The company's shares were set to open around 9 percent higher after
touching $78.13 in premarket trading.
Up to Wednesday's close, Facebook's stock had more than quadrupled
since touching a low of $17.55 in September 2012.
At least 18 brokerages raised their price targets on the stock, by
as much as $15 to a high of $100.
At $100, Facebook would be valued at more than $250 billion.
Facebook reported on Wednesday that its mobile advertising revenue
grew 151 percent in the second quarter, accounting for about 62
percent overall ad revenue.
"Facebook has, so far, effectively addressed one of the most
significant overhangs from its IPO days - the lack of mobile
monetization," RBC Capital Markets analysts said in a note.
Facebook's initial public offering in May 2012 was widely considered
to be a flop. The stock, priced at $38, fell for months after the
debut as investors worried about the company's ability to make money
from mobile advertising.
With people increasingly accessing the Internet from smartphones and
tablets, companies such as Facebook, Google Inc and Twitter Inc have
been looking for ways to generate more revenue from the smaller
screens.
"We think 2Q represents further validation that Facebook can
continue to drive mobile ad revenue growth through better ad
targeting, relevancy and quality, and through continued growth in
advertiser demand in its ad auction," JP Morgan analysts wrote in
research report.
JP Morgan, which kept its "overweight" rating on the stock, raised
its price target to $90 from $80.
Of the 43 analysts covering the stock, 37 have a "buy" or a higher
rating on the stock and six a "hold". There are no "sell" ratings,
according to StarMine data.
Facebook's quarterly revenue of $2.91 billion beat the average
analyst estimate of $2.81 billion, according to Thomson Reuters
I/B/E/S.
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"It was a very impressive quarter on top of what we believe were
very high Street expectations," Barclays Equity Research analyst
Paul Vogel wrote in a note.
While the average price per ad rose 123 percent year-over-year,
total ad impressions fell 25 percent.
"The sharp rise in pricing was the result of an increase in
proportion of newsfeed ads, which generally command higher pricing
relative to other formats, and the decline in impressions was due to
an increase in mobile usage," Macquarie Research analysts wrote.
Facebook, whose newsfeed ads inject paid marketing messages straight
into a user's stream of news and content, said it now had 1.32
billion monthly users, of which about 63 percent access the service
every day.
Facebook shares hit a record high of $72.59 in regular market
trading on March 11. The stock closed at $71.29 on the Nasdaq on
Wednesday.
(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee in Bangalore; Editing by Ted Kerr)
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