Investors wipe almost $200bn from value of Social Media Giant Meta

Investors wiped almost $200bn from the market valuation of Facebook owner Meta as it warned that users were spending more time on newer rivals such as ByteDance’s TikTok. Shares in the company plummeted more than 20 per cent in pre-market trading on Thursday after Meta said it expected its first-quarter revenues to fall short of Wall Street forecasts because of the “increasing competition”. The tumble leaves Meta shares on track for their worst day since the group listed in 2012 and would mark one of the biggest one-day declines in a company’s market value on record. “

People have a lot of choices for how they want to spend their time, and apps like TikTok are growing very quickly,” Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive, warned on a call with analysts after the group’s results were announced late on Wednesday. The competition would put short-term pressure on Meta’s advertising business, he added. The latest evidence that Meta was losing the “attention battle” to apps such as TikTok came a day after its rival, Google parent Alphabet, posted an unexpected surge in advertising revenue.

Whereas the Google owner has taken Apple’s recent privacy changes in its stride, Meta said it was still suffering from the new policies that make it harder to track users and target advertising. “There’s a clear trend where less data is available to deliver personalised ads,” Zuckerberg said. Some tech companies have been under considerable pressure this year as investors grow jittery over signs of slowing growth and as the Federal Reserve prepares to tighten policy.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index suffered its worst month in January since coronavirus first rocked financial markets in March 2020. Late last month, Netflix shares slid by their most in almost a decade after the company’s guidance fell short of expectations. PayPal, which missed expectations on Tuesday, plunged almost 25 per cent the following day, slicing $51bn off the company’s valuation.

Meta’s fourth-quarter earnings at a glance Actual vs estimates Revenue: $33.7bn vs $33.4bn Net income: $10.3bn vs $11bn EPS: $3.67 vs $3.83 Ad sales: $32.6bn vs $32.5bn Monthly active users: 2.91bn vs 3bn Sources for estimates: S&P Capital IQ and Refinitiv Spotify also posted a disappointing outlook for first-quarter subscriber growth on Wednesday, sending its shares down as much as 23 per cent in after-hours trading before they recovered to trade roughly 10 per cent lower. Meta said it expected revenues in the first quarter of 2022 to be in the range of $27bn to $29bn, equivalent to between 3 and 11 per cent growth year on year.

That was below expectations for first-quarter revenue of $30.3bn, according to S&P Capital IQ, and would essentially be Facebook’s slowest growth period in its history, according to analysts. Fourth-quarter profits were squeezed by its investment in a digital avatar-filled world known as the metaverse, as well as higher spending at its virtual and augmented reality technology arm. Facebook’s monthly active user base remained flat at 2.91bn, below analysts’ estimates of 3bn. Recommended News in-depthMeta Platforms Facebook patents reveal how it intends to cash in on metaverse On top of “increased competition for people’s time”, Meta blamed the poor performance on “a shift of engagement within our apps”. It said people were watching more short-form videos that brought in less money than the advertising appearing in its feed.

The social media company has struggled to maintain its edge with teenagers and younger users, while a string of privacy and moderation scandals have battered its reputation. Zuckerberg last year announced that the company would be “retooling . . . to make serving young adults the north star”, with a focus on Reels, its TikTok clone.

Meta on Wednesday also warned that macroeconomic challenges such as inflation and supply chain disruptions were hitting advertisers’ budgets. Tom Johnson, global chief digital officer, at Mindshare Worldwide, said: “The warnings over significant headwinds linked to supply chain and the impact on ad dollars, the continuing impact of [Apple] iOS privacy changes, as well as consumers moving to Meta features that monetise at a lower level have combined to scare investors that the good times may be over.”