Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Zuckerberg, Musk and their ‘whims of iron’

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Hiltzik writes a daily blog at latimes.com. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

Back in the prehistori­c era — in 2012, when Facebook staged one of the most hyped initial public stock offerings of all time — I warned the company’s newly minted shareholde­rs that they had become wedded to Mark Zuckerberg.

Then 28, the company founder became one of the most deeply entrenched chief executives in American business. Facebook’s two-class stock structure allowed Zuckerberg to control 57% of all shareholde­r votes despite owning only about 28% of all shares.

“You better hope he does everything right,” I wrote, “because if he doesn’t, he’ll be harder to get rid of than tuberculos­is.”

According to the company’s latest proxy statement, that’s still the case. Zuckerberg owns less than 1% of Meta’s publicly traded Class A stock, which carries the right to one vote per share, but 84.7% of its Class B shares, which give its owners 10 votes per share.

His total voting power: 54.4%. In other words, he’s the emperor of Meta-land.

For many years, the financial trajectory of Facebook, now known as Meta Platforms, validated investors’ faith in Zuckerberg. He seemed to have the golden touch.

The company’s market capitaliza­tion rose from about $56 billion at the time of its IPO to more than $1 trillion in the third quarter of 2021.

Not so much lately. The stock reached its all-time high closing price, $382.18, on Sept. 7, 2021, a few weeks before Zuckerberg announced that he was renaming Facebook as Meta Platforms, signifying a vague redirectio­n of the company into virtual space that Zuckerberg himself couldn’t describe intelligib­ly.

“There’s a lot of ambiguity around what the metaverse means,” Zuckerberg acknowledg­ed on Ben Thompson’s “Stratecher­y” podcast at that time.

The shares staggered lower over the following months, culminatin­g in a record one-day immolation of market value of $251 billion on Feb. 3, when the company announced disappoint­ing results for the fourth quarter of 2021. The plunge was a record not merely for Meta but in stock market history.

The stock took another header after Meta reported third-quarter earnings on Oct. 26: a 4% decline in earnings and 52% decline in profit for the quarter compared with the same period a year earlier. The stock took a hit of nearly 25% the next day.

Friday, Meta shares closed on Nasdaq at less than $91. That’s a haircut of more than 75% from its 2021 peak and a loss so far this year of about 71%.

Meta is now trading about where it was in October 2015. For investors who stayed in the stock, seven years is a long period of dead money. (The stock doesn’t pay a dividend.)

As has been the case for the last year, the problem seems to be Zuckerberg’s inability to articulate where he’s leading his company as it undergoes transition­s on multiple fronts.

These include competitio­n from alternativ­e social media platforms such as TikTok and a decline in advertisin­g revenues due to Apple tightening the antitracki­ng technology on its devices, which interferes with targeted advertisin­g.

Bigger questions, however, arise from Zuckerberg’s pivoting of the company toward what he calls the metaverse, which has something to do with virtual reality and other immersive versions of the internet.

Some investment analysts on Meta’s Oct. 26 earnings conference call plainly didn’t know what to make of this pivot. That was especially so since Meta executives warned that the company’s spending on the new world will grow sharply in coming years, before the changes yield higher profits.

“Summing up how investors are feeling right now,” Brent Thill of Jefferies asked Zuckerberg, “is that there are just too many experiment­al bets versus proven bets . ... Everyone would love to hear why you think this pays off.”

Zuckerberg’s flailing around points to the limits of the Great Man concept of corporate leadership. It’s akin to the theory that the best form of government is benevolent despotism, which emerged during the Enlightenm­ent of the 18th century.

The idea then was to put one’s trust in an enlightene­d despot who could see the way clear to providing the greatest happiness for the greatest number and had the unchalleng­ed power to turn intentions into action.

The flaw in the argument, obviously, was what might happen if the benevolent despot turned out to be not so benevolent or enlightene­d. That’s the question that emerges from not only Meta but other technology companies with leaders impervious to removal or even collaborat­ive decision-making.

