Facebook scrambles to escape stock’s death spiral as users flee, sales drop

PUBLISHED FRI, SEP 30 2022 By Jonathan Vanian
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/09/30/facebook-scrambles-to-escape-death-spiral-as-users-flee-sales-drop.html

KEY POINTS

Meta is trading at its lowest since early 2019, and the stock is one of the 
worst performers this year in the S&P 500.

The company’s problems are mounting, whether it’s the ad hit from Apple’s iOS 
changes or the growing threat posed by TikTok.

“I’m not sure there’s a core business that works anymore at Facebook,” said 
Laura Martin, an analyst at Needham.


A year ago, before Facebook had turned Meta, the social media company was 
sporting a market cap of $1 trillion, putting it in rarefied territory with a 
handful of U.S. technology giants.

Today the view looks much different. Meta has lost about two-thirds of its 
value since peaking in September 2021. The stock is trading at its lowest since 
January 2019 and is about to close out its third straight quarter of 
double-digit percentage losses. Only four stocks in the S&P 500 are having a 
worse year.

Facebook’s business was built on network effects — users brought their friends 
and family members, who told their colleagues, who invited their buddies. 
Suddenly everyone was convening in one place. Advertisers followed, and the 
company’s ensuing profits — and they were plentiful — provided the capital to 
recruit the best and brightest engineers to keep the cycle going.

But in 2022, the cycle has reversed. Users are jumping ship and advertisers are 
reducing their spending, leaving Meta poised to report its second straight drop 
in quarterly revenue. Businesses are removing Facebook’s once-ubiquitous social 
login button from their websites. Recruiting is an emerging challenge, 
especially as founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg spends much of his time 
proselytizing the metaverse, which may be the company’s future but accounts for 
virtually none of its near-term revenue and is costing billions of dollars a 
year to build.

Zuckerberg said he hopes that within the next decade, the metaverse “will reach 
a billion people” and “host hundreds of billions of dollars of digital 
commerce.” He told CNBC’s Jim Cramer in June that the “North Star” is to reach 
those sorts of figures by the end of the decade and create a “massive economy” 
around digital goods.

Investors aren’t enthusiastic about it, and the way they’re dumping the stock 
has some observers questioning if the downward pressure is actually a death 
spiral from which Meta can’t recover.

“I’m not sure there’s a core business that works anymore at Facebook,” said 
Laura Martin of Needham, the only analyst among the 45 tracked by FactSet with 
a sell rating on the stock.

Nobody is suggesting that Facebook is at risk of going out of business. The 
company still has a dominant position in mobile advertising and has one of the 
most profitable business models on the planet. Even with a 36% drop in net 
income in the latest quarter from the prior year, Meta generated $6.7 billion 
in profit and ended the period with over $40 billion in cash and marketable 
securities.

The Wall Street problem for Facebook is that it’s no longer a growth story. Up 
until this year, that’s the only thing it’s known. The company’s slowest year 
for revenue growth was the pandemic year of 2020, when it still expanded 22%. 
Analysts this year are predicting a revenue drop.

The number of daily active users in the U.S. and Canada has fallen in the past 
two years, from 198 million in mid-2020 to 197 million in the second quarter of 
this year. Globally, user numbers are up about 10% over that stretch and are 
expected to increase 3% a year through 2024, according to FactSet estimates.

“I don’t see it spiraling in terms of cash flows in the next few years, but I’m 
just worried that they’re not winning the next generation,” said Jeremy Bondy, 
CEO of app marketing firm Liftoff.

Sales growth is expected to hover in the single digits for the first half of 
2023, before ticking back up. But even that bet carries risks. The next 
generation, as Bondy describes it, is now moving over to TikTok, where users 
can create and view short, viral videos rather than scrolling past political 
rants from distant relatives with whom they mistakenly connected on Facebook.

Meta has been trying to mimic TikTok’s success with its short video offering 
called Reels, which has been a major focus across Facebook and Instagram. Meta 
plans to increase the amount of algorithmically recommended short videos in 
users’ Instagram feeds from 15% to 30%, and Bondy speculates the company will 
likely “get tremendous revenue flow from that” algorithmic shift.

However, Facebook acknowledges it’s early days for monetizing Reels, and it’s 
not yet clear how well the format works for advertisers. TikTok’s business 
remains opaque because the company is privately held and owned by China’s 
ByteDance.

Sheryl Sandberg, who’s leaving the company Friday after more than 14 years as 
chief operating officer, said in her final earnings call in July that videos 
are harder than photos in terms of ads and measurement, and that Facebook has 
to show businesses how to use the ad tools for Reels.

“I think it’s very promising,” Sandberg said, “but we’ve got some hard work 
ahead of us.”

Skeptics such as Martin see Facebook pushing users away from the core news 
feed, where it makes tons of cash, and toward Reels, where the model is 
unproven. Martin says Zuckerberg must know something important about where the 
business is headed.

“He wouldn’t be hurting its revenue at the same time he needs more money, 
unless he felt like the core business wasn’t strong enough to stand alone,” 
Martin said. “He must feel he has to try to move his viewership to Reels to 
compete with TikTok.”  A Facebook spokesperson declined to comment for this 
story.

