Facebook reports robust profit, revenue gains

Business
Facebook reports robust profit, revenue gains
Facebook reported robust earnings and revenue that handily surpassed Wall Street expectations for the final quarter of 2018 despite heavy spending on safety and security.

Facebook said Wednesday that it earned $6.9 billion, or $2.38 per share, in the October-December period. That's up 61 percent from $4.3 billion, or $1.44 per share, a year earlier. Analysts polled by FactSet had expected $2.18 per share.

Revenue increased 30 percent to $16.9 billion, beating expectations of $16.4 billion.  Facebook's stock almost 12 percent in afterhours trading to roughly $168.

The social network has been plagued by privacy scandals and the threat of regulation, but those haven't appreciably slowed its expansion. Its user base, for instance, also grew to 2.32 billion monthly users, up 9 percent from a year earlier — also higher than analyst expectations.

Last year was replete with major challenges for Facebook, starting with its biggest privacy scandal when Cambridge Analytica, a political data-mining that worked for the 2016 Trump campaign, accessed the private information of up to 87 million users.

That plus continuing fallout from fake news and Russian election meddling on Facebook led to congressional hearings; then came privacy bugs and even a hack. So far, this year hasn't been much better when it comes to scrutiny from critics and lawmakers. On Wednesday, Facebook faced charges of deceiving users, including teens, it paid to download an app that extensively tracked their phone and internet use.

But the company's business appears to be weathering the storm.

That's a big change from last July, when Facebook warned of slowing revenue growth that caused its shares to plunge a whopping 19 percent. It was the worst drop not just for Facebook but, based on the dollar amount, in stock market history. The stock still hasn't recovered from that drop.

On Wednesday, Facebook's stock closed up 6 percent at $150. 42 and added 12 percent to $162.82 after hours. That's still far from the record high of $217.50 that it hit in late July, the day before the historic plunge.

In a brief telephone interview with The Associated Press, Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg echoed past official statements, emphasizing that company expenses are up because of "major investments in privacy, safety and security."

Likewise, she said Facebook is "very supportive" of regulation and touted the company's public database of Facebook political ads as an instance of "not even waiting for regulation" to improve transparency. 
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