Meta mojo is back: Earnings surprise sparks share surge, lifts Big Tech
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[February 02, 2023] By
Aditya Soni and Medha Singh
(Reuters) - Meta Platforms Inc shares rose nearly 20% in premarket trade
after the Facebook owner floored Wall Street by slashing its spending
forecast and boosting its stock buyback plan by $40 billion.
The company was set to add around $75 billion to its market value and
would post its best day in a decade, if gains hold.
Meta stock surge also sparked a rally in shares of mega-caps Amazon.com,
Apple Inc and Alphabet Inc, all of which sport market values of more
than $1 trillion and report earnings after market close.
Meta's move on Wednesday to rein in costs was a dramatic shift for a
company that has spent billions of dollars to turn its vision of the
futuristic metaverse into a reality even while its core business reeled
from stiff competition and a weak advertising market.
The results prompted at least 19 analysts to boost their price targets
on the stock, with several saying that a combination of lower costs,
upbeat revenue growth and share buybacks will drive up earnings per
share.
"That is rare", analysts at Evercorse ISI said, referring to the
positive developments. "And stocks react to rare."
The results also provided some relief to the market after an earnings
meltdown at Snap Inc on Tuesday that had sent the tech sector's shares
lower.
"After Snap's disaster, the fact that Meta wasn't quite so bad has
brought encouragement to tech mega-caps," said Fiona Cincotta, analyst
at City Index.
"There is also a less hawkish Fed which is also boosting demand for
growth and tech stocks generally."
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The logo of Meta Platforms' business
group is seen in Brussels, Belgium December 6, 2022. REUTERS/Yves
Herman/File Photo
'YEAR OF EFFICIENCY'
Meta now expects its 2023 expenses between $89 billion and $95
billion, a sharp drop from its previous outlook of $94 billion to
$100 billion, with CEO Mark Zuckerberg calling the period a "Year of
Efficiency."
The forecast reflects savings from the 11,000 job cuts it announced
in November, plans for lower data-center construction expenses and
moves to drop non-crucial projects.
"Promising that 2023 will be a year of efficiency was always likely
to go down well with investors concerned about the largesse in
spending directed towards the unproven potential of the metaverse,"
said AJ Bell, investment director at Russ Mould.
There were also signs that Meta's core social-media business was
getting back on track, with monetization efficiency for short-form
video Reels on Facebook doubling and the business being on track to
break-even as soon as end of 2023.
The company, which forecast first-quarter revenue above market
estimates, also said that Facebook's daily active user base grew to
2 billion, from 1.98 billion in the prior quarter.
"Meta is getting its mojo back," analysts at Baird said.
(Reporting by Medha Singh and Aditya Soni in Bengaluru; Editing by
Vinay Dwivedi)
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