Facebook's share price is going to be cut in half by the Cambridge Analytica scandal, according to billionaire British investor Jim Mellon.

He said the data disaster is just the "tip of the iceberg."

Facebook and Google are "ripe for the plucking" by governments around the world, he added.



Jim Mellon, the billionaire British investor, has predicted that Facebook faces "decimation" over the Cambridge Analytica data disaster.


Speaking on CNBC's "Squawk Box" after a tumultuous two weeks for Mark Zuckerberg's social media company, Mellon said the fallout will be far-reaching after Facebook was plundered for the data of 50 million US users.The scandal has wiped around $80 billion (£57 billion) off Facebook's value, and Mellon said the firm's share price could halve over the next two years.

He said the threats come from amid increased government regulation and further fiascos over how it handles the personal information of its users. Facebook shares closed at $153.03 on Wednesday.


"The Cambridge Analytica thing is just the tip of the iceberg," said Mellon, who is typically bearish on big tech. "We're going to see decimation of particularly Facebook and quite right too, it's a trivial use of modern technology and one that's rather sinister."


Mellon added that Facebook and Google's scale and increased public accountability has left them vulnerable to government regulation around the world.He predicted that Google will be hit by "enormous" fines, like the €2.4 billion ($3 billion) one meted out by the EU last year , and parent firm Alphabet could be broken up by US and European administrations.

"These fatted calves are now ripe for the plucking by governments everywhere," Mellon told CNBC.

Mellon's net worth stands at £920 million ($1.3 billion), according to The Sunday Times Rich List.


His investment company Burnbrae Group has a number of biotech interests, such as the experimental cancer drug firm SalvaRX, which began trading on London's junior Aim market in March 2016.

Mellon made his money in mining and property, and supported the campaign to take Britain out of the European Union in 2016.