Here's what Facebook said that spooked investors a
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Shares fell as much as 24 percent, slumping below $170 in extended trading.
The company's top executives warned about decelerating revenue, tightening margins and the ongoing effects of privacy policy changes.
Facebook shareholders wiped more than $130 billion off the company's market value Wednesday after the company's second-quarter earnings call.
Shares fell as much as 24 percent, slumping below $170 in extended trading. The call and subsequent plunge followed a revenue miss for the company and a report of lower daily active user counts in Europe.
At the lowest after-hours price, Facebook would open Thursday with a market value below $500 billion. Its market cap at the close Wednesday was $629.8 billion.
The company's top executives delivered a few scary warnings:
Revenue deceleration
Chief Financial Officer David Wehner said shareholders can expect "revenue growth rates to decline by high single-digit percentages from prior quarters" for the third and fourth quarter.
"We plan to grow and promote certain engaging experiences like Stories that currently have lower levels of monetization, and we are also giving people who use our services more choices around data privacy which may have an impact on our revenue growth," said Wehner. He also said currency fluctuations would hurt the stock in the second half of the year, after helping it for the last several quarters.
Weaker margins
Wehner also said the company expects margin compression, with operating margins trending toward "mid-30s on a percentage basis," compared with second-quarter operating margins of 44 percent.
That tightening is the result of broadening markets, investments in news products — such as the recent introduction of the company's long-form video format, IGTV — and capital expenditures related to safety and security that total "billions of dollars," Wehner said.
"We think that's the right thing to do for the business in terms of ensuring the community, safety and durability of the franchise," he said. "But they don't have obviously immediate translation into revenue dollars."
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Effects of privacy changes
Facebook has made several privacy policy changes in recent months in the wake of the company's Cambridge Analytica privacy scandal and the European Union's recently enacted General Data Protection Regulation, a set of rules that give users more control over their online data.
The company's earnings report revealed some of the earliest effects of the GDPR rules, which took effect in May, with the company reporting fewer daily active users in Europe. But the report only encompasses the first month of those changes.
"GDPR hasn't had a revenue impact, but we also fully recognize it wasn't fully rolled out," Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg said on the earnings call. "As we look further out, we recognize there's still risk and we're going to watch closely."