About 200 investors showed up at an IPO presentation in Palo Alto, California, where they were given the opportunity to quiz Zuckerberg
and his lieutenants. Wall Street had been concerned about the company's
ability to wring revenue from mobile users, considered crucial for
long-term growth.
Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook's
chief operating officer, said the company's overall advertising
business was gaining steam, with most marketers increasing their
spending with Facebook.
The two executives,
who appeared on stage alongside finance chief David Ebersman,
highlighted social ads as an important tool for Facebook to tackle its
mobile challenge.
The ads, which incorporate information about Facebook
users' friends who "like" certain products, are better-suited to the
smaller screens of smartphones, from which more than half of Facebook's
users currently access the service, executives said.As Facebook collects more information about its users, such as location data, Facebook will be able to offer more relevant mobile ads, executives said.
Facebook aims to raise about $10.6 billion via its initial public offering, dwarfing the coming-out parties of tech companies like Google Inc and granting it a market value of up to $96 billion - rivaling Amazon.com Inc's.
On Thursday, a
source close to the process told Reuters its IPO was already
oversubscribed, a week before final pricing.
The offering marks a
watershed moment for the new generation of Web companies that are
challenging established players such as Google and Yahoo for consumers' online time and for advertising dollars.
With 900 million users, Facebook is the world's dominant social network.
Mark Zuckerberg, the company's co-founder and 27-year-old CEO was Time
Magazine's Person of the Year in 2010 and was depicted in the
fictionalized 2010 movie The Social Network.
"It is a bit of a celebrity event," said Alice Evans,
with London-based F & C Asset Management. "You're not expecting to
learn that much but it's as close as you can get to kicking the tires."Zuckerberg made brief introductory comments at the event, which took place eight miles from Facebook's new Menlo Park headquarters located at One Hacker Way, before opening the session up to questions.
The company had
provoked some grumbles from investors earlier this week, when it took
limited questions from the audience at an event in New York.
Investors managed
to get in more than 10 questions at Friday's event, ranging from capital
spending to regulatory issues, even as Facebook maintained tight
control over the proceedings, forbidding questioners from asking
follow-up questions.
Zuckerberg was asked about Facebook's $1 billion
acquisition of mobile app maker Instagram, the largest deal in
Facebook's history. The deal was forged over a weekend, according to
media reports.
Zuckerberg said the
company had been thinking about buying Instagram for one to two months
before the deal occurred. And he noted that the number of Instagram
users has already increased from 30 million to 50 million since the deal
was announced.
(Reporting by
Alistair Barr and Alexei Oreskovic, with additional reporting by
Poornima Gupta, Noel Randewich and Gerry Shih, Writing by Edwin Chan;
editing by Carol Bishopric)



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