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SAN FRANCISCO: The numbers are in for Facebook’s acquisition of mobile-messaging application WhatsApp: the social network paid $22 billion for a start-up that generated $10.2 million in revenue last year.
In a regulatory filing on Wednesday, Facebook disclosed WhatsApp’s financial results for 2012 and 2013. The messaging service, which reached 400m active users in December, generated less than 3 cents in revenue for each one last year. By comparison, Facebook paid $55 per user when it acquired the company. WhatsApp’s net loss was $138.1m for 2013.
The valuation of the deal was already regarded as lofty, at 19 times projected sales. Still, the results illustrate how far Facebook has to go to get its money’s worth for the app, which generates revenue by charging 99 cents for subscriptions after a user’s first year. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg said he’s in no rush to make money from WhatsApp, or Facebook’s other growing applications, until they reach 1bn users.
“The right strategy is to focus on connecting the people before aggressively turning them into businesses,” he said Tuesday on a conference call to discuss Facebook’s third- quarter earnings. “Once we get to that scale, then we think they will start to become meaningful businesses in their own right.”
WhatsApp’s revenue growth is going in the right direction — sales more than doubled last year from $3.82m in 2012. The app now has more than half a billion users, and revenue for the first half of this year reached $15.3m, Facebook said yesterday.
The unit’s losses are still widening — its net loss for the six months that ended in June was $232.5m.
Facebook already had a product for chatting, Messenger, when it acquired WhatsApp. Zuckerberg said that the purpose for Facebook’s Messenger is different than for WhatsApp. People use Messenger to communicate with their Facebook friends, while WhatsApp is more of a text-messaging replacement that people might use with those who aren’t their friends on social media. The two products are seeing growth in some of the same countries, he said.
The world’s largest social network paid for WhatsApp mostly with equity, boosted by a rise in its stock price. Those who praised the acquisition said Facebook was knocking out a major competitor by bringing it into the company.
By arrangement with Bloomberg-The Washington Post
Published in Dawn, October 31st, 2014
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