Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive officer of Meta Platforms Inc., center, departs from federal court in San Jose, Calif., on Dec. 20, 2022.
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Facebook parent Meta is scheduled to report first-quarter earnings after the close of regular trading Wednesday.
Here’s what analysts are expecting:
Earnings: $2.03 per share, according to Refinitiv.
Revenue: $27.65 billion, according to Refinitiv.
Daily active users (DAUs): 2.01 billion, according to StreetAccount.
Monthly active users (MAUs): 2.99 billion, according to StreetAccount.
Average revenue per user (ARPU): $9.30 expected, according to StreetAccount.
Since Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced in February that 2023 would be the company’s “year of efficiency,” the stock has been on the rise, cutting into its historic losses last year.
Investors have rallied around Zuckerberg’s plans to slim down his company through a series of layoffs, resulting in some 21,000 expected job cuts. The company most recently said goodbye to some technical workers last week, and is planning another round of cuts in May that will target employees in business groups.
Meta’s downsizing efforts come as the company’s revenue base is shrinking from a battered online advertising market and the lingering effects of Apple’s 2021 iOS privacy update that dramatically limited ad targeting capabilities. The company is also facing increased competition from rival TikTok.
The Facebook parent could record its fourth consecutive quarterly sales drop if it posts first-quarter results that come in at the low end of its previous guidance, which called for revenue of between $26 billion and $28.5 billion.
Google parent Alphabet, which dominates the online ad market along with Meta, reported first-quarter results on Tuesday that beat analysts’ expectations, though ad revenue fell from the prior year.
Outside of its core business, Wall Street will also want to hear Meta’s latest plans for investing in the metaverse, a futuristic world of virtual and augmented reality. Since changing its name from Facebook to Meta in late 2021, the company has been spending billions of dollars a quarter on technologies for the metaverse, even as revenue isn’t expected to be significant anytime soon.
Analysts expect Reality Labs, the metaverse division, to record an operating loss for the first quarter of $3.95 billion, according to StreetAccount.
Meta shares have jumped 72% so far this year after losing almost two-thirds of their value in 2023. The stock closed on Tuesday at $207.55.
Lip-Bu Tan, Chief Executive Officer of Intel, appears at an event organized by the company.
Andrej Sokolow | Picture Alliance | Getty Images
Intel‘s stock dropped 9% after the chipmaker said it would slash foundry costs in its latest attempt to turnaround its struggling business.
Concerns about where that leaves Intel’s chip manufacturing business overshadowed a better-than-expected earnings report late Thursday. Intel beat on revenue and issued a sales forecast for the third quarter that also topped estimates. The company reported adjusted earnings of 10 cents per share, topping the average analyst estimate of a penny, according to LSEG.
CEO Lip-Bu Tan, who was appointed to the job in March, wrote in a memo to employees that the company’s forthcoming chip manufacturing process, called 14A, will be built out based on confirmed customer commitments and that there will be “no more blank checks.” In a filing with the SEC on Thursday, Intel said it may “pause or discontinue” its foundry business entirely if it could not secure a customer on its next technology cycle.
“We have been unsuccessful to date in securing any significant external foundry customers for any of our nodes and our prospects for securing a significant external foundry customer for Intel 14A are uncertain,” the company said in the filing.
Intel’s drop on Friday wiped out most of its rally for the year. The shares lost 60% of their value in 2024, their worst year on record. The slump reflected Intel’s inability to make much headway in the artificial intelligence market, which is dominated by Nvidia, as well as skepticism surrounding its foundry bet.
The company said it’s axing chip facility projects in Germany and Poland and slowing production at its Ohio plant. Intel depends on a large customer for its foundry business to succeed.
“Management wants external customer commitments to pursue the node, but in the meantime, this adds more uncertainty to product roadmaps and makes customer adoption more unlikely,” analysts at Barclays, who have the equivalent of a hold rating on the stock, wrote in a note to clients.
Tan, who replaced Pat Gelsinger as CEO, said in the memo that his first few months at the helm of the company have “not been easy.” Intel has gone through with most of its layoff plans, which will result in eliminating 15% of its workforce and finishing the year with 75,000 employees.
“Over the past several years, the company invested too much, too soon – without adequate demand,” Tan wrote. “In the process, our factory footprint became needlessly fragmented and underutilized,” he added
Intel’s net loss widened to $2.9 billion, or 67 cents per share, from $1.61 billion, or 38 cents in the year-ago period. The company recorded an $800 million impairment charge, “related to excess tools with no identified re-use.”
Analysts at JPMorgan Chase called Intel’s foundry decision a “positive step,” although ongoing market share losses remain a concern.
Chris Martin of Coldplay performs live at San Siro Stadium, Milan, Italy, in July 2017.
Mairo Cinquetti | NurPhoto | Getty Images
Days after Astronomer CEO Andy Byron resigned from the tech startup, the HR exec who was with him at the infamous Coldplay concert has left as well.
“Kristin Cabot is no longer with Astronomer, she has resigned,” a company spokesperson wrote in an email to CNBC Thursday. Cabot was the company’s chief people officer.
Cabot and Byron, who is married with children, were shown in an intimate moment on the ‘kiss cam’ at a recent Coldplay show in Boston, and immediately hid when they saw their faces on the big screen. Lead singer Chris Martin said, “Either they’re having an affair or they’re just very shy.” An attendee’s video of the incident went viral.
Byron resigned from the company on Saturday. Both Cabot and Byron have been removed the company’s leadership team webpage.
Pete DeJoy, Astronomer’s interim CEO, wrote in a post earlier this week that recent and unexpected national attention has turned the company into “a household name.”
In May, the New York-based company, which commercializes open source software, announced a $93 million investment round led by Bain Ventures and other investors, including Salesforce Ventures.
Elon Musk‘s satellite internet service Starlink said it had a “network outage” on Thursday. The company said it was working on a solution.
There were more than 60,000 reports of an outage on Downdetector, a site that logs issues.
Starlink is owned and operated by SpaceX, which is also run by Musk.
Musk apologized for the outage on his social media platform X and said, “Service will be restored shortly.”
Musk posted earlier Thursday that the company’s direct-to-cell-phone service was “growing fast” following the announcement that T-Mobile‘s Starlink-powered satellite service was available to the public.
T-Mobile said the T-Satellite service was built to keep phones connected “in places no carrier towers can reach.”
Starlink didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Starlink internet speeds and reliability decrease with popularity, a recent study found.
It wasn’t immediately clear if the T-Satellite service was affected by or involved in the outage.