Facebook Q1 revenue grows 72% on rising mobile ads
San Francisco: Facebook Inc.’s
mobile advertising business accelerated in the first three months of
the year, helping the Internet social networking company top Wall
Street’s financial targets.
Shares of Facebook were up nearly 3% at $63.05 in after-hours trading on Wednesday.
Facebook said that mobile ads represented 59% of its ad
revenue in the first quarter, up from 30% in the year-ago period.
Facebook’s overall revenue grew 72% year-on-year to $2.5 billion in the
first quarter,
above the $2.36 billion expected by analysts polled by
Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
“They’ve got the right products for what advertisers are
looking for and that’s manifesting itself in the results you’re seeing,”
said JMP Securities analyst Ronald Josey.
Facebook’s newsfeed ads, which inject paid marketing
messages straight into a user’s stream of news and content, have ignited
Facebook’s revenue growth and bolstered its stock price during the past
year. The ads are ideally suited for the smaller-sized screens of
smartphones and other mobile devices.
The world’s No.1 Internet social network said its total
number of monthly active users reached 1.28 billion as of 31 March, with
1.01 billion of those users accessing its service on mobile devices
such as smartphones and tablets.
Facebook’s users spent more time on its service, with
roughly 62.7% of its monthly users accessing the site every day,
compared to 59.9% in the year-ago period.
Facebook also announced that finance chief David Ebersman is resigning to pursue an unspecified opportunity in the healthcare industry, where he worked before joining Facebook in 2009.
Ebersman, who will remain with the company through September, will be replaced by David Wehner, Facebook’s vice president of corporate finance and business planning.
Ebersman saw the company through a rocky initial public
offering in 2012 that was plagued by technical glitches with the Nasdaq
stock exchange and concerns about what was then slowing revenue growth.
Since the IPO, Facebook has regained Wall Street’s favour thanks to its
strong mobile ad business.
“Ebersman’s departure appears to have been part of a planned transition,” said JMP’s Josey.
The company said it earned $642 million in net income, or
25 cents a share, in the first quarter, versus $219 million, or 9 cents
a share in the year ago period. Excluding certain items Facebook said
it earned 34 cents a share in the first quarter, versus 24 cents a share
expected by analysts.
Shares of Facebook have more than doubled during the past 12 months but are off 13% from a 52-week high of $72.59 in mid-March. Reuters
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