San
Francisco (AFP) - Facebook's quarterly profit nearly doubled but its
stock was pounded after it outlined a plan to invest heavily in the
future instead of revelling in short-term riches.
Facebook
shares, which had been near record levels in recent days, dropped more
than eight percent to $74.15 in after-market trades.
The drop
followed an earnings call in which executives said they will pour money
into talent and technologies with the potential to pay off handsomely
down the road."Their commentary tanked the stock," said independent analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group in Silicon Valley.
"They gave the impression that regardless of how things are going, costs are going to get out of hand; I think that is what the market walked away with."
Looking a decade out,
Facebook founder and chief Mark Zuckerberg envisioned hitting milestones
regarding machine intelligence and extending Internet access to
billions more people on the planet.
"We
are going to continue preparing for the future by investing
aggressively, connecting everyone, understanding the world, and building
the next-generation in computing platforms," Zuckerberg said.
"We have a long journey ahead."
- Mobile ad money surge -
Facebook
shares sank despite the social network beating earnings expectations,
boasting a gain in users and a surge in mobile ad revenue.
Facebook
said it made $802 million in profit for shareholders on revenue of $3.2
billion in the quarter that ended on September 30, while the number of
monthly active users grew to 1.35 billion worldwide.
The
number of people using mobile devices to connect with Facebook rose to
about 1.12 billion in September, a 29 percent increase from the same
month a year earlier, according to the earnings report.
Facebook
took in $2.96 billion from advertising during the quarter, with
marketing messages served up on mobile devices becoming more important.
Mobile represented 66 percent of advertising revenue for the third quarter of 2014, up from 49 percent a year earlier.
Payments and other fees generated $246 million, a 13 percent increase from the same quarter last year.
Facebook
has made a priority of adapting to lifestyles increasingly centered on
getting online using smartphones or tablets, an adjustment deemed by
analysts as critical for Internet firms that want to remain popular.
- Year for investment -
Facebook
has also been seeking to broaden its offerings, unveiling an
application that lets people chat anonymously in virtual "rooms,"
evoking the chat rooms from the early days of the Internet.
It
is also testing a feature that lets users of the leading social network
make purchases by simply pressing an on-screen "Buy" button.
Facebook completed its multibillion-dollar deal for mobile messaging application WhatsApp earlier this month.
"One
of the things happening on mobile is there is an increased focus for
apps to do one thing really well," Zuckerberg said during an earnings
call."In order to best serve people, you need to build multiple stand-alone apps; we are going to do more of that in the future."
Facebook executives on the call told analysts that 2015 will be a "significant investment year," with an emphasis on acquiring talent and working toward long term goals.
Objectives
Zuckerberg outlined included ramping up users of Instagram, WhatsApp,
and Messenger application to a billion or more each, so they become
"important businesses in their own right" during the next five years.
"This
may sound silly to say, but for us products don't get that interesting
to turn into business until we have about a billion people using them,"
Zuckerberg said.
Near-term
priorities at Facebook include sharing video and news at the social
network, along with being a place for public figures to distribute
content.
When asked about his
hopes in China, where he wowed a university audience by fielding
questions in Mandarin during a visit last week, Zuckerberg said Facebook
is taking a long-term approach to a valuable market that has frustrated
many US technology firms.
"We are already doing more in China on the business side than a lot of folks think about," Zuckerberg said.
"Our
approach to China and every country is very long term; we are going to
be here for decades and we want to create good relationships with these
countries."
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