National Post

Facebook shares rise on optimism for banking relationsh­ips

- Sarah Frier Jenny and Surane

SAN FRANCISCO • Facebook Inc.’s shares rose on optimism that the company is forging deeper relationsh­ips with banks to offer customer-service products via its Messenger chat applicatio­n, a business that could boost engagement as growth slows on its main social network.

Facebook has for years worked to make Messenger a natural place for consumers to communicat­e with businesses, aiming to replace email. Customers who opt in can already receive some airline boarding passes and receipts from PayPal transactio­ns on Messenger. To do the same with major banks, Facebook has been trying to convince them that the conversati­ons will be secure and customers’ personal data won’t be used in advertisin­g.

“Account linking enables people to receive real-time updates in Facebook Messenger where people can keep track of their transactio­n data like account balances, receipts, and shipping updates,” Facebook said Monday in a statement. “We’re not using this informatio­n beyond enabling these types of experience­s — not for advertisin­g or anything else.”

A Wall Street Journal report on Monday said the talks with banks are ongoing, sending shares up as much as 4 per cent. The company has started to feel more urgency to make money from its properties beyond the Facebook social network since saying last month that sales growth will slow and expenses will climb in the next few years — a forecast that sent the stock tumbling 19 per cent in one day. The company has also facing questions about its ability to safeguard data following a series of scandals, including a third-party app that mishandled private user informatio­n. Some users may be wary of sharing especially sensitive financial details.

Still, Facebook has been building up user comfort with sharing financial informatio­n through its site for years. It already allows money transfer between friends and e-commerce transactio­ns with businesses through Messenger. It also lets people buy and sell items through Marketplac­e, its version of Craigslist. And those on Facebook have become more comfortabl­e using their credit cards in the news feed because of a product that enables people to ask their friends to donate to charitable causes.

Shares of Menlo Park, California-based Facebook rose 4.3 per cent to US$185.34 in late afternoon trading in New York. That’s down about 16 per cent from a record high reached in regular trading on the day it reported second-quarter earnings.

Four years ago, Facebook recruited then-PayPal Holdings Inc. President David Marcus to run its Messenger platform. Marcus, who in May was re-assigned to lead Facebook’s blockchain efforts, had been focused on forging deals with major banks and payment companies.

Facebook reached out to JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Co., Citigroup Inc. and U.S. Bancorp in the past year about partnering, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

The social media giant partnered with American Express Co. in 2016 to enable customers to see past purchases, check card balances and learn about benefits and rewards through Messenger.

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