Facebook owner Meta to lift veil off its metaverse business
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[January 31, 2022] By
Elizabeth Culliford
(Reuters) - Since October, Facebook has
renamed the company, articulated a vision of the internet where people
can digitally connect through virtual-reality avatars or teleport to see
places like ancient Rome, and helped trigger the metaverse investment
craze.
When the company, now Meta Platforms Inc, reports fourth-quarter results
on Wednesday, investors will get a new window into the financial impact
of CEO Mark Zuckerberg's current passion.
Meta plans to break out the results of its augmented and virtual-reality
hardware unit, Reality Labs, for the first time, an investment the
company previously warned would cause a $10 billion hit to 2021 profit
and would not be profitable "any time in the near future."
The company is hiring engineers and buying up multiple virtual reality
gaming studios to build toward the metaverse, which is a broad
futuristic idea of shared virtual realms that can be accessed via
different devices and which Zuckerberg is betting will be the successor
to the mobile internet.
Analysts said they would be keen to see indicators about the Reality
Labs division's profitability, how long it might be a drag on the
advertising side, and evidence around the strength of VR headset sales.
"It's going to be huge for me as an analyst, not having to surgically
dig through Facebook earnings ... and just see a lens into the Reality
Labs," said VR market analyst Stephanie Llamas of VoxPop.
Meta has said it expects non-advertising revenue to be down
year-over-year in the fourth quarter as it compares unfavorably with the
"strong launch" of its VR Quest 2 headsets during the previous year's
holiday shopping season.
The company has not released sales numbers for Quest headsets, but a
July recall notice for the Quest 2's facial foam liners said it affected
about 4 million units in the United States. In a sign of strong sales
for the headsets during the recent holiday period, its Oculus app hit
the top spot on the U.S. App Store for free iPhone apps on Christmas
Day.
'SIGNIFICANT UNCERTAINTY'
Front-of-mind for investors, though, will be how Meta's core digital
advertising business is faring, after the tech giant said in October it
faced "significant uncertainty" in the fourth quarter.
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Facebook's rebrand logo Meta and a 3D printed Facebook logo are seen
in this illustration taken on November 2, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
The company, which has the second-largest digital ad platform in the world after
Alphabet Inc's Google, warned it could face continued hits from Apple Inc's
privacy changes which have made it harder for brands to target and measure their
ads on Meta's social media services Facebook and Instagram. Analysts said Meta
had set the bar low for its coming earnings, but questions remained about these
effects and about issues related to the COVID-19 pandemic.
"The Apple tracking change clearly had a negative impact on Facebook in the
September quarter," said Evercore ISI analyst Mark Mahaney. "The question is,
were they able to further mitigate that risk ... or did it become bigger?"
Pedro Palandrani, a research analyst at Global X, said the metaverse was the
"long-term story" but in the near term investors would look for how Meta
navigates Apple's policy as well as e-commerce updates and ways to monetize
messaging or features like its short video offering, Reels.
Meta, which reported 2020 revenue of about $86 billion, has yet to explain in
detail how it will make money in the metaverse. In November, it pointed to
potential opportunities for brands, from immersive shops to running paid
mixed-reality events. The company has invited a group of ad execs to discuss its
brand change and its plans for the metaverse at a virtual roundtable next month.
Meta is expected to report revenue of $33.38 billion, according to Wall Street
estimates, up 18.9% year over year, and is expected to post quarterly earnings
per share of $3.84, a slight decline. The company has said it expects total 2021
expenses to come in at $70 billion-$71 billion and full-year 2022 expenses to
reach $91 billion-$97 billion.
(Reporting by Elizabeth Culliford in New York; Additional reporting by Sheila
Dang in Dallas; Editing by Kenneth Li and Matthew Lewis)
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