Facebook (META 2.33%) stock surged 11% on Jan. 31 after the social media giant's fourth quarter results crushed Wall Street's estimates. Revenue rose 30% year over year to $16.91 billion, beating expectations by more than $500 million. Net income increased 61% to $6.88 billion and EPS rose 65% to $2.38, beating the analyst consensus by $0.19.

Facebook's monthly active users (MAUs) rose 9% to 2.32 billion, and its daily active users (DAUs) also climbed 9% to 1.52 billion. Its worldwide average revenue per user (ARPU) rose 19% to $7.37. Those robust growth rates allayed concerns that Facebook's privacy and security issues would impede its growth.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

Image source: Facebook.

For the first quarter, Facebook expects its revenue growth rate to decelerate sequentially by a mid-single-digit percentage on a constant-currency basis. It expects year-over-year revenue growth to continue to decelerate over the course of 2019. Analysts currently expect that Facebook's revenue will rise 24% in fiscal 2019 but its earnings will stay roughly flat.

The bulls were clearly enthusiastic about Facebook's fourth quarter beat, but the stock remains more than 20% below its 52-week high. Let's take a closer look at Facebook's fourth quarter to see if the stock is worth buying again.

The key numbers

Facebook's 30% increase in revenue represents its slowest growth rate since its IPO, and that slowdown won't end anytime soon. The deceleration was mainly caused by the sluggish growth of its MAUs and DAUs in the U.S., Canada, and Europe.

Region

Q4 MAUs

YOY change

Q4 DAUs

YOY change

U.S. and Canada

242 million

1%

186 million

1%

Europe

381 million

3%

282 million

2%

Asia Pacific

947 million

14%

577 million

16%

Rest of World

750 million

8%

478 million

8%

Data source: Facebook Q4 earnings presentation. Chart by author. YOY = year over year.

Facebook's users in the U.S., Canada, and Europe generate significantly more revenue than its users in Asia and the rest of the world.

However, Facebook still grew its ARPU significantly across all four regions, indicating that advertisers weren't deterred by its headline-dominating privacy and security issues. In fact, Facebook added 1 million active advertisers over the past year to bring its total advertiser count to 7 million.

Region

Q4 ARPU

Growth (YOY)

U.S. and Canada

$34.86

30%

Europe

$10.98

24%

Asia Pacific

$2.96

17%

Rest of World

$2.11

13%

Data source: Facebook Q4 earnings presentation. Chart by author. YOY = year over year.

Revenue from Instagram -- which wasn't disclosed separately -- also contributed to Facebook's growth, as Instagram Stories surpassed 500 million DAUs. Instagram's closest rival, Snap's Snapchat, had just 186 million DAUs in the third quarter.

Furthermore, Facebook's DAU count rose sequentially in the U.S., Canada, and Europe during the fourth quarter, after declining in Europe and remaining steady in the U.S. and Canada during the third quarter.

This indicates that the dip in the third quarter was likely a temporary news-driven event, and Facebook can gradually replace those lost users as long as it avoids more high-profile scandals. Rising ARPU should gradually offset slower user growth in the U.S. and Canada and stabilize its top-line growth over the long term.

Stabilizing margins and inflated earnings

Facebook's operating margin fell 11 percentage points year over year to 46% during the fourth quarter, due to higher infrastructure investments and a 42% increase in its headcount. However, that also represents a 4 percentage point improvement from the third quarter.

Servers at a Facebook data center.

Image source: Getty Images.

Facebook's 60%-plus growth in net income and net earnings initially seems impressive. However, those figures were boosted by two things: a much lower effective tax rate (which fell from 43% to 14%) and $12.9 billion in share buybacks over the past year.

That low-tax boost will wear off. Meanwhile, Facebook expects its total expenses to rise 40%-50% in 2019. That's why its earnings growth will temporarily flatten out this year.

An expanding ecosystem with irons in the fire

Over the long term, Facebook still has plenty of ways to grow its revenue and earnings. Facebook Watch now reaches 400 million monthly active viewers, Instagram is expanding its social shopping efforts, and SuperData recently reported that Facebook sold over half a million Oculus Go headsets during the holidays.

2.7 billion people used one of Facebook's apps (Facebook, Messenger, WhatsApp, or Instagram) in December, and the company's controversial plans to unify those messaging services could help it lock in those users for decades to come. Facebook also finished the quarter with $41 billion in cash and equivalents, so it can keep expanding its ecosystem with smart acquisitions.

Check out the latest Facebook earnings call transcript.

Is it safe to buy Facebook?

I personally own shares of Facebook, and I don't plan to sell my shares anytime soon. The stock isn't cheap, with a forward P/E in the low 20s, but the company simply doesn't face any meaningful competition.

Facebook's worst enemy over the past year has been itself. If it can overcome its management, privacy, and security issues, it will remain a dominant force in social networking and online advertising -- which makes it a solid long-term buy.