Facebook
on Wednesday reported a powerful surge in profits as the user base of leading
social network continued to climb. Profit in the first quarter tripled from a
year ago to $1.5 billion as revenue jumped to $5.4 billion from $3.5 billion in
the same period a year earlier.
“We
had a great start to the year,” said Facebook co-founder and chief executive
Mark Zuckerberg. The key metric of monthly active users rose to 1.65 billion,
up 15 percent from a year ago. And those using Facebook daily rose 16 percent
to 1.09 billion, with strong gains in numbers of people using mobile devices.
The
report shows Facebook is using its dominant position in social media to boost
advertising revenues as it connects more people with new services such as live
video. Facebook also announced that its board of directors has approved a plan
to create a non-voting class of stock intended to raise capital while leaving
Zuckerberg in control of the company’s vision and direction.
Shareholders
will get to vote on the proposal at an annual stockholders meeting on June 20,
according to Facebook. The move aims to allow Zuckerberg to remain in charge
even as he gives away the bulk of his holdings to charity as he announced last
year with his wife. “The board’s proposal will allow Facebook to maintain and
improve upon the structure that has served shareholders well, while also
enabling Mark to pursue his important goals through the Chan Zuckerberg
Initiative,” a Facebook statement said.
Facebook shares were up more than nine percent
to $119 in after-market trades that followed release of the earnings report. –
New revenue streams – Revenue that the California-based social network took in
from adversing alone soared 57 percent in the quarter. “Facebook just keeps
getting stronger and stronger every quarter.
Its
share of digital advertising is continuing to grow, and it is steadily adding
new revenue streams,” said eMarketer analyst Debra Aho Williamson. “Two years
after Facebook rolled out premium ads in the news feed, we see advertisers
moving past the experimentation stage and beginning to craft advertising
specifically for Facebook — rather than simply repurposing TV spots.”
The
market tracker forecast that Facebook would capture $10.2 billion in display ad
revenue in the United States this year to claim 31.2 percent of the money
spent. Mobile was expected to account for the bulk of Facebook’s digital ad
revenue in the US this year, with Instagram and video formats aimed at
smartphones or tablets driving growth.
Facebook
has been cautiously optimistic about the potential for money-making advertising
on its popular services such as Instagram, Messenger and Live real-time video
streaming. “As we expected, Facebook is putting a lot of emphasis on Messenger
this year, and the announcements at f8 earlier this month show that it is on a
path toward monetizing that service,” Williamson said, referring to the social
network’s annual developers conference. “Instagram remains popular with
advertisers, and the ad rollout appears to be going smoothly among Instagram
users.”
Facebook
has moved beyond its role in social networking to ramp up its messaging
platform, and has also moved into virtual reality with its Oculus headsets for
which orders have begun.
Source: Vanguard News
Source: Vanguard News
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