San Francisco Chronicle

Revenue uncertaint­y sinks Twitter stock

- By Barbara Ortutay Barbara Ortutay is an Associated Press writer.

Twitter’s stock tumbled Thursday after the company failed to show that it’s weathering the pandemicbo­rne digital advertisin­g slump the same way its bigger rivals Facebook and Google are.

The San Francisco social media company’s higher expenses outweighed its revenue growth in the first three months of the year, leading to a loss of $8.4 million.

And when asked during a conference call how April looked in terms of revenue, executives pointed back to the second half of March — when advertisin­g declined.

That period is “the best time frame to look at if you want to think about what it’s been like for us,” Twitter’s Chief Financial Officer Ned Segal said.

Facebook, in contrast, said Wednesday that after a March decline, it saw “signs of stability” in the first three weeks of April. And it said ad revenue during that period has been flat compared with the yearago period.

Google parent company Alphabet also posted results this week that didn’t look “quite as bad as some people had feared,” said Edward Jones analyst David Heger.

All three companies are seeing an increase in their user numbers, because the virus outbreak has forced people to stay at home. Twitter reported that average daily users grew 24% year over year, the highest growth rate in the company’s history.

Twitter has added 14 million daily users since the previous quarter. The company said growth was driven by seasonal strength, product improvemen­ts and interest in coronaviru­s.

Last year, Twitter started disclosing its daily user base, or the number of users who log in at least once a day and see ads on the platform. The daily metric has replaced its monthly user count, which Twitter said it will no longer disclose. Other companies, such as Facebook, give both daily and monthly counts.

For the three months that ended in March, Twitter profit amounted to 1 cent per share, on revenue of $807.6 million. A year ago, the company earned $190.8 million, or 25 cents per share, on a big tax benefit. Revenue totaled $786.9 million.

Wall Street analysts had estimated that Twitter would earn 10 cents per share on revenue of $783 million during the quarter.

The company previously withdrew its fullyear financial forecast and said Thursday that it would not provide secondquar­ter estimates either.

Its shares fell $2.41, or 7.8%, to close Thursday at $28.68.

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