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Groupon Could Challenge Google's Record IPO

jbrodkin writes "Months after spurning Google's $6 billion takeover bid, Groupon may topple Google's IPO record with an initial public offering worth $25 billion. Google went public in 2004 with a $24.6 billion valuation and Groupon seems to be on the verge of an IPO worth even more, Dow Jones VentureSource says. Even if Groupon doesn't break Google's record, it seems likely to become only the fifth venture-backed company to achieve a $10 billion valuation at the time of its IPO."

13 of 245 comments (clear)

  1. Groupon by viablos · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Groupon has a great business idea, AND it's mainly targeted to girls and women who also spend a lot for beauty things. They make shitloads of money as well as does the partner companies and their users. Win-win-win.

    1. Re:Groupon by MetalliQaZ · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually users SPEND money. When advertisers say that you "save" money by taking advantage of a deal, they are altering reality. Saving money is the opposite of buying.

      Still, when used responsibly, it IS a win-win-win. I have used it to great effect.

      -d

      --
      "Here Lies Philip J. Fry, named for his uncle, to carry on his spirit"
    2. Re:Groupon by russotto · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Um, if you "buy" a house and it costs, say, 200k with 40k down and the rest mortgaged, you have a 200k asset and a 160k to pay off. So you have a 40k asset right? No.

      You initially have a 200k asset and a 160k liability.

      Over 25-30 years it'll cost you around 320k to pay off that 160k, or some other multiple of 160k depending on how fast you pay it off, what the terms of the mortgage is and the interest rate etc. etc.

      Sure, but you don't count future liabilities against current assets.

  2. Welcome to 1999 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I bet the stock is at 5 bucks in 3 years.

    1. Re:Welcome to 1999 by MetalliQaZ · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I wouldn't write Groupon off as a bubble stock. They actually make money, which means they can be legitimately valued. The hysteria in 1999 was in companies that had no proven revenue stream whatsoever.

      --
      "Here Lies Philip J. Fry, named for his uncle, to carry on his spirit"
    2. Re:Welcome to 1999 by Surt · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The pricing is bubble, though. They're getting valued at 20X gross. That's a factor of 5 off normal.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  3. Trying to Blow Up a New Bubble by MarkvW · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wall St. can't keep itself from trying to blow up investment bubbles.
    There's a sucker born every minute (and then the taxpayers bail the investment banks out).

  4. Re:Can someone explain the appeal here? by oh-dark-thirty · · Score: 3, Informative

    There are also a good number of restaurant coupons, at least in my area. I've used a couple and have been very pleased. If I like the place I'll be back, otherwise I'm not out the full boat for trying it.

  5. How is it worth anything? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Groupon makes a lot of money. Groupon also has a massive amount of debt. They secured about a billion dollars in funding during a recent 'investment round'.

    We are talking about a billion dollars in funding to run a website that requires no novel technology, has no valuable intellectual property, and doesn't have much of a competitive advantage. There isn't anything stopping other companies and people from creating more Groupon clones (as is obviously evidenced by competitors like LivingSocial and Google's upcoming daily deals site).

    The VCs must be really desperate for a success story, considering all the 'most innovative companies' coming out of silicon valley have no business model. They want to make money off of one of the pseudo-profitable organizations while they can. Welcome to doctom bubble 2.0.

    1. Re:How is it worth anything? by sycorob · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Auctions need an economy of scale to work at all, though. If there aren't people selling there, there's no point going there to buy. If nobody's buying anything, there's no point listing it for sale there. GrouponClone needs enough people to sell, say, 100 coupons to start, and then you can grow from there. You could just run it a little leaner, and charge the restaurant slight less. It's really easy to copy. In some areas of the country, like New York, LivingSocial has way more mindshare than Groupon does, and they started later.

      There are probably hundreds of developers and business people out there that just heard about this potential IPO and said "how hard can it be to make that?" Groupon should cash in now, before they get their lunch eaten by 1000 me-too competitors.

  6. Off topic-ish by Anrego · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Am I the only one, or do all the groupon advertisements put anyone else off?

    I love the concept of groupon it’s really quite brilliant but for some reason all their ads and even their name totally puts me off. They feature food I like, but it doesn’t look appetising for some reason I can’t put my finger on. Also phrasing like “hot dang” appears to have a negative effect on me.

    This isn’t meant to be a troll or anything, I’m legitimately curious. I know I'm not the coupon type, but it seems weird that they put me off so completely.

  7. This is what we value in this country by cosm · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is what we value in this country. Companies that spam coupons for the masses to buy more shit they don't need. So Wall St. intends on pumping 25 billion into a company that doesn't actually even manufacturer anything. A company whose only value is that it offers discounts to other companies! So in ten years, is their going to be a gang-groupon.com, that groupon pays to send out links to its own coupon links? The service based slave wage economy of the future is going to be quite sad indeed.

    --
    'We are trying to prove ourselves wrong as quickly as possible, because only in that way can we find progress.' RPF
  8. Not trying to play down the significance but... by wizeman · · Score: 4, Informative

    ... according to one inflation calculator, the $24.6 billion of Google's IPO in 2004 is worth $28.82 billion in 2011 dollars.