Facebook feels $10 Billion sting from Apple’s privacy push
Facebook stock faceplants: On pace for biggest one-day drop ever
WallStreet Alliance Group partner Aadil Zaman and Sarge986 president Stephen Guilfoyle react to the earnings miss on ‘The Claman Countdown.’
Facebook’s parent company served up a stark sign of how Apple Inc.’s new ad-privacy policy is roiling the digital-advertising world.
Meta Platforms Inc. closed down more than 26% in Thursday trading—a $230 billion-plus loss in market capitalization—after Chief Financial Officer David Wehner on Wednesday said the company expects the Apple policy to cost it more than $10 billion in lost sales for 2022, equivalent to about 8% of its total revenue last year.
"It’s a pretty significant headwind," Mr. Wehner said on a call with analysts.
The share decline represented the biggest one-day retreat in value in U.S. history.
FACEBOOK SEES BIGGEST ONE-DAY MARKET VALUE DROP EVER FOR US COMPANY
Rival social-media platform Snap Inc., which retreated more than 23% Thursday amid concerns over the impact Apple’s policy is having on the online ad market, cheered investors after the closing bell with its first-ever quarterly profit. The company also signaled progress in navigating the Apple policy changes. The stock rallied more than 50% in after-hours trading on the results.
Apple introduced the changes last April, altering its iPhone software to require apps to ask users whether they want to be tracked. The move limited the ability to gather data through apps that is used to target digital ads and drove advertisers to alter spending patterns. Meta had said previously that the Apple move was hurting its ad business, but it hadn’t given an estimate for how much.
Meta "was impacted significantly and it’s going to be a continuous problem," Daniel Newman, a principal analyst at Futurum Research, said Wednesday.
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