Gulf News

Tech stocks face investor wrath on Facebook folly

COMPANY CEO VOWS TOUGHER RESTRICTIO­NS ON DEVELOPER ACCESS TO USER DATA

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The morning after Facebook Inc. Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg acknowledg­ed the social network’s mishandlin­g of user data, technology stocks are feeling the wrath.

Facebook helped pace the group lower, falling as much as 2.5 per cent before paring losses, amid broad weakness in US equities. This week’s sell-off in tech stocks is on pace to be the worst since early February.

Zuckerberg on Wednesday promised tougher steps to restrict developers’ access to user informatio­n, his first response to allegation­s that London-based political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica improperly accessed data to build profiles on American voters and influence the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Analysts from several brokerages expressed relief that there were no signs in Zuckerberg’s status update on the row or in subsequent interviews of a more fundamenta­l shift in the company’s advertisin­g-driven revenue model.

Facebook shares, however, have fallen for two of the last three days, knocking nearly $46 billion (Dh169 billion) off its market value, and some analysts said it was clear the company would have to carry extra costs to shore up its reputation in the months ahead.

Technology stocks have fallen along with Facebook this week as investors worried the row was likely to lead to much tighter scrutiny of global platforms like Google, Twitter and Snapchat.

“We expect more cautious FB investors to point to the potential for FB to spend more this year due to these increased safeguards ... which will hold back earnings power,” Morgan Stanley’s Brian Nowak said in a morning note.

Stifel analyst Scott Devitt was the fourth major Wall Street name to cut his price target on Facebook, by $27 to $168, saying the uncertaint­y generated by the row demanded a higher discount.

“Facebook’s current plight reminds us of eBay in 2004 an unstructur­ed content business built on trust that lost that trust before implementi­ng policies to add structure and process,” Devitt said.

“We would buy all of our Buy-rated stocks and many of our Hold-rated stocks before we would buy Facebook shares, given the informatio­n available to us,” Devitt added. He has a ‘Hold’ rating on Facebook.

Amid the Facebook storm, US President Donald Trump took to Twitter yesterday morning to boast about his successful use of social media during his 2016 election campaign.

Presidenti­al campaign

“Remember when they were saying, during the campaign, that Donald Trump is giving great speeches and drawing big crowds, but he is spending much less money and not using social media as well as Crooked Hillary’s large and highly sophistica­ted staff.

Well, not saying that anymore!” he tweeted.

Steve Bannon, who ran Trump’s 2016 campaign before falling out with the president last year, was expected to speak at a Financial Times event on the “Future of News: Trust, Technology and Transforma­tion in an Age of Upheaval” yesterday.

Zuckerberg said the social network would investigat­e thousands of apps that have used Facebook’s platform, restrict developer access to data, and give members a tool that lets them disable access to their Facebook data more easily. Those plans did not represent a big reduction of advertiser­s’ ability to use Facebook data — the company’s lifeblood.

Open-source browser and app developer Mozilla said late on Wednesday it was suspending advertisin­g on Facebook.

“We found that its current default settings leave access open to a lot of data particular­ly with respect to settings for third party apps,” Mozilla said in a blog post. It would consider returning if Facebook strengthen­s its default privacy settings for third party apps.

The Times newspaper reported that British advertisin­g group ISBA, which represents thousands of well-known brands, had threatened to withdraw ads if investigat­ions show user data has been misused.

“We think this issue is more likely to snowball than recede and that advertiser­s are reaching a tipping point at which spending on not only Facebook and other online platforms, is re-evaluated,” brokerage Liberum said in a note. “The big beneficiar­y from any shift would be the TV Broadcaste­rs.”

Facebook’s current plight reminds us of eBay in 2004 an unstructur­ed content business built on trust that lost that trust before implementi­ng policies to add structure and process.”

Scott Devitt | Stifel analyst

 ?? Bloomberg ?? ■ Tourists take ‘selfies’ in front of the Facebook logo that is displayed at the entrance of the company’s headquarte­rs in Menlo Park, California
Bloomberg ■ Tourists take ‘selfies’ in front of the Facebook logo that is displayed at the entrance of the company’s headquarte­rs in Menlo Park, California

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