Facebook shares rise as Zuckerberg soothes investors

More than $80bn in Facebook’s market value had been wiped following Cambridge Analytica news

Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg said the social media company failed to protect users' information during an interview with PBS NewsHour.

Shares of Facebook rose as much as 4.2 per cent on Thursday after chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said the social network had not seen any meaningful impact on usage or ad sales in the wake of a data privacy scandal.

The company’s shares have sunk 16 per cent, wiping more than $80 billion from its market value since March 16th, when the New York Times and London’s Observer newspaper broke news of the use of its data by political consultancy Cambridge Analytica.

Some investors see the chaos as a chance to snap up shares in a service for which there is scarce alternative, despite rising public scrutiny and the prospect of a grilling from US legislators when Zuckerberg testifies before Congress next week.

Canada's province of British Columbia and Canada's federal government combined investigations on Thursday, saying they had launched a joint probe into Facebook and Canadian data firm AggregateIQ, while Australian authorities said they were exploring whether the social media company had breached user privacy laws.

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The California State Teachers' Retirement System, with nearly $1 billion in Facebook stock as of last year, on Thursday also said it would question the company about privacy protections.

Despite the probes and celebrities including singer Cher, actor Will Ferrell and Tesla chief Elon Musk deleting their accounts, Facebook's social app downloads improved on a monthly basis both in the United States and globally, according to Evercore ISI.

Facebook expanded its share of social app downloads in March by 33.2 per cent from 30.1 per cent, Evercore data showed.

Several Wall Street analysts said the stock’s decline presented a good opportunity to buy into the social network’s previously high-flying shares, although they cautioned that much will depend on Zuckerberg’s testimony to Congress.

"We suspect that looking back a year from now, if not sooner, this episode will have been a uniquely compelling buying opportunity in the mega-cap internet space," Deutsche Bank analysts said.

Facebook's chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, told Bloomberg in an interview on Thursday that a few advertisers had paused spending in the wake of the incident, but that the company was having reassuring conversations about how it has built privacy into its system.

Companies including US auto parts retailer Pep Boys, internet company Mozilla and German bank Commerzbank AG have suspended advertisement on the platform.

Sandberg also said a tool that allowed a researcher to gain access to personal information of up to 87 million users, complied with a privacy agreement the company signed with the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in 2011.

Her comments followed reports that the FTC was investigating the company over a possible violation of that agreement, which demands it to get user consent before sharing their information.

"While it's clear that investor sentiment has been materially impacted by (the) Cambridge Analytica revelations, we believe FB is acting proactively and aggressively to tighten its privacy controls and increase the level of transparency into its practices," Wells Fargo analyst Ken Sena said.

Mr Zuckerberg, who will testify about the scandal next week in front of committees in the US House and Senate, may face calls from legislators for more oversight.

Ms Sandberg, in a separate interview with PBS, said: “We’re not just open to regulations, we’re moving ahead of it,” and had built a tool which would be live before the next US election and which would show details of who paid for election ads and demographics of the audience.

Facebook shares closed up 2.7 per cent at $159.35. – Bloomberg