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Temu's Tariff Troubles Could Throttle Meta's Growth

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PDD, one of the largest e-commerce companies in China, launched Temu as its cross-border marketplace in 2022. It undercut many big retailers by allowing Chinese merchants to directly sell their goods to overseas buyers.

By the end of 2024, Temu had grown to 292 million monthly active users (MAUs) worldwide. As of last August, 185.6 million of those MAUs were in the United States. It also became the world's most downloaded shopping app on iOS and Android in 2024.

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A person uses a credit card to make an online purchase.
Image source: Getty Images.

However, Temu's growth spurt could end as the Trump administration raises its tariffs on Chinese goods and scuttles the "de minimis" rule that previously exempted shipments valued at less than $800 from customs duties. Under the new rules, imports from China will face tariffs up to 245% while products worth less than $800 would be taxed at either 30% of their declared value or $25 per item. That figure will be raised to $50 per item after June 1. That's certainly bad news for PDD, which had counted on Temu to diversify its business away from China and help it challenge Amazon and other e-commerce leaders.

But it could also spell trouble for Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META), which profited from Temu's ad-spending spree over the past few years. That's why Meta's investors should pay close attention to Temu's recent decision to rein in its ad purchases across Meta's Facebook and Instagram, Alphabet's Google, and other American ad platforms.

Why did Meta profit from Temu's growth?

2022 was a year to forget for Meta. Its revenue and EPS declined 1% and 38%, respectively, as Apple's privacy changes on iOS, intense competition from ByteDance's TikTok, and the macro headwinds throttled its ad sales. As its top line growth cooled off, its Reality Labs segment, which makes its AR and VR products, continued to rack up steep losses.

That combination of slowing growth and rising costs caused Meta's stock to plummet to a seven-year low of $88 a share in November 2022. However, Meta's stock subsequently rallied more than 460% and trades at around $495 today. From 2022 to 2024, its revenue and earnings per share grew at a compound annual growth rate of 19% and 67%, respectively, even as inflation, rising interest rates, geopolitical conflicts, and trade wars rattled the global markets.

Three catalysts sparked that recovery. First, Meta gathered more first-party data to curb its dependence on Apple's third-party data for its targeted ads. Second, it countered TikTok by expanding its short video platform, Reels, on Facebook and Instagram. Lastly, China's economic slowdown and hostile regulatory environment drove a lot of its e-commerce and gaming companies to ramp up their spending on Facebook and Instagram to reach more overseas users. One of those companies was Temu.