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Facebook Investors Who Bought the Historic Dip Aren’t Seeing a Quick Recovery

Facebook Investors Who Bought the Historic Dip Aren’t Seeing a Quick Recovery

(Bloomberg) -- For five years, buying the dip in Facebook Inc. as its value soared by half a trillion dollars has been one of the stock market’s surest bets. Right now, it isn’t working.

An investor who purchased Facebook shares after its historic 19 percent plunge on July 26 is still in the red almost a month later. That’s in contrast to the relatively quick turnaround in the stock at the depths of the company’s data-privacy scandal in March.

Facebook Investors Who Bought the Historic Dip Aren’t Seeing a Quick Recovery

Few stocks have been more consistent money makers than Mark Zuckerberg’s social-media behemoth, whose only down year was in 2012, the same one in which it went public. Bulls are proving slower to forgive this time around, leaving the stock behind even as they bid up other tech titans including Apple Inc. and Amazon.com Inc.

“Instead of just the cloud of Cambridge Analytica and the related chatter around data privacy and security, there seems to be multiple issues at play now,” said Piper Jaffray analyst Michael Olson, who is bullish on the stock. They include forecasts for lower operating margins, concern about revenue generation in its new “Stories” product, and European privacy laws, Olson said.

Facebook’s shares have gained less than 1 percent since closing at a three-month low on July 30, two trading days after the company’s warning that revenue growth would continue to slow in the second half of the year triggered a rout that wiped out a record $119 billion in market value. The stock recouped half of its data-privacy losses over 15 trading days in the spring and rose above the pre-Cambridge Analytica stock price in less than two months.

Facebook Investors Who Bought the Historic Dip Aren’t Seeing a Quick Recovery

A spokeswoman for the Melo Park, California-based company, Nora Chan, declined to comment on the stock’s recent performance.

Apple has set fresh records six times after surpassing $1 trillion in market valuation on Aug. 2. Amazon.com Inc., with a market capitalization of about $927 billion, isn’t far behind.

The bright side? According to Olson, it probably won’t get much worse.

“While there are multiple issues on investors’ minds, unless there is some additional negative catalyst, most of those issues are fully baked into the stock,” he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jeran Wittenstein in San Francisco at jwittenstei1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Catherine Larkin at clarkin4@bloomberg.net, Chris Nagi, Richard Richtmyer

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.