Business

Facebook sees $60 billion in market value erased in just 2 days as advertisers like Starbucks and PepsiCo halt social-media spending

  • Facebook shares fell roughly 1% on Monday morning as more advertisers announced boycotts of its platform. The drop followed an 8.3% slide on Friday amid the first round of pulled advertising.
  • The two-day stock decline resulted in roughly $60 billion being erased from Facebook’s market value.
  • Starbucks, PepsiCo, Coca-Cola, Unilever, and Verizon have all suspended their advertising on Facebook — and in some cases, on other social-media platforms too.
  • Daniel Salmon, a BMO Capital Markets analyst, said the boycott wouldn’t significantly hurt Facebook’s revenue, as it has more than 8 million advertisers.

Facebook shares dropped roughly 1% on Monday morning as more advertisers joined the boycott of the social network. The continued slide followed an 8.3% loss on Friday amid the first round of pulled advertising.

The two-day stock decline resulted in roughly $60 billion in market value being erased from Facebook at those lows.

Starbucks, PepsiCo, Coca-Cola, Diageo, Unilever, and Verizon have all halted advertising on Facebook and in some cases, on other social-media platforms too. Several high-profile executives have called for the social media giant to do more to combat the spread of misinformation and hate speech on its platform.

Facebook has responded with policy tweaks. It said it planned to label ads that discuss voting to direct viewers to accurate information, ban a wider range of hateful language, and tag posts by political figures that violate its standards as “newsworthy” to indicate why they haven’t been taken down.

However, the boycott is unlikely to do much damage to Facebook’s revenue, as it has more than 8 million advertisers, the BMO Capital Markets analyst Daniel Salmon said in a research note.

He added that the bigger financial impact could stem from greater pressure on Facebook to invest in safety and security in the coming years.

Source
markets.businessinsider

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