Facebook went after Apple after the latter announced its App Tracking Transparency feature
Earnings per share came in at $3.67 which was below Wall Street expectations of $3.84 and a decline of 5% from the $3.88 reported for last year’s fourth quarter. Advertising revenue amounted to $32.64 billion during the fourth quarter, up 15.4% over last year’s fourth-quarter advertising revenue. For all of 2021 advertising revenue rose 36.5% to $114.93 billion,
Revenue related to Facebook’s “family of apps” such as Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, WhatsApp, and others was $32.79 billion during the fourth quarter of 2021 which resulted in a profit of $15.89 billion during the three months. For the entire year, those apps took in $115.66 billion and reported a $56.95 billion profit.
For all of 2021, the top line was $117.93 billion, up 37% from 2020’s revenue of $85.97 billion. Net income last year rose 35% from the prior year’s $29.15 billion to $39.37 billion.
Facebook sees headwinds ahead impacting 2022 and Meta’s stock plunges over 20%
Meta stock (FB) dropped $73.95 following the release of the report to finish the day at $249.05. Besides the impact of Apple’s ATT, META also blamed other events for this year’s shortfall including supply chain disruptions, inflation, and more. And the beat goes on as Meta is calling for first-quarter revenue to be in a range of $27-$29 billion while most analysts expected the top line to be $30.15 billion according to a consensus of Wall Street analysts.
The number of Daily Active Users for the fourth quarter was 1.93 billion, short of estimates of 1.95 billion and a year-over-year increase of 5%. The number of monthly active users was 2.91 billion, again, short of Wall Street forecasts of 2.95 billion and a 4% annual increase. The average revenue per user for the fourth quarter was announced at $11.57 vs $11.38 expected by Wall Street analysts.
Facebook sees more problems ahead. “On the impressions side, we expect continued headwinds from both increased competition for people’s time and a shift of engagement within our apps towards video surfaces like Reels, which monetize at lower rates than Feed and Stories,” Facebook said.