Chart Of The Day: Metaverse Fails To Provide Boost For Facebook Shares

 | Dec 08, 2021 14:32

Shares of multinational, mega-cap tech gaint Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:FB), the company formerly know as Facebook, closed up 1.55% on Tuesday. That's undeniably a positive move, but the stock is still well off its recent highs, down as much as 16% since early September.

Meta is listed on two major US indices, the S&P 500 which climbed 2.07% during yesterday's trading and the NASDAQ 100 which surged on Tuesday, +3%. Both indices did quite a bit better than FB, over the same timeframe.

Even when compared to its FAANG peers, shares of the company formerly known as Facebook underperformed yesterday: Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) added 2.8%; Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) jumped 3.5%, scoring a new record to boot; Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) rose 2.1% and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) climbed 2.87%

So why is FB underperforming by just about any measure?

Though we don't actually know, we can speculate since there are a variety of possible, fundamental headwinds currently battering the company.  After the most recent whistleblower, Frances Haugen, made headlines in late summer, sentiment about Facebook's social media platform, and the company itself, has soured—fans are no longer as enthusiastic. Users and investors alike may also have grown tired of Facebook's seemingly endless slimey antics. 

Adding to the negative sentiment, the company's recent rebranding, to Meta Platforms, seems puzzling to many and senseless as well. Myriad investors and users see it as an effort to simply put lipstick on a pig—without really improving the product or rectifying the company's many failings.

As well, tying the company to the metaverse and its virtual universe aligns it more with the cryptosphere, where an escalating array of metaverse tokens have carved out an alignment with the fortunes of all cryptocurrencies, which are currently mostly struggling.

For traders focused more on technicals, price action is the only thing that matters since it's an expression of supply and demand, the primary thing that moves markets in their universe.