SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -
Facebook Inc reported its first quarter-to-quarter revenue slide in at least
two years, a sign that the social network's sizzling growth may be cooling as
it prepares to go public in the biggest ever Internet IPO.
The company blamed the
first-quarter decline, which surprised some on Wall Street, on seasonal
advertising trends.
"It was a faster slowdown
than we would have guessed," said Brian Wieser, an analyst with Pivotal
Research Group.
"No matter how you slice it,
for a company that is perceived as growing so rapidly, to slow so much on
whatever basis - sequentially or annually - it will be somewhat concerning to
investors if faced with a lofty valuation," Wieser said.
Facebook is preparing to raise at
least $5 billion in an initial public offering that could value the world's
largest social network at up to $100 billion.
"The biggest issue is the
realization that Facebook is not going to have an easy time meeting high
expectations of the public market," said Jeff Sica, chief investment
officer of SICA Wealth Management, which manages more than $1 billion in client
assets, real estate and private equity holdings. "It will affect how
people look at the IPO."
Investors are still likely to
sign up in droves for the IPO; however, growth concerns may make some investors
less likely to keep the stock over the long term, he added. CONTINUE . . . . .
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