Scottish Daily Mail

Facebook loses its mojo

- Alex Brummer CITY EDITOR

How sobering it will be for investors who have put their faith in big tech that Facebook-owner Meta’s shares plummeted by 26pc in the past two days. To put that in context, it is a fall of £175bn, almost all of the value of Unilever and Glaxosmith­kline added together.

It would be easy to paint this setback for Meta as just another gyration on the Nasdaq, which trades the biggest beasts in the equity universe as if they were penny stocks on London’s AIM market.

There are indication­s that bigger things are afoot. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s unwillingn­ess to submit to the norms of good governance are closing in on him, particular­ly in Europe.

In Britain, the Competitio­n and Markets Authority has just fined Meta £1.5m over its purchase of online animated GIF maker Giphy. That amounts to just a flea bite for Facebook. But the regulatory net is closing in, with plans to crack down on the web giants over people smugglers, fraud and revenge porn.

In the US, the Federal Trade Commission is limbering up for an anti-trust fight.

The bigger threats to Facebook are technologi­cal and commercial. Meta says it is building the world’s biggest supercompu­ter for handling artificial intelligen­ce (AI).

As Zuckerberg hatches his latest plot to be master of the universe, the Chinese are beating him to the punch without a power draining supercompu­ter.

Facebook has the astonishin­g number of 2.1bn registered users worldwide. However, it is no longer adding users at exponentia­l rates, if at all.

A social media site which began life among Harvard students, and was embraced by young people across the globe, has become staid and has fallen out of fashion, in spite of owning Instagram. It remains a huge force in digital advertisin­g. But science and tastes are moving on.

By all accounts, Tik Tok has stolen a march on Facebook. Chinese AI is able to track the popularity of each of its short videos. The software monitors how good the videos are in encouragin­g the return of users and deploys the data to upsell digital services.

while Zuckerberg’s supercompu­ter plays catch-up, the longer-term threat to Meta’s hegemony looks very real.

Instagram, its fastest growing arm, is slowing in its acquisitio­n of monthly users with projection­s showing a fall of 5.8pc this year and 3.1pc by 2025. This is a far cry from the 16.5pc gain seen in 2021.

Facebook is blaming the slowdown in usage on the end of lockdowns and pouring billions of dollars into TikTok-style video clips on its Reels platform.

That could be the start of the Meta fightback. But it is just possible that Facebook will be the first of the Silicon Valley giants to go ex-growth. That wouldn’t be great for those UK funds who have bought into Facebook immortalit­y.

Putin’s put

PRESIdENT Putin is playing the west like a fiddle when it comes to energy.

Should the US and its Nato allies decide to impose financial sanctions on Moscow, because of threats to the Ukraine, Putin has the option of cutting natural gas flows to Europe and refusing to activate the new Nord Stream pipeline.

Putin now seeks to insulate Russia from the economic impact of cutting off supplies to the west by signing a deal with President Xi to supply an extra 10bn cubic metres of Russian gas to China from its Eastern fields.

Geography may prevent gas bound for Europe being diverted to Beijing. Moscow’s supply deals with Beijing will mean it is no longer as dependent on euros and dollars.

The UK and Europe’s vulnerabil­ity to gas cut-off by Moscow has been eased by the diversion of US liquefied natural gas (LNG) resources to Europe. That brought down the wholesale price of natural gas sharply in Europe in december.

But it is far too late to make any difference to the UK’s energy price shock.

Low rated

AMoNG the big four central banks – the Fed, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan – there is only one holdout on tightening policy.

Japan’s big fight is against deflation rather than rising prices.

Consumer prices rose by just 0.5pc in december, way below the BoJ’s 2pc target. After decades of deflation, there is belief among Japan’s households and businesses that price rises will be absorbed and wages won’t rise. what a contrast.

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