ns that the costs of improving privacy would level off.

The news raised concerns that Facebook’s days of astronomic­al growth were firmly in the rearview mirror, and shares of the world’s biggest social network dropped 7.2% in extended trading.

Facebook reported its slowesteve­r revenue growth for the fourth quarter, at 25%, and Facebook’s chief financial officer, David Wehner, said on a call with investors that the pace of expansion will slow further in the first quarter of 2020. Wehner forecast a percentage point decline in the growth rate in the low- to mid-single digits, citing Facebook’s maturing business, the impact of global privacy regulation and concerns about ad targeting.

“We have experience­d some modest impact from these headwinds to date. The majority of the impact lies in front of us,” Wehner said.

He specifical­ly noted changes made by Apple Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google, which have both announced new restrictio­ns on browser cookies used to track users online.

The company reported total costs and expenses increased 34% to $12.22 billion in the fourth quarter, more than double the 14% that analysts had forecast and dragging down operating margins to 42% from 46% a year earlier.

It also announced it had reached a $550 million settlement in principle of an Illinois lawsuit that claimed it illegally collected and stored biometric data for millions of users without their consent. The fourth-quarter revenue growth of 25% did beat analysts’ expectatio­ns of a dip to 23%. But it is the company’s fourth straight quarter of revenue growth less than 30%, playing to concerns that Facebook is struggling to restore its pre-2018 momentum when sales regularly grew upwards of 40%.

Still, Facebook’s shares rose more than 50% over the last year, raising pressure for a strong performanc­e.

“FB stock had made a big run-up in anticipati­on of the report ...so the room for error was low,” said Daniel Morgan, a portfolio manager at Synovus Trust Co.

The company continued to add users, beating estimates. Monthly users of Facebook’s core social network climbed 8% to 2.5 billion, while 2.9 billion people used one of its apps—Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram or Messenger —each month.

 ?? AP FILE ?? ■
Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg.
AP FILE ■ Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg.

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