Zuckerberg has at least one major reason for concern beyond just stalled user 
growth and a slowing economy: Apple
.
The 2021 iOS privacy update, called App Tracking Transparency, undermined 
Facebook’s ability to target users with ads, costing the company an estimated 
$10 billion in revenue this year. Meta is counting on artificial 
intelligence-powered advertising to eventually make up for Apple’s changes.

That may amount to little more than a Band-Aid. Chris Curtis, an online 
marketing expert and consultant, has seen social networks rise and fall as 
trends change and users move along. And that problem isn’t solvable with AI.

“I’m old enough, and I was there when MySpace was a thing,” said Curtis, who 
previously worked at Anheuser-Busch
and McKinsey. “Social networks are switchable, right?”

When you look at Meta’s user numbers, Curtis said, they suggest the company is 
“not in a good position.”

‘Force for good or evil’

The last time Facebook’s market cap was this low, it was early 2019 and the 
company was dealing with the continued fallout of the Cambridge Analytica 
privacy scandal. Since then, Facebook has suffered further reputational damage, 
most notably from the documents leaked last year by whistleblower and former 
employee Frances Haugen.

The main takeaway from the Haugen saga, which preceded the name change to Meta, 
was that Facebook knew of many of the harms its products caused kids and was 
unwilling or unable to do anything about them. Some U.S. senators compared the 
company to Big Tobacco.

Denise Lee Yohn, author of brand-building books including “What Great Brands 
Do” and “Fusion,” said there’s little evidence to suggest that Facebook’s 
rebranding to Meta late last year has changed public perception of the company.

“I think the company still suffers from a lot of criticism and skepticism about 
whether they are a force for good or evil,” Yohn said.

Rehabilitating a damaged brand is difficult but not impossible, Yohn said. She 
noted that in 2009, Domino’s Pizza
was able to successfully come back from a crisis. In April of that year, a 
video made as a prank by two restaurant employees went viral, showing one of 
them doing disgusting acts with food while cooking in one of the company’s 
kitchens. Both employees were arrested and charged with food contamination.

In December 2009, Domino’s launched a marketing blitz called the “Pizza 
Turnaround.” The stock climbed 63% in the first quarter of 2010.

Yohn said the company’s approach was, “We’ve been told our pizzas suck, and so 
we’re actually going to make substantive changes to what we are offering and 
change people’s perceptions.” While it sounded initially like “just marketing 
speak,” Yohn said, “they actually really did change.”

Zuckerberg, on the other hand, is not “coming across as a leader who is serious 
about changing his culture and about changing himself and about kind of 
creating a company that will be able to step into the future that he’s 
envisioning,” she said.

Meta’s reputational hit could also harm the company’s ability to recruit 
top-tier talent, a stark contrast to a decade ago, when there was no more 
prized landing spot for a hotshot engineer.

A former Facebook ad executive, who spoke on condition that his name not be 
used, told CNBC that even though TikTok is owned by a Chinese parent, it now 
has an edge over Meta when it comes to recruiting because it’s viewed as having 
less “moral downside.”

Ben Zhao, a computer science professor at University of Chicago, said he’s 
seeing that play out on the ground as an increasing number of students in his 
department are showing interest in working for TikTok and ByteDance.

In order to stay competitive, given how the market has punished tech stocks 
this year, Zhao said, Meta and Google
are “having to pay more and are having certainly to hand out more lucrative 
stock options and packages.”

The bull case

Still, Zuckerberg has a history of proving his doubters wrong, said Jake 
Dollarhide, the CEO of Longbow Asset Management in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Dollarhide remembers when investors ran from Facebook not long after its 2012 
IPO, scoffing at the company’s ability to move “from the PC to the mobile 
world.” Facebook’s mobile business quickly caught fire and by late 2013, the 
stock was off to the races.

Zuckerberg’s success in pivoting to mobile gives Dollarhide confidence that 
Meta can cash in on its bet-the-farm move to the metaverse. In the second 
quarter, Meta’s Reality Labs division, which houses its virtual reality 
headsets and related technologies, generated $452 million in revenue, about 
1.5% of total Meta sales, and lost $2.8 billion.

“I think Zuckerberg is very bright and very ambitious,” said Dollarhide. “I 
wouldn’t bet against Zuckerberg just like I wouldn’t bet against Elon Musk.”

Dollarhide’s firm hasn’t owned Facebook shares, though, since 2014, preferring 
the trajectory of tech companies such as Apple and Amazon, two of his top 
holdings.

“The reality is they can be perceived as a value company and not a growth 
company,” Dollarhide said, regarding Meta.

No matter what happens in the next year or two or even three, Zuckerberg has 
made clear that the future of the company is in the metaverse, where he’s 
banking on new businesses forming around virtual reality.

Meta could grow the metaverse, but there’s a long road ahead, says Jefferies’ 
Brent Thill Zhao, from University of Chicago, says there’s immense uncertainty 
surrounding the metaverse’s prospects.

“The real question is — are daily users ready for the metaverse yet?” Zhao 
said. “Is the underlying technology ready and mature enough to make that 
transition seamless? That’s a real question and that may not be all up to 
Facebook or Meta at this point.”

If Zuckerberg is right, perhaps 10 years from now Meta’s stock price from the 
depths of 2022 will look like the discount of the decade. And if that happens, 
predictions of a death spiral will be mocked like a 2012 cover story from 
Barron’s, headlined “Facebook is worth $15” with a thumb pointing down. Four 
years later, it was trading near $130.

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