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Asian stocks fall on US-Iran impasse, AI setbacks
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Wembanyama leads Spurs to brink as Timberwolves routed
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Ronaldo left waiting for Saudi title after goalkeeping gaffe
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EU to ease train travel with one journey, one ticket rules
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Quick bowler Brown left out of Australia T20 World Cup squad
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Los Angeles stadium undergoes World Cup facelift
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Pacific nation Nauru to change name in break from colonial past
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Messi still highest-paid player in MLS
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Paramount defends Warner bid amid California probe
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Tens of thousands demonstrate in Argentina over Milei university cuts
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Ex-NBA player Jason Collins dies after brain cancer battle
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Foot blister forces McIlroy to cut short PGA practice round
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Man City boss Guardiola urges players to make VAR irrelevant
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Favourites Finland, Israel through at Eurovision semis
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Revitalized Rose sets aside Masters loss for top PGA form
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Musk 'wanted 90%' of OpenAI, Altman tells tech titan trial
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Former Honduras mayor arrested over murder of environmental activist
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Oil prices advance, stocks mostly fall on US-Iran deadlock
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'Bittersweet' runner-up run has Scheffler inspired at PGA
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Lakers would welcome return of LeBron James
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Musk 'wanted 90%' of OpenAI, Altman says in high-stakes trial
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US appeals court halts order declaring Trump's global 10% tariff illegal
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Rubio, with new Chinese name, heads to Beijing despite sanctions
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Showtime as boycotted Eurovision kicks off
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Stars descend as Cannes Film Festival opens without Hollywood backing
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No.1 Scheffler to start PGA with Rose and Matt Fitzpatrick
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Trump heads to China for superpower summit
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Referees' chief says disallowing Hammers goal against Arsenal 'categorically' right
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Brazil's Lula launches plan to fight organized crime ahead of elections
year
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Grizzlies forward Brandon Clarke dies at 29: team
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No.5 Morikawa still battles back issues as PGA start looms
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Stadium changes just part of Houston's World Cup transformation
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Trump announces departure of food and drug regulation chief
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Russia demands closure of high representative post in Bosnia
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Rabada stars as Gujarat hammer Hyderabad to move top of IPL
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Kevin Warsh returns to Federal Reserve with 'regime change' agenda
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Former Georgia rugby captain Sharikadze banned over urine-swap scheme
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Fabled Argentine city Ushuaia tries to shrug off virus suspicions
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Pentagon says US cost of Iran war nearing $29 billion
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Wild peacocks bring delight, despair to Italian village
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Murray to coach British star Draper in run-up to Wimbledon
Meta reports sales fall, but beats expectations
Facebook and Instagram owner Meta on Wednesday reported its first annual sales drop since the company went public in 2012, but the fall was less brutal than expected, sending its share price soaring.
The social media giant said sales dropped one percent to $116.6 billion in 2022, while it also announced that the number of users on Facebook hit two billion for the first time.
In a statement, CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg pointed to the success of improved algorithms on Meta's video Reels service, that was delivering short clips more efficiently to users on Facebook and Instagram.
Meta competes fiercely with TikTok, the Chinese owned video-sharing platform that has proved a formidable rival in attracting young users away from once-dominant Instagram.
Zuckerberg also lauded perfected artificial intelligence to better distribute ads after changes on the iPhone decided by Apple seriously hampered Meta's ability to target users.
The 2022 results ended a bad year for Meta, which in November announced it would lay off 11,000 employees or 13 percent of staff in the largest worker reduction in the company's history.
Zuckerberg said his company's "management theme for 2023 is the 'Year of Efficiency' and we're focused on becoming a stronger and more nimble organization."
Big tech platforms have been suffering from the souring economic climate, which is forcing advertisers to cut back on marketing, and Apple's data privacy changes, which have reduced leeway for ad personalization.
- Targeted advertising -
Apple sent shockwaves through the industry in 2021 when it began inviting iPhone users to opt out of having their online activity tracked by apps for the purpose of targeting ads.
This dealt a punishing blow to Facebook and Instagram that depend on super-targeted advertising for revenue.
Meta last year said Apple's policy, which impacts the precision of the ads it sells and thus their price, would cost the social media giant $10 billion in lost revenue in 2022.
Apple's iPhones hold about 55 percent of the smartphone market in the United States and about one third of smartphone users in Europe, the world's biggest ad markets.
The company is also under pressure for making a huge gamble on the metaverse, the world of virtual reality that Meta believes will be the next frontier online.
The bet however has yet to pay off with Meta's Reality Labs, the division that builds the necessary VR headsets and software, posting an operating loss of $4.28 billion in the last quarter of 2022. This followed big losses in the previous quarters.
"With losses at its VR division mounting, Mark Zuckerberg is going to have to accept an unfortunate reality: Virtual worlds are simply not what businesses or consumers want right now," said Insider Intelligence analyst Debra Aho Williamson.
Investors last year punished Meta, sending the company's share price down by an astonishing two thirds over 12 months, but the stock has so far recovered some of the ground in 2023.
In after-hours trading, Meta's share price was up as much as six percent.
A.P.Maia--PC