In the event that investors were worried over Facebook’s privacy scandals, they’ve gotten over it. Organization shares are up 23% since March 27, when they hit an eight-month low.
The total assets of Mark Zuckerberg, who possesses around 16% of the firm’s stock, has ascended thusly. The 33-year-old CEO is presently worth $74.2 billion, Forbes estimates, and is the fifth wealthiest individual on the planet. He has picked up $13 billion since March 27.
Facebook’s most recent public relations controversy was lighted in mid-March, when reports in the New York Times and The Guardian revealed that a Trump-subsidiary data firm, Cambridge Analytica, had despicably gotten to data on a huge number of Facebook users.

Shares of the social media giant subsequently plummeted nearly 20% within two weeks, erasing over $90 billion in market value. Zuckerberg traveled to Capitol Hill for questioning, where he apologized for not taking “a broad enough view of our responsibility” and for not doing “enough to prevent [the platform] from being used for harm.” For its part, Cambridge Analytica announced on May 2 that it would file for bankruptcy.
The blowback toward Facebook sparked a broader conversation about data privacy at technology firms. A key component of Facebook’s business strategy—and that of many of its competitors—is collecting user data in order to target advertisements. For many years, third party-applications were also able to glean their own data on users, including some who had not opted in to the collection.
Following revelations of the Cambridge Analytica breach, Facebook unveiled a number of reforms. It will no longer permit advertising based on third-party data, and it will permit users to clear their histories on the platform. Zuckerberg says the firm is focused on restoring trust and is striving to build a network of engaged “communities” online.
The recent debacle came in an already turbulent year for Facebook. It was accused of facilitating misinformation in the 2016 U.S. presidential race and other elections abroad, and of enabling political interference from foreign actors.
Still, its stock continues to climb, and is now trading just below an all-time high. Investors are either placated by the firm’s pledged reforms or think that blowback will have little effect on its bottom line. Indeed, engagement was steady even during the Cambridge Analytica kerfuffle and petitions to #DeleteFacebook, Zuckerberg told reporters in April. Facebook hauled in $12 billion in the quarter ending March 31, a 49% increase over the prior year.
Zuckerberg famously founded the business in his dorm room at Harvard. The platform, which now has more than 2 billion monthly active users, began as a networking tool for Ivy Leaguers. The stakes are now astronomically higher—so too is the scrutiny.