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Wall Street starts to trim Facebook targets as shares fall

Reuters 

(Reuters) - was the third brokerage this week to make a rare cut in price targets for Inc on Wednesday as the social network's shares slid for a third day in response to a row over data use by

The brokerage cut its target for the California-based firm by $20 to $210, still way above the current share price of $165 but adding to signs that analysts are waking up to the risks to the company.

A 1.6 percent fall in shares in premarket trading brought the losses in the company's market value this week to $57 billion, or 10.5 percent - a shock for a company that has risen more than 550 percent in value in the past five years.

The suspended of said in a secretly recorded video broadcast on Tuesday that his UK-based political consultancy's played a decisive role in U.S. Donald Trump's 2016 election victory.

Alexander Nix's comments, which could not be verified, were potentially a further problem for as it faces U.S. and European scrutiny of Cambridge's improper use of 50 million users' personal data to target voters.

"We ... anticipate that the stock will be subject to further headline risk in the coming weeks as senior management is summoned to for hearings with lawmakers," wrote in a note.

Many analysts have now raised concerns that the incident will have a negative impact on user engagement with Facebook, potentially eating into its clout with advertisers. There are mixed views, however, on whether an aggressive regulatory response will materialise.

So far, U.S. and European lawmakers have demanded an explanation of how gained access to user data in 2014 and why failed to inform its users, raising broader industry questions about consumer privacy.

said that is unlikely to act on the issue. He said that despite allegations of Russian interference, a bill requiring companies to disclose foreign buyers of is going nowhere.

"We don't expect to enact anytime soon, even if Democrats win the House this fall," Gallant said.

On Tuesday another brokerage cut their target by $20 to $205, their biggest reduction ever. also trimmed its by $5 to $200, the first reduction since Oct 2012, five months after stock market launch.

"Investors now have to consider whether or not the company will conclude that it has grown in a manner that has proven to be untenable or whether it needs to significantly improve how it is managed," said

analysts said they expected to bring changes to how data are made available to app developers and third parties, adding it could have a negative impact on Audience Network's ability to scale, although minimal.

(Reporting by and in Bengaluru; editing by Patrick Graham)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, March 21 2018. 18:11 IST
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