The National - News

Facebook investors want Zuckerberg to go after ‘digging up dirt’ on rivals

- THE NATIONAL

Facebook investors are calling on chairman and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg to step down after a New York

Times investigat­ion suggested the company hired a Republican-owned political consulting firm that “dug up dirt on its competitor­s” to smear critics.

“Facebook is behaving like it’s a special snowflake,” said Jonas Kron, a senior vice president at Trillium Asset Management, a US investor with a stake in the social network, calling on Mr Zuckerberg to step down as board chairman after an investigat­ive report on the company last week.

“It’s not. It is a company and companies need to have a separation of chair and CEO,” Mr Kron was cited as saying by The Telegraph.

Facebook class A shares are down 21 per cent year-to-date to $139.5 as of the close of trading on Friday. Mr Zuckerberg has lost $17.4 billion of his net worth so far this year, ranking him sixth on the Bloomberg Billionair­es’ Index.

Without Mr Zuckerberg, Facebook’s historical financials would have been valued at 40 per cent of the actual stock price when compared to the company’s competitor­s, Twitter, Snapchat and Match Group, according to Seeking Alpha.

There have been at least six attempts to remove Mr Zuckerberg as chairman since 2012, but these failed due to the dual class structure of the company.

This allows Mr Zuckerberg (through class B shares) to control 60 per cent of shareholde­r voting power.

Facebook’s top 20 investors include Vanguard, BlackRock, Capital Group, State Street Global, Morgan Stanley, UBS, Bank of New York Mellon and Goldman Sachs.

Facebook is said to have hired Definers, a Republican public relations company, to manage the fallout over Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 US presidenti­al election and from the Cambridge Analytica scandal that mined personal informatio­n of Facebook users to sway voters.

According to the media report, Definers is said to have portrayed critics of the social media giant as anti-Semites and linked anti-Facebook groups to billionair­e George Soros.

On Friday, four Democrat senators wrote to Mr Zuckerberg, asking him to provide more details about Facebook’s lobbying activities, according to The New

York Times. The regulators also inquired whether Facebook had ever used its own data and platform against critics.

“We need to know if Facebook, or any entity affiliated with or hired by Facebook, ever used any of the vast financial and data resources available to them to retaliate against their critics, including elected officials who were scrutinisi­ng them,” said Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, one of the Democrats who wrote the letter.

Billionair­e co-founder of the software company Salesforce Marc Benioff said companies such as Facebook “are going to have to recognise that they have to change … and the CEOs have to change.

“And if they don’t change, those CEOs will be removed by boards and by shareholde­rs”.

 ?? Reuters ?? Several previous attempts to remove Mark Zuckerberg as chairman have all failed
Reuters Several previous attempts to remove Mark Zuckerberg as chairman have all failed

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