The Asian Age

Facebook expects swelling costs over revenue for ‘ some time’

The company estimated that revenue growth would slow in the current 2018 quarter, compared with last quarter

-

Facebook Inc has relieved investors by forecastin­g that margins would stop shrinking after 2019 as costs from scandals ease up, sending shares up despite a second- straight quarter with record- low user growth. CEO Mark Zuckerberg repeated the company’s warning that growing user interest in private messaging, video and safer content would cause costs to rise faster than revenue for “some time.” But he said he was focused on bringing them in line.

That same guidance three months ago sparked Facebook’s biggest oneday sell- off as some investors braced for dire results. The third- quarter performanc­e and revised guidance suggested that the downward trend would be more gradual and taper off after 2019, financial analysts said.

Shares of Facebook traded up about 3 per cent after updating its forecast. They reversed course several times, falling and gaining as much as 5 per cent, during an hour of volatility after closing on Tuesday up 2.9 per cent at $ 146.22.

Facebook, Amazon. com Inc and Google parent Alphabet Inc had suffered a battering over the last month on Wall Street after leading a year- long rally. Slowing growth has been a top concern, and Facebook’s weak results did not squash those fears.

“The best news was that the quarter was just not a disaster,” Ivan Feinseth, an analyst at Tigress Financial Partners, told Reuters. The company estimated revenue growth would slow in the current quarter, compared with last quarter, which could mark the worst performanc­e since its initial public offering in 2012.

The main Facebook service and its Messenger sibling grew monthly users to 2.27 billion, up 10 per cent compared with a year ago but a percentage point below both expectatio­ns and last quarter’s pace.

Zuckerberg said that Facebook’s problem is that users are gravitatin­g towards features such as direct messaging and video viewing faster than it can find ways to place ads there while attracting clicks and not annoying users.

Adding to the challenge is that the bulk of new users are from countries including India, Indonesia and Philippine­s where advertiser­s focus more on TV, print and outdoor advertisin­g, Facebook executives said.

Average revenue per the US and Canadian user grew 6.7 per cent in the third quarter compared with the same period last year. Growth for Asian- Pacific users was 4.6 per cent.

Though the factors are holding back ad prices, they also leave Facebook with significan­t untapped commercial opportunit­ies with newer businesses such as WhatsApp. Still, Facebook said WhatsApp would not be a revenue driver in 2019.

Financial analysts are concerned that the company’s operationa­l problems are so vast that revenue growth and cost containmen­t will not come as expected.

The company disclosed its latest gaffe on Tuesday, saying that its misclassif­ication of user activity had led to immaterial overcounti­ng of monthly and daily users.

More broadly, the social network’s reputation has suffered from a data breach affecting 29 million users in September and a privacy scandal involving a British political consulting firm in March.

It also has been rocked by domestic and internatio­nal informatio­n warfare on its services, including WhatsApp and Instagram, and a wave executive departures.

About 2.6 billion users interact with at least one of Facebook’s services each month, up from 2.5 billion when it released the figure for the first time last quarter to emphasise that its potential audience for advertiser­s is unrivalled in size.

Facebook’s spending has ballooned from licensing more engaging content such as video, and as it tries to fortify itself against fraudsters and hackers.

Zuckerberg said upcoming elections would be a test of its new systems, which he expects will be fully installed by end of 2019.

“With a community of more than 2 billion people, we will see all the good and bad that humanity can do. And we will never be perfect,” he said.— Reuters of

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India