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Facebook is facing unprecedented corporate drama, but users and advertisers seem to be unfazed by it all

Feb 1, 2019, 01:46 IST

Thomas Trutschel/Photothek via Getty Images

Facebook reported stellar earnings Wednesday, despite a scandal-ridden end to 2018. It beat estimates on revenue, earnings and user growth and said it's making far more money per user than analysts expected, much more than it ever has before.

Why it matters: The company is facing unprecedented scrutiny from policymakers, business partners and privacy advocates, but strong growth - particularly overseas - demonstrates that users and advertisers are largely unfazed by the corporate drama.

Read more: Facebook enters its 2nd day of chaos after Apple blocked its internal company apps

The new numbers:

  • 2.7 billion monthly active users across all of its apps
  • 2 billion daily active users across all of its apps
  • 66% of Facebook core app users also are daily active users
  • 500 million daily active users of Instagram Stories
  • 7 million total advertisers across all apps
  • 2 million total businesses active on Stories

The big takeaways on growth:

  • Facebook has improved its ability to monetize users. While user growth was strong, just about matching estimates, average revenue per user was up much higher than expected, by 20% year over year.
  • The Asia-Pacific region is booming. The company added more daily active users and monthly actives users across every region in the world, including North America, which is largely saturated with existing Facebook users, anyway. It experienced especially strong growth in the Asia-Pacific region.
  • It posted a record $6.8 billion in profits, despite executives' assurance that investments in safety and security on its platform have been so costly that they have affected its bottom line.
  • Facebook warned revenue growth would slow. "Revenue growth rates will continue to decelerate throughout 2019 on constant current basis," said chief financial officer David Wehner. The company said it will rely more heavily on Story ads than News Feed ads for growth.

The big takeaways on policy:

  • Facebook's earnings call didn't touch policy, per Axios' David McCabe. Neither analysts nor the company addressed one of the company's main concerns in Washington, an ongoing Federal Trade Commission investigation into its privacy practices.
  • But Facebook says the privacy issue could hurt its bottom line this year. Wehner warned that Facebook could face "headwinds" on its ad-targeting business due to privacy concerns in 2019.
  • Safety and security cost the company more than expected. "A lot of our business challenges have been self imposed," said CEO Mark Zuckerberg. "Investment in security and safety increased cost and reduced revenue."

The big takeaways on the future of the business:

  • Messaging is a massive priority: Executives spoke at length about the importance of monetizing and improving Facebook's messaging services. The company has made plans to integrate the workings of its messaging apps.
  • Stories are driving advertising growth: The company announced that 2 million businesses are actively using Facebook Stories. Zuckerberg said stories and messaging are becoming more central to the user experience.
  • The company took PR around earnings seriously. Executives called reporters with prepared talking points as soon as the earnings were released Wednesday afternoon. Chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg did a few televised interviews as well.

NOW WATCH: We compared the $1,200 MacBook Air to the $500 Surface Go and the results were a mess

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