Facebook CEO dangles search and mobile, shares rally
By Alexei Oreskovic and Gerry Shih | Reuters – Tue, Sep 11, 2012
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Facebook
Inc CEO Mark Zuckerberg soothed investors in his first major public
appearance since the No. 1 social network's rocky May IPO, breathing
life into its struggling shares after hinting at new growth areas from
mobile to search.
The 28-year-old
co-founder looked confident in a gray T-shirt and jeans, asking Wall
Street to be patient as the company developed new products, addressing
issues such as employee morale, and dashing rumors Facebook may build a
smartphone.
The chief
executive, who has himself lost billions of dollars on paper since
Facebook's market debut, admitted to disappointment about his company's crumbling share price, but argued Wall Street has yet to grasp the full potential of its fledgling mobile business.
His delivery helped
drive Facebook shares up more than 3 percent after hours to above $20,
building on a 3.3 percent gain in regular trade on Tuesday.
While declining to offer details, Zuckerberg hinted that the company
was "halfway through" a cycle to "retool" and offer new advertising
products. He also said he believed search could be a ripe area of growth
for Facebook and was working to offer a competitive search product --
comments that likely interested executives at Google Inc, one of Facebook's fiercest competitors.
"Facebook is uniquely positioned to answer a lot of
questions people have," Zuckerberg told the TechCrunch Disrupt
conference in San Francisco. "We have a team working on search."
Zuckerberg
repeatedly emphasized that the company would focus on building
Facebook's smartphone application, while conceding that he had erred
years ago by using a programming language that slowed the development of
Facebook apps for Apple and Android phones.
But he again quashed a years-long rumor that Facebook
is wading into the hardware business and developing a branded phone.Building a smartphone would be "clearly the wrong strategy for us," Zuckerberg said.
He conceded that
the company's downward spiraling stock was not helping staff morale, but
stressed he still thought it was a good time to join the company and
"double down."
"It's not like this
is the first up and down that we've ever had," he told hundreds of
attendees at the conference. "I would rather be in the cycle where
people underestimate us."
Facebook became the
first U.S. company to debut on stock markets with a value of more than
$100 billion. But it has since lost more than half of its capitalization
as investors fret about slowing growth.
Shares in the
company ended Tuesday at $19.43, well off their $38 debut price. The
stock crept above $20 in extended trade on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic and Gerry Shih; Editing by Leslie Gevirtz)
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