Facebook's stock fell Friday with the broader market following a weak
jobs report that showed the U.S. economy adding far fewer jobs than
expected.
Shares of Facebook Inc. fell $1.88, or 6.4 percent, to
close at $27.72 on Friday. That's down 27 percent from its initial
public offering price of $38. And it's down about 13 percent for the
week.
Published: Jun 2, 2012 at 12:32 PM PDT
Facebook began trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market two weeks
ago Friday on a day marred by trading glitches and general investor
confusion. The IPO capped the worst week for the U.S. stock market so
far this year.
Baird analyst Colin Sebastian started coverage of
Facebook's stock Friday with an "Outperform" rating and a target price
of $37. The keyword, he said, is potential.
"Despite near-term
headwinds from the shift to mobile and sluggish social game trends, we
believe Facebook represents an attractive long-term investment in
advertising, digital media, payments and e-commerce," he wrote in a note
to investors. He is referring to concerns about the company's ability
to make money from the growing number of people who access Facebook
through their mobile devices, where advertising is still scant.
Sebastian
added that Facebook collects an "unprecedented amount of personal data
and is in the early stages of monetizing these assets via targeted
advertising."
Morningstar analyst James Krapfel, meanwhile,
advised investors to be cautious and said the company "is likely to
disappoint investors over the next 12 to 18 months."
Other social
media company stocks declined as well. Shares of online game maker
Zynga Inc. slid 25 cents, or 4 percent, to close at $6.01. LinkedIn
Corp., the online social network for professionals, fell $4.59, or 4.8
percent, to $91.51. Online reviews site Yelp Inc., meanwhile, fell
$1.02, or 6.1 percent, to $15.69.
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