Times Colonist

Daily user growth spikes at Twitter

- KELVIN CHAN

LONDON — The global pandemic and U.S. protests are forcing a pullback by advertiser­s on Twitter, but it’s also led to an unpreceden­ted surge of users.

Average daily user growth spiked 34 per cent in the second quarter, the company said Thursday, the largest jump in users ever recorded by the company.

In an earnings call, CEO Jack Dorsey addressed an embarrassi­ng hacking incident last week that compromise­d the accounts of high profile users, saying he felt “terrible” about it.

Shares of Twitter bounced six per cent higher.

But the company took a huge tax hit to earnings, posting a net loss of $1.2 billion US, or $1.56 per share, in the April-June period, compared with profit of $1.1 billion, or $1.43 per share, a year earlier.

Revenue fell by about a fifth to $683 million, far short of the $702 million Wall Street had expected, according to a survey of analysts by FactSet.

Twitter’s advertisin­g business was hit harder than its larger rivals Google and Facebook, and analysts had expected the bleeding to continue in the second quarter. The company said ad revenue made a “gradual, moderate recovery” relative to levels in March but many brands then slowed or paused their spending in late May to mid-June, following the outbreak of Black Lives Matter protests in the U.S.

“We continue to see headwinds from lower global advertisin­g demand due to COVID and civil unrest,” Dorsey said.

Ad revenue fell 15 per cent in the last three weeks of June, which was better than the 27 per cent decline in the final three weeks of March, with advertiser demand returning as the protests subsided, chief financial officer Ned Segal said in the earnings call.

New users have been flocking to the platform as they isolate, with the number of daily active users jumping to 186 million.

“Twitter’s strength as a news and entertainm­ent source has helped buoy engagement during the pandemic as housebound consumers use the platform for realtime news and informatio­n,” said eMarketer analyst Jasmine Enberg. But she does not expect this to continue as stay-at-home restrictio­ns begin to lift and people start returning to more normal routines.

The earnings were overshadow­ed by the continuing fallout from a hack last week that targeted 130 accounts, including world leaders, celebritie­s and tech moguls, and appeared designed to lure their Twitter followers into sending money to an anonymous Bitcoin account. The company revealed more details Wednesday, saying hackers accessed the direct message inboxes of 36 accounts, including an elected Dutch official. It didn’t identify the official but Dutch anti-Islam lawmaker Geert Wilders said it was him.

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