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SEC Calls For Review of Facebook IPO

beaverdownunder writes "After losing another 8.9% of its IPO value in its third day of trading, SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro has called for a review of the circumstances surrounding Facebook's IPO on the NASDAQ late last week. Unable to sell Facebook short, investors have instead taken to short-selling funds that owned pre-IPO shares as revelations come out that the underwriters involved revised their Facebook profit forecasts downward in the days before the offering without similarly revising the opening share price. Meanwhile, Thomson Reuters Starmine has come out with a post-party Facebook estimate of a meager 10.8 per cent annual growth rate, valuing the stock at a paltry $US9.59 a share, a 72 per cent discount on its IPO price, signaling that the battered stock may not have found the bottom yet."

66 of 267 comments (clear)

  1. When Zuckie himself is selling shares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
    1. Re:When Zuckie himself is selling shares by mirix · · Score: 3, Informative

      Of course he's selling some of his shares. That's pretty well the whole point of this operation, letting the senior people cash out.

      It's not like they need cash to put into R&D or anything.

      --
      Sent from my PDP-11
    2. Re:When Zuckie himself is selling shares by Animats · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That's pretty well the whole point of this operation, letting the senior people cash out.

      Right. The insiders sold $9 billion in stock. Facebook, Inc, only raised $7 billion. Accel Partners sold about 25% of their Facebook stock. DST Group (Russia) sold 37% of theirs.

      Facebook is probably worth around $10 a share. Even that assumes 10% growth for the next 10 years, which is rather good. It's entirely possible that Facebook may not be a big deal as social moves to mobile.

    3. Re:When Zuckie himself is selling shares by cjcela · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Of course he did. That was the whole point of this IPO: they wanted to cash out before it burst. The money to be made out of it was already made by the original owners, at expense of the investors. There was not a single reason to believe FB was priced fairly and not overvalued, and no clear indication on how FB could make enough money in the future to justify a 100B valuation. After the market experiences in the last 15 years, I cannot believe how many bought into the hype of this.

    4. Re:When Zuckie himself is selling shares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      derp. at 38 it was worth 100x forward p/e, that's more than Amazon.

      At apples p/e it's more like 4$/share.

      The pundits say it's a strong buy if it gets to 28, but just about everyone says, don't buy until they file an earnings report. Flashcrash among all the tech stocks leading up to the IPO was hilarious and heartbreaking.

    5. Re:When Zuckie himself is selling shares by dadioflex · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Arguably the money will be made at the expense of the brokers like Morgan Stanley who stepped in to prop up the share at launch and bought up billions of dollars worth.

      The mistake they made was over-estimating demand and releasing too many shares. A smaller float could well have become a feeding frenzy - not that I think it's worth thirty bucks a share, or whatever it sinks to today either.

    6. Re:When Zuckie himself is selling shares by Alex+Belits · · Score: 4, Funny

      feeding frenzy

      !!!RARE!!! The original Facebook