Google IPO Open for Registration
Jon Shoberg writes "Google IPO is open for bid registration. From the front page: 'A registration statement relating to Google's Class A common stock has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission but has not yet become effective. Google's Class A common stock may not be sold nor may offers to buy be accepted prior to the time the registration statement becomes effective. This communication shall not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy nor shall there be any sale of Google's Class A common stock in any state in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of any such state. No offer to buy shares of Google's Class A common stock can be accepted and no part of the purchase price can be received until the registration statement has become effective, and any such offer may be withdrawn or revoked, without obligation or commitment of any kind, at any time until the notice of acceptance is sent after the effective date. Of the shares to be sold in Google's initial public offering of Class A common stock, 14,142,135 shares will be issued and sold by Google and 10,494,524 of the shares will be sold by the selling stockholders.'"
If you add those two numbers together, the number you get is 24,636,659 ... which happens to be prime.
With all the hype surrounding this IPO it is sure to drive in some individual investors who would otherwise not commit themselves to such a high level of risk.
This is one of the rare times when an indivudal without millions in worth will have the opprunity to purchase shares from a company's public offering.
In my opinion any individual who purchases these shares is not doing themselves any favor. What is the goal behind buying any? Priced between 108-135 the odds of GOOG appreciating in value anytime soon after the IPO are slim.
Even in their SEC filings they admit in the risks section that they face increasingly greater compettition. They are not immune anymore and I would not want to myself to buy any of these shares nor would I like any family members.
Here's some information on how an IPO works. As for what google means, that's just silly.
OK, so 2,4636,659 shares * $135.00USD = $3,325,948,965USD
Is it just me, or are we back in the dot com shenanigans?
Google. 3 *billion* USD. Not worth it (to me at least).
Then again, I'm just a lowly engineer.
Why not more shares and lower price so those of us who *made* Google what it is could have had at least one share?
Sigh.
Mind the gap...
What does a search engine need with $3.3 billion other than $$$ for the board members? I love google as much as anyone but I won't be buying their stock....unless it is in a mutual fund or stock index fund.....
Ok, cross everything you have two of. This could be REAL good, or REAL bad for the tech sector. I, like many others, lost my ASS on Palm when they IPO'd. I only wish I'd have waited a DAY, instead of buying immediately. My $2,000 got me a whopping 11 shares, that turned into 1.1 shares 6mos later when they had a 1-for-10 split. Now it's worthless...
Lesson learned...
My
Google could buy a 10% stake in Yahoo. Now that would be fun to watch
Rus
Cheap UK and US VPS
even *with* the Dutch Auction.
I think the Dutch auction works against the investor, and in favor of Google.
Think about Netscape, VA Linux, Red Hat, and other such IPOs. They initially sold at a low price, and the stock skyrocketed the first day. People who got in at the IPO price and sold shortly thereafter made out like bandits -- heck, overall they probably made more than the companies. With Google's approach, there's no reason to expect much of an opening day vault, as the opening ask price comes from the auction price, and who would suddenly pay much more for the stock (once it's in general trading) than they would have shortly before (during the auction)?
Google has a scheme that allows them to pocket all that opening day enthusiasm themselves. Very smart, but there's little reason for small investors to care about the IPO itself as a result.
Not that I know that much about investing and IPOs, mind you.
Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
User Friendly found this out
--Chag
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Actually, the Dutch auction works in favor of the small investor AND Google.
In traditional IPOs, the company sells itself to several investment banks at a value below the expected fair market value. These banks sell those shares to their best customers. Sometimes they even give out shares with the stipulation that the investor that received those shares must buy more shares at market price when the stock goes public (an illegal practice that drives up share prices). Once the stock goes public, the share price usually rockets (because it is undervalued) and the investment banks are free to sell their stock and pocket the difference. The company issuing the stock gets none of this money, even though it is part of the "perceived value" of the company at the point of the IPO. This system really benefits the investment banks and their big investors, to the detriment of the company issuing the IPO and small investors.
Small investors usually can only buy the stock when trading goes public. Most small investors are lucky to get in the first day, and by then, the price has skyrocketed. With the Dutch auction, every investor is on equal footing. If you are willing to buy 10 shares at $100, you will win out over somebody willing to buy 100,000 shares at $90. Everybody who gets the stock will buy it at the lowest price at which all share will sell, so if you bid $135 and the final price is $103, you will get the shares you bid for at $103, the same as everyone else.
FWIW, the estimated market cap for Google, based on those share prices, is more than McDonalds, but roughly the level of Yahoo. Is Google worth as much as Yahoo? That is for you to decide. If you think that those prices overvalue Google, don't buy. If you think Google is going to grow to be a $30 billion company in the next decade, then it is a very good investment. You decide...there are always risks in buying stocks.
--
The internet is the greatest source of biased information in the history of mankind.
Keep in mind that Google has additional avenues of business available to them. Not only have they built some phenominal search technology, but they have also demonstrated the versatility of Linux and the GooOS at maintaining a vast sea of computing hardware.
In the future it may be a Google-inspired operating system that we run for our enterprise computing tasks. The Google Search Appliance is a targeted business to test the culmination of this technology as a consumer product.
Time will tell, but I suspect this is a more robust company than the dot-bombs of the mid 90's. As always, skip the IPO and pickup stock after the initial boom cycle has given way to bust. Don't forget to read the prospectus and do the math to figure out what the company is *really* worth.
Eric Sarjeant
eric[@]sarjeant.com
An IPO is *supposed* to be a financing event. It's only with the dotcom boom that a perception has arisen that the IPO is when you "cash-out" of a company. Traditionally, a company would consider an IPO to raise cash for expansion - it's a means to and end, not an end in itself.
The way Google is conducting their IPO indicates that they view it as a traditional financing event - the higher the IPO price, the more money that's available to the company to expand and grow. In Netscape's IPO, for example, the stock may have closed at $80 at the end of the first trading day, but Netscape itself only realized the $14/share that the offering was priced at. You can bet your bottom dollar that despite all the hype, someone was getting his butt chewed for leaving $66/share on the table. Google's auction doesn't eliminate the possibility of something like this happening, but it does reduce it significantly.
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