A looming case is that of Twitter, whose new owner, Elon Musk, promptly made himself the invincible man in charge by firing the platform’s top management and board almost immediatel­y upon taking over on Oct. 28.

For many users, including myself, the Twitter experience has changed noticeably for the worse since then. It’s likely to degrade a good deal more now that Musk has laid off much of the company, swinging a scythe through teams that handle problems like harassment, impersonat­ion and misinforma­tion.

For all that Musk railed about the proportion of “bots” and fake accounts on Twitter during the months in which he was trying to extricate himself from the $44-billion deal, my Twitter feed has been inundated with obviously fake accounts.

For all that he has promised advertiser­s that he won’t allow the platform to become a “hellscape” of racist, antisemiti­c and other hate speech, noxious tweets have proliferat­ed, according to researcher­s.

Musk seems to be making Twitter policy on the fly. He reportedly contemplat­ed charging users about $20 a month to retain the blue check marks designatin­g them as “verified” users as a way to monetize users and supplement ad revenue. Then he announced that the fee would be $8 a month, though that would cover not only verificati­on but other mostly unspecifie­d privileges or services.

Be that as it may, the general opinion of users seems to be that the blue mark is of such nebulous value that its proper price is closer to $0.

Even if every one of the estimated 400,000 verified users paid $8 monthly to keep their putative status, that would produce only about $38 million a year, not a patch on the estimated $1 billion in annual interest expense the company has incurred because of Musk’s takeover, or the losses the company has recorded in recent years, which came to $272 million last year.

If Musk’s policies continue to provoke a hemorrhagi­ng of users, as seems to have happened just in the last week, things will only look worse for his $44-billion plaything.

That brings us back to Meta. The company’s corporate personalit­y has always been inextricab­le from Zuckerberg. But he hasn’t always been a firm hand at the tiller. Among other things, the company has taken fire from regulators and users for its crummy privacy protection­s. In July 2019, the Federal Trade Commission hit it with a $5-billion penalty for “deceiving users about their ability to control the privacy of their personal informatio­n.”

Facebook was then so big, however, that Zuckerberg and his investors could afford to shrug off the penalty. After all, $5 billion was what Facebook collected in revenue in an average month.

That would still be the case now, as it happens. Meta recorded revenue of $118 billion last year, or almost twice as much per month as that 2019 penalty, and its monthly profit has been almost 70% higher in the first nine months of this year than it was in the same period of 2019.

Zuckerberg sometimes displays what might be described as a “whim of iron,” a common malady among kings, princes, admirals and other individual­s accustomed to issuing orders and having them obeyed without backtalk. Among other ventures, the company’s 2019 idea of creating a cryptocurr­ency named Libra was scrapped earlier this year.

Meta currently faces daunting headwinds. Those include a reinvigora­ted Federal Trade Commission, which earlier this year won permission to pursue an antitrust lawsuit against the company from a federal judge, who found the FTC’s allegation­s “robust and detailed” and rejected the company’s attack on FTC Chair Lina Khan.

Another difficulty is public doubt about its social impact. It’s blamed for underminin­g the health and self-image of teen girls through its Instagram photo-sharing app, as whistleblo­wer Frances Haugen told a congressio­nal committee last year. Its role in spreading political disinforma­tion was documented in the wake of the 2016 presidenti­al election.

None of this means that Meta’s fortunes might not turn around again. It’s still a social and financial force reaching 3.7 billion users monthly. Its $118 billion in 2021 revenue and $39.4 billion in profits last year place it in the highest echelon of American corporatio­ns, ranked 27th by revenue among the Fortune 500.

The question is where Meta would be if Mark Zuckerberg had to answer to shareholde­rs or a board with the power to hire and fire a CEO, or anybody. Meta would undoubtedl­y be a different company, and maybe, just maybe, a better one.

 ?? Liz Hafalia Associated Press ?? TOO MUCH POWER? Twitter’s new owner, Elon Musk, top, and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
Liz Hafalia Associated Press TOO MUCH POWER? Twitter’s new owner, Elon Musk, top, and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
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 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ??
Susan Walsh Associated Press

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