Khaleej Times

Facebook profit soars despite Russia scandal

- David Ingram and Aishwarya Venugopal

washington — Facebook Inc faced harsh criticism in Washington on Wednesday over its failure to prevent Russian operatives from using its platform for election meddling, but the earnings report it issued hours later showed just how insulated its business remains from political risk.

The social network said its quarterly profit soared 79 per cent and revenues were up nearly 50 per cent in the third quarter as marketers poured money into Facebook’s advertisin­g offerings, whose power to target and influence users has actually been showcased by the election scandal.

Chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, condemned Russia’s attempts to influence last year’s election through Facebook posts and advertisem­ents designed to sow division, and repeated his pledge to ramp up spending to confront the problem.

Zuckerberg said that spending would include 10,000 additional people to review content on the network, though, based on past practice, many of those people will be contractor­s. The spending would hit profits, Facebook said, with expenses expected to grow by 45 per cent to 60 per cent next year. “What they did is wrong, and we are not going to stand for it,” Zuckerberg said of the Russians, on a conference call with analysts.

The company’s share price, which hit a record $182.90 earlier on Wednesday, initially rose in after-hours trading, but later fell into negative territory on discussion of the higher spending. Shares have gained almost 60 per cent this year. “While the investigat­ions into Rus- sian activity on the platform have been getting a lot of attention, they’re not detracting from Facebook’s power as an ad platform,” analyst Debra Aho Williamson of research firm eMarketer said in an interview. The political storm in the United States over how Face- book, Twitter Inc, and Alphabet Inc’s Google handle false news stories and political manipulati­on of their services gathered strength this week as three separate congressio­nal committees held hearings.

Zuckerberg did not appear at the hearings. But lawmakers threatened tougher regulation and fired questions at Facebook general counsel, Colin Stretch, excoriatin­g the company for being slow to act and slow to share what it knew with Congress.

The chief executive told analysts that legislatio­n to force disclosure of election ads “would be very good if done well.”

In a series of disclosure­s over two months, Facebook has said that people in Russia bought at least 3,000 US political ads and published another 80,000 Facebook posts that were seen by as many as 126 million Americans over two years. Russia denies any meddling.

Facebook’s total advertisin­g revenue rose 49 per cent in the third quarter to $10.14 billion, about 88 per cent of which came from mobile ads.

Analysts on average had expected total ad revenue of $9.71 billion, according to data and analytics firm FactSet.

Facebook in the third quarter gave advertiser­s for the first time the ability to run ads in standalone videos, outside the Facebook News Feed, and the company is seeing good early results, chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, told analysts.

“Video is exploding, and mobile video advertisin­g is a big opportunit­y,” Sandberg said.

More than 70 per cent of ad breaks up to 15 seconds long were viewed to completion, most with the sound on, she said.

Facebook executives, though, declined to give details on the performanc­e so far of Watch, a video tab the company rolled out two months ago. “It’s too early to be talking about any stats there,” chief financial officer, Dave Wehner, said in response to an analyst question.

Zuckerberg said Facebook would be spending heavily in making the Watch tab a place where “people want to talk and connect around,” rather than a spot to passively consume programs. The 49 per cent increase in total ad sales in the latest quarter compares with a 47 per cent rise in the prior quarter and a 51 per cent jump in the first quarter.

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 ?? — AP ?? Facebook’s quarterly profit soared 79 per cent and revenues were up nearly 50 per cent in Q3.
— AP Facebook’s quarterly profit soared 79 per cent and revenues were up nearly 50 per cent in Q3.
 ??  ?? KT GRAPHIC • SOURCE : FACEBOOK/GOOGLE FINANCE/ AFP
KT GRAPHIC • SOURCE : FACEBOOK/GOOGLE FINANCE/ AFP

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