Meta headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif.
Photo:
Tony Avelar/Associated Press
How the Meta has fallen. Who would have predicted a year ago that
market value would be nearly double that of the company formerly known as
? Certainly not the antitrust regulators who sued to break up
alleged monopoly.
Meta’s stock took a 23% dive this week after its third-quarter earnings report showed slowing growth in social media and mounting losses at its virtual-reality division. The company’s market value has fallen $655 billion this year, which knocked it out of the list of top 25 companies in the world by market capitalization.
Other big tech stocks have also sold off this year amid rising interest rates. The Federal Reserve’s bond-buying and negative real interest rates drove investors into growth stocks, which inflated tech valuations. Social-media companies have also been hurt by lower advertising spending as businesses cut marketing budgets amid economic uncertainty.
Meta’s 70% share decline this year is also the result of investors downgrading its growth expectations. Meta is facing social-media competition from TikTok, which is more popular than Facebook and Instagram among the youngest generations. Privacy controls that
introduced on its iPhones last year have also limited advertisers’ ability to target users, which has hurt Meta’s ad sales.
Foreseeing these headwinds, Mr. Zuckerberg last fall tripled down on the company’s metaverse bet. The company has plowed $13 billion in the last year into its Reality Labs, which sells virtual-reality headsets and apps that allow users to interact in an alternative universe. But its metaverse has struggled to attract users beyond hard-core video-gamers.
A recent
report said Meta employees this…
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