Twitter's position as Donald Trump’s platform of choice has
failed to reverse its decline, with the company reporting its first fall in
advertising revenue.
Shares nosedived on Thursday as Twitter reported a widening
$167m (£133m) loss. Revenue grew by just 1pc - the slowest on record - with
advertising sales falling from $641m to $638m as data licensing grew.
Some analysts had speculated
that Twitter’s prominent role in the US election and regular statements from
Donald Trump himself on it would have boosted interest in the social network,
which has struggled for most of its three years as a public company and failed
to find a buyer last year.
User
growth has continued to be meagre, with Twitter signing up just 14m
new monthly users in the last year. In the same period, both Facebook and
Instagram grew by almost 200m.
Shares
dropped by 10pc in pre-market trading on Thursday. Anthony Noto, Twitter’s chief operating
officer, did suggest an impact from Mr Trump’s tweeting, but that it could not
rely on it. “The president's use of twitter has broadened the knowledge of the
platform and how it can be used, but it's very hard for a single person to
drive sustained growth,” he said.
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