Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks at a tech conference in San Francisco in September 2012.(Photo: Kimihiro Hoshino, AFP/Getty Images)
Facebook shares soared Wednesday after the company's earnings report
showed it's making progress turning its mobile users into profits.
Shares
of the No. 1 social networking company ended up $3.73, or 19%, to
$23.23 as investors parsed the third-quarter earnings report released
late Tuesday. The stock had been as high as $24.25 a share in trading
Wednesday.
Facebook (FB)
topped earnings expectations after adjusting for special charges, by
reporting earnings per share of 12 cents, topping estimates by a penny a
share. The company's revenue also came in 32% higher at $1.3 billion.
Analysts
were especially keen on Facebook's revelation it got 14% of revenue
from mobile advertising. The fear that Facebook wouldn't be able to
capitalize on the growing number of users who access the site on mobile
devices has plagued the stock since it went public in May at $38 a
share.
"Strong mobile performance in" the third quarter "should
help alleviate some of the concerns surrounding the mobile transition
for Facebook," wrote Arvind Bhatia, analyst at Sterne Agee, in a note to
clients, where he boosted his estimates for the company's profits for
2013 by 1.6% and rated the stock a "buy."
But Facebook's troubles
are far from over. Facebook showed weakness in its payments business, in
large part due to struggles at online game company, Zynga.
Even
more pressing, though, is a lockup expiration of 234 million shares on
Monday, allowing many employees, for the first time, to sell, says
Michael Pachter, analyst at Wedbush, in a note to clients, where he
rates the stock "outperform." "Lock-up expiration over the next three
weeks may negatively impact share price due to oversupply," he says.
USA Today