The Commercial Appeal

Twitter revenue drops amid Musk fight

- Kelvin Chan and Matt O’brien

LONDON – Twitter reported a quarterly loss Friday and declining revenue caught Wall Street off guard with the number of people using the platform on the rise.

The latest quarterly earnings figures offered a glimpse into how the social media platform has performed during a months-long negotiatio­n with billionair­e and Tesla CEO Elon Musk after he said that he would buy the company, and then changed his mind.

It was worse than industry analysts had anticipate­d.

The company lost $270 million in the April-june period, or 8 cents per share. Wall Street was expecting a per-share profit of 14 cents, according to a poll by Factset.

Inflation has crimped advertisin­g spending and that was a huge drag on Twitter’s quarterly revenue, which slid 1% to $1.18 billion. The company also cited “uncertaint­y” over the acquisitio­n by Musk.

Twitter is holding no calls with analysts and will not publish a letter to shareholde­rs, as is the norm, because of the pending acquisitio­n.

The underlying numbers at Twitter, however, were good. The number of daily active users rose 16.6% to 237.8 million compared with the same period a year before.

Those numbers are particular­ly impressive in the wake of a quarterly earnings report late Thursday from the social media company Snap.

Snap also saw advertisin­g tumble in the high-inflationa­ry environmen­t and shares plunged more than 30% Friday before the opening bell.

“When compared to the nightmare quarter of SNAP last night, it shows digital ad spending is not falling off a cliff like feared which is a positive for others in the space such as Facebook, Pinterest, and Google,” wrote Dan Ives, who covers technology for Wedbush.

Shares of Twitter Inc. rose 1% at the opening bell Friday as the clash with Musk overshadow­ed almost everything. Twitter is attempting to force Musk to make good on his April promise to buy the company for $44 billion. Twitter last week sued Musk to complete the deal and both sides are bracing for an October courtroom trial to resolve the dispute.

The April-june fiscal quarter encompasse­d a tumultuous three months for Twitter, starting with the April 4 disclosure that Musk had acquired a huge stake in the company, paving the way for his takeover bid later that month. It didn’t take long for the relationsh­ip to fray as Musk publicly tweeted his concerns about Twitter and its employees and signaled he was having second thoughts.

Twitter argued in court that Musk’s actions and his “repeated disparagem­ent of Twitter and its personnel” created uncertaint­y that harmed Twitter’s business operations, employees and stock price.

It called for an expedited trial so the company could carry on with important business decisions, while Musk sought to wait until next year because of the complexity of the case and his demands for more of Twitter’s internal data about how it counts fake and automated “spam bot” accounts – which he’s cited as a chief reason for trying to terminate the deal.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Shares of Twitter Inc. rose 1% Friday as the clash with Tesla CEO Elon Musk overshadow­ed almost everything.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Shares of Twitter Inc. rose 1% Friday as the clash with Tesla CEO Elon Musk overshadow­ed almost everything.

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