Brutal earnings days may be the new norm for Facebook and Instagram parent company Meta (FB) as the social media giant deals with slowing growth, elevated expenses, and high expectations.

“I certainly think it’s possible [it reports another bad quarter],” Technalysis founder Bob O’Donnell said about Meta on Yahoo Finance Live (video above).

Meta will report its first quarter results on April 27 after the close of trading.

O’Donnell, who noted that Big Tech earnings overall will likely be a “mixed bag,” said that “in the case of Meta, it will be an interesting story. There’s been a lot of challenges there. We’ll see how the advertising space plays out.”

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies via video conference during an Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law Subcommittee hearing on

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies via video conference during an Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law Subcommittee hearing on “Online platforms and market power. Examining the dominance of Amazon, Facebook, Google and Apple” on Capitol Hill on July 29, 2020 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Graeme Jennings – Pool/Getty Images)

It’s almost hard to imagine a darker day for Meta than Feb. 3, 2022, when shares crashed 26% after a very disappointing fourth quarter and outlook. The company reported that it added just 2 million monthly active users in the quarter after adding 15 million monthly active users in the previous quarter. Daily active users also fell by 1 million amid increased competition from TikTok.

Overall, the company missed analysts’ profit estimates by a whopping 14 cents.

The resulting stock slide wiped away $251.3 billion in market value from Meta, marking the biggest one-day loss in value for any U.S. company ever.

Thus far in 2022, Facebook has seen slowing growth and a $10 billion hit from privacy changes to Apple’s iOS operating system.

“I don’t see anything that’s necessarily magically corrected,” O’Donnell said. “So I certainly think there is a possibility we will continue to see those kinds of trends for Meta.”

Shares of Meta have largely flat-lined since that report as Wall Street braces for another financial shoe to drop at the company.

And two shoes arguably have already dropped in the past week, both from outside of Meta’s walls.

First, a shockingly lackluster quarter and outlook from fellow FAANG member Netflix called into question growth rates at large-cap tech companies. And then a tepid outlook from Snap due to advertising weakness raised questions about the health of the digital ad space.

Pros think Meta’s quarterly results could showcase similar themes.

“I think the expectations are going to be super low [on Meta],” veteran tech analyst Mark Mahaney of EvercoreISI, who has a short-term negative rating on Meta, said on Yahoo Finance Live last week. “I think we will see signs of brand advertising weakness out of Western Europe. I guess currency headwinds will be a bit of an issue.”

Brian Sozzi is an editor-at-large and anchor at Yahoo Finance. Follow Sozzi on Twitter @BrianSozzi and on LinkedIn.

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Source: finance.yahoo.com