: Meta stock hits 52-week low as European leaders buck at threats to shutter Facebook and Instagram

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Meta Platforms Inc. said again last week it is considering pulling the plug on Facebook and Instagram in Europe, leading to pushback from European leaders as shares hit a new 52-week low Monday.

European regulators have voiced plans to craft new legislation that will dictate how EU citizens’ user data gets transferred across the Atlantic, and Facebook parent Meta
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disclosed in its annual report that it could pull services out of the continent as a result.

“If a new trans-Atlantic data transfer framework is not adopted and we are unable to continue to rely on SCCs (standard contractual clauses) or rely upon other alternative means of data transfers from Europe to the United States, we will likely be unable to offer a number of our most significant products and services, including Facebook and Instagram, in Europe, which would materially and adversely affect our business, financial condition, and results of operations,” Meta said in its annual report last week.

“We have been subject to other significant legislative and regulatory developments in the past, and proposed or new legislation and regulations could significantly affect our business,” the company added.

The passage is similar to what has appeared in the Facebook parent’s earnings report the past few years and mirrors language in earnings reports from dozens of other companies that include Apple Inc.
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Google parent Alphabet Inc.
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and Salesforce.com Inc.’s
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Slack.

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A Meta spokesperson said the company has no intention to withdraw from Europe, but merely raising concerns it has shared in previous filings.

“We have absolutely no desire and no plans to withdraw from Europe, but the simple reality is that Meta, and many other businesses, organizations and services, rely on data transfers between the EU and the U.S. in order to operate global services,” the spokesperson told MarketWatch in an email message. “Fundamentally, businesses need clear, global rules to protect trans-Atlantic data flows over the long term, and like more than 70 other companies across a wide range of industries, we are closely monitoring the potential impact on our European operations as these developments progress.” 

Critics of Facebook in Europe took the company to task, however, bring attention to the threat. European lawmaker Axel Voss, who has had a hand in writing EU data-protection legislation, fired back on Twitter
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“Meta cannot just blackmail the EU into giving up its data protection standards, leaving the EU would be their loss.”

The issue has percolated since July 2020, when the European Court of Justice ruled the data transfer standard between the U.S. and EU does not adequately protect European citizens’ privacy. Ireland’s Protection Commission sent Facebook a preliminary order to stop transferring user data from the EU to the U.S. in August 2020, according to a Wall Street Journal report. A final decision is expected in the first half of 2022.

The financial consequences for Meta — which finds itself in the crosshairs of competitive pressures with TikTok, Apple, Alphabet and Snap Inc.
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— could be significant. The Irish Data Protection Commission could fine Meta up to 4% of its annual revenue, or $2.8 billion, if it fails to comply.

Meta’s stockcratered to a 52-week low Monday, falling as much as 5.5% in the morning trading session after suffering the biggest market-cap loss in U.S. history last week in the wake of an earnings report fraught with danger.

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