Tough week for social media stocks - no one is spared

NEW YORK (AP) - It hasn't been an easy week in social media, despite double-digit revenue growth from Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook. Investors are looking beyond headline numbers and finding reasons to sell.

Not even Facebook, with stronger-than-expected profit and revenue numbers and bulletproof mobile advertising strategy, was spared. Its stock is down 2.6 percent for the week, compared with a roughly 1 percent increase for the Standard & Poor's 500 index. A whopping 82 percent rise in expenses spooked some investors.

Though the stocks dipped across the board, there was no common thread that ties the companies' fates together. Facebook has been trading near record highs, so investors cashing in on some profits after the earnings report seems understandable. Twitter's stock on the other hand, has been trading near its lowest level in two years over concerns about its ability to attract users, not to mention several high-profile departures. It's off about 12 percent since the start of the week. Yelp fared the worst, its shares down 25 percent for the week as some question the company's ability to survive on its own.

LinkedIn, whose stock is down about 8 percent for the week, delivered quarterly results above Wall Street expectations. However, the company said one of its business segments, display advertising, is seeing some softness and investors took that as a sign to cut back. Some industry analysts urged patience, and noted the professional networking service is showing strength in newer areas. It acquired Lynda.com, an online learning site, in the second quarter in an effort to extend its services to people who are not looking for new jobs.

Sarah Hindlian of Brean Capital, said the Lynda acquisition masked what was actually a weak quarter for LinkedIn. She said she does not think the company can continue to acquire expensive companies "to bolster growth forever" and added the company's core talent solutions business is slowing down. This segment makes money from charging businesses and headhunters that use its site to find job candidates.

"We advise investors sell premium valuation shares of LinkedIn, as growth decelerates," she wrote in a research note.

While Twitter's user growth has been stalling, Facebook has nearly 1.5 billion people who check in to the site at least once a month. That's nearly a fifth of the world's population. Twitter, meanwhile, remains in many ways a niche social network, popular with celebrities, journalists and young people. Its biggest task is convincing the rest of us that we need it.

Facebook isn't struggling on the user front, but it is spending heavily on hiring and on new endeavors such as virtual reality and drones helping bring Internet access to remote parts of the world.

"Facebook is making the right choices for the long term but the short-term focused market won't like expenses that grow faster than sales," said Edison Investment Research analyst Richard Windsor.

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