Los Angeles Times

Facebook stock takes a big hit

Firm sees revenue and daily visitors fall in second quarter amid public scandals over privacy and content.

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The firm’s shares dive in after-hours trading as its revenue and daily visitors miss expectatio­ns.

Facebook Inc. saw the first signs of user disenchant­ment in the midst of public scandals over privacy and content, with secondquar­ter revenue and average daily visitors missing analysts’ projection­s.

Its stock sank as much as 25% in extended trading.

The social media giant said it had 1.47 billion daily active users in June, compared with the 1.48 billion average of analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Revenue, fueled by mobile advertisin­g sales, increased 42% to $13.2 billion. Analysts had projected $13.3 billion.

The company’s user growth fell short of expectatio­ns in the same quarter Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg testified for 10 hours in Congress on data privacy issues. It also came as Europe implemente­d strict new data laws, which Facebook had warned could lead to fewer daily visitors in that region. The company also was bombarded by public criticism over its content policies, especially in countries such as Myanmar and Sri Lanka where misinforma­tion has led to violence.

“The core Facebook platform is declining,” said Brian Wieser, an analyst at Pivotal Research Group.

The company’s user base was unchanged in its biggest market — the United States and Canada — at 185 million daily users, while declining in Europe to 279 million. Overall, average daily users increased 11% from the same period last year.

The Menlo Park company reported net income of $5.11 billion, or $1.74 a share, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $1.71 a share, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

This was the first time Facebook had missed analysts’ revenue projection­s since 2015.

Facebook’s shares closed Wednesday at $217.50, a record high, before the company released its quarterly report. The stock had advanced 23% this year. A drop of 20% would knock more than $100 billion off the company’s stock market value.

The social network, despite the drama of the last few months, still holds one of the world’s most valuable sets of data on what people are interested in, and it makes that audience easily available to advertiser­s. But its ad growth engine contended with disruption­s in its most lucrative markets. In Europe, Facebook had to respond to new privacy rules. In North America, an effort to get all political advertiser­s to verify their identities may have halted some purchases as the company worked through its broad definition of what is considered political.

The company remains in a dominant position in mobile advertisin­g alongside Alphabet Inc.’s Google. Facebook said mobile made up 91% of its ad revenue last quarter, up from about 87% in the year-earlier quarter.

As Facebook grows, reaching a majority of the world’s internet-connected population, it is becoming more reliant on properties other than its main social network to fuel growth. It owns three other properties with more than 1 billion users: WhatsApp, Messenger and Instagram. Instagram’s business model is so far the most mature, and analysts said it probably contribute­d meaningful­ly to the company’s revenue in the quarter, though Facebook doesn’t break out sales for the app.

Facebook has said it will increase spending to make investment­s in video content, and on new bets such as artificial intelligen­ce and virtual reality. The company is also rapidly expanding its real estate around the world to accommodat­e a hiring spree, which includes thousands of new workers to help combat foreign election manipulati­on on the site.

 ?? Gerard Julien AFP/Getty Images ?? FACEBOOK’S revenue, fueled by mobile ad sales, rose 42% to $13.2 billion in the quarter. Analysts had projected $13.3 billion. Above, CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
Gerard Julien AFP/Getty Images FACEBOOK’S revenue, fueled by mobile ad sales, rose 42% to $13.2 billion in the quarter. Analysts had projected $13.3 billion. Above, CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

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