Meta's Revenue Might Have Surged In Recent Q1 Report But Things Are Thick For Its Metaverse

zycryptoPubblicato 2022-05-01Pubblicato ultima volta 2022-05-01

Introduzione

For the second time since its rebrand, Meta posted its Q1 earnings Wednesday, eliciting mixed reactions from investors.

For the second time since its rebrand, Meta posted its Q1 earnings Wednesday, eliciting mixed reactions from investors.

But first, the company recorded an increase in Daily Active Users (DAUs) at 1.96B users up from 1.92B users in the last quarter, sending a sigh of relief to investors who have watched Meta’s stock dump by over 55% since September. The company also recorded a 7 percent rise in revenue to $29.9 billion, albeit being the slowest growth rate since the company went public 18 years ago.

Meta’s Metaverse Still In the Red

However, Meta’s family of applications- Whatsapp, Messenger, Facebook, and Instagram- which have been the company’s greatest source of revenue weren’t the stars of the show. CEO Mark Zuckerberg, dialed back the metaverse rhetoric, echoing his belief in the metaverse becoming the company’s Jewel in the future despite the project greatly slowing Meta’s stock growth.

Last quarter, the company’s Reality Labs Division, which is tasked with building virtual and augmented reality infrastructure from Meta brought in $695 million, exceeding previous estimates of 683 million by analysts. However, there is a catch. In Q1, Metas reality labs were operating at $2.96 Billion despite generating the reported income. Last year, the division lost over $10 billion, a picture that is better explained by a plunge in meta’s stock plunge.

Zuckerberg’s Metaverse Still Blurry?

While Meta’s most promising revenue generator from Reality Labs is the VR headsets, Zukerberg has already come under heavy criticism for attempting to push through ‘archaic” headsets into the virtual world, ZyCrypto reported. Already, Meta Quest 2 VR headset has had bumpy sales in the past four months prompting the company to announce an upgrade later this year.

Zuckerberg’s understanding of the Metaverse has also been put into question, lowering investor confidence in Meta’s spending on the project. In a blog post on April 11, the company announced that it would let a handful of horizon creators sell virtual assets on its metaverse. A Meta spokesperson later told CNBC that Meta was planning on taking an overall cut of up to 47.5% on each transaction provoking heated criticism, especially from NFT users.

Meta has also been criticized for being inconsiderate to customers, a trend that investors fear could drag into the metaverse especially considering 98% of its app revenue is generated through adverts. Reggie Fils-Aime, former president of leading video game maker Nintendo has recently told Bloomberg that Meta is “not an innovative company” stating that Zuckerberg’s vision of the metaverse is unlikely to succeed.

Letture associate

Anthropic's IPO Launch: Commercial Miracle or Valuation Bubble?

Anthropic has confidentially filed for an IPO, led by Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, potentially going public by October. Following its latest $650 billion funding round, its pre-IPO valuation stands at $965 billion, with projections reaching up to $2 trillion at listing, which would make it the highest-valued private company ever. The article, written by Fu Sheng, addresses skepticism that this represents an AI bubble akin to the 2000 dot-com crash. It argues the current situation differs fundamentally. Unlike the internet bubble era, which relied on speculative narratives with little revenue, Anthropic's valuation is backed by unprecedented, measurable financial performance. Key data points include: * **Revenue Growth:** ARR skyrocketed from $10 billion in early 2025 to $470 billion by May 2026, targeting $100 billion by year-end—a growth curve unmatched in business history. * **Profitability:** It achieved operating profitability in Q2 2026 with an estimated $5.6 billion profit. * **Efficiency:** With ~3,000 employees and ~$470 billion ARR, its revenue per employee exceeds $10 million. Products like Claude Code, launched less than a year ago, already generate $25 billion in annualized revenue. * **Enterprise Adoption:** It boasts a strong enterprise client base, with 8 of the Fortune 10 and over 1,000 large firms spending over $1 million annually on Claude. The valuation is framed using a traditional SaaS model (e.g., a 10x Price-to-Sales multiple on $100 billion revenue). The author contends the core question for analysts has shifted from "How big could this be?" to "How much is it earning and will earn next quarter?" The discussion extends beyond Anthropic to a broader paradigm shift: the transition from a "carbon-based" to a "silicon-based" economy. Companies are increasingly prioritizing investment in compute and AI capabilities over human resources, as these directly scale productivity and competitive advantage. Anthropic's IPO is thus positioned not just as a corporate milestone, but as a price anchor for this new economic era.

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Anthropic's IPO Launch: Commercial Miracle or Valuation Bubble?

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