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Facebook just had its worst day ever on Wall Street

In this illustration photo taken in Los Angeles on Oct. 28, 2021, a person watches on a smartphone as Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveils the META logo. The name of Facebook's parent company was changed to Meta to represent a future beyond just its troubled social network.
Chris Delmas
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AFP via Getty Images
In this illustration photo taken in Los Angeles on Oct. 28, 2021, a person watches on a smartphone as Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveils the META logo. The name of Facebook's parent company was changed to Meta to represent a future beyond just its troubled social network.

Updated February 3, 2022 at 4:19 PM ET

Through all of the challenges Facebook has faced over the years, one thing has been constant: More and more people have kept signing up and logging on.

But that changed in the last three months of 2021, when the world's biggest social network lost daily users for the first time ever.

On Thursday, Facebook's parent company Meta had had its worst day ever on Wall Street, as disillusioned investors sliced its market value by 26% — or more than $250 billion.

The company's latest quarterly earnings report raised a number of red flags. CEO Mark Zuckerberg pointed to intense competition from the newest social media juggernaut, TikTok.

"People have a lot of choices for how they want to spend their time, and apps like TikTok are growing very quickly," he told investors on Wednesday. "The thing that is somewhat unique here is that TikTok is so big as a competitor already and also continues to grow at quite a fast rate."

The wildly popular Chinese-owned video app is swiping users and advertising dollars from Facebook and its sister app Instagram, threatening the heart of a business that generated $115 billion dollars in revenue last year.

Meta is scrambling to catch up with new features like Instagram Reels, a TikTok clone that the company is betting on to keep young users engaged.

But investors were spooked by Zuckerberg's acknowledgement that TikTok already has a clear, perhaps insurmountable, head start.

"The threat is so large that Facebook is being forced to change its products to replicate TikTok, because TikTok is what clearly consumers now want," said Rich Greenfield, an analyst at LightShed Partners. He said Meta's plunging share price reflected "the fear that TikTok has reached escape velocity."

TikTok is not the only problem weighing on Meta.

Apple recently changed its privacy settings on iPhones, making it harder for Meta to sell targeted ads. Meta said that could cost it $10 billion in lost sales this year.

"We're rebuilding a lot of our ads infrastructure so we can continue to grow and deliver high-quality personalized ads," Zuckerberg said.

And then there is Zuckerberg's ambition to become "a metaverse company."

Last fall, he renamed Facebook as Meta to signal its new focus on this future virtual world. But building it will cost a lot of money: Meta said it lost $10 billion last year on its Reality Labs division, which designs and builds the software and virtual reality hardware, such as the Quest 2, that will be used in the metaverse.

The ballooning costs resulted in a rare decline in quarterly profit to $10.3 billion.

On Wednesday's call, Zuckerberg admitted that the future is uncertain.

"This fully realized vision is still a ways off," Zuckerberg said. "And although the direction is clear, our path ahead is not perfectly defined."

But many shareholders are not sticking around to find out, said LightShed's Greenfield.

"Investors can handle bad news, investors can handle good news," he said. "What investors hate is lack of visibility."

Editor's note: Meta pays NPR to license NPR content.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Shannon Bond is a business correspondent at NPR, covering technology and how Silicon Valley's biggest companies are transforming how we live, work and communicate.
Peter Granitz

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