Facebook
tops Wall Street revenue target in fourth quarter
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[January 29, 2015]
By Alexei Oreskovic
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Facebook Inc's
revenue grew 49 percent in the fourth quarter, as mobile advertising
growth helped the world's largest Internet social network beat Wall
Street's targets for earnings and sales.
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But revenue growth was the weakest since the start of 2013, and
spending rose faster. Facebook shares fell about 2.6 percent in
after-hours trade after vacillating above and below the closing
price.
Facebook's business has boomed thanks to its mobile ads for
smartphones and tablets. Its success contrasts with other
established Internet companies such as Google Inc and Yahoo Inc,
which have struggled as advertisers shift more and more to mobile
devices from personal computers.
"They are taking share of advertising dollars online. They are
taking share of overall advertising budgets," said Ronald Josey, a
JMP Securities analyst, noting the strong quarter.
The company said on Wednesday it ended 2014 with 1.39 billion
monthly users, with 86 percent of them accessing its service on
smartphones and other mobile devices.
Mobile ads accounted for 69 percent of advertising revenue in the
fourth quarter, or $2.48 billion.
Many investors are betting that video ads, which Facebook began
offering last year, will provide the company's next leg of growth.
Chief Financial Officer Dave Wehner said in an interview the company
still had a lot of hard work to do and was optimistic about video.
"We have great marketer interest in video. It's a creative medium
that they know how to use effectively," he said.
Facebook has warned that 2015 will be a year of heavy investment, as
the company steps up efforts to expand a collection of products that
include messaging service WhatsApp, photo-sharing service Instagram
and virtual reality headset maker Oculus Rift.
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Facebook's revenue growth during the fourth quarter was exceeded by
its operating expenses, which grew roughly 87 percent as a result of
sharp increases in research and development costs and marketing and
sales spending.
Operating expenses are "ramping up faster than we would have liked,"
said Ben Schachter, an analyst at Macquarie Research.
Facebook's fourth-quarter overall revenue rose to $3.85 billion from
$2.59 billion in the year-ago period. Analysts polled by Thomson
Reuters I/B/E/S had forecast $3.77 billion.
Facebook said it earned 54 cents a share, excluding certain items,
in the fourth quarter, beating the average analyst estimate of 49
cents.
(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; additional writing by Peter
Henderson; Editing by Richard Chang)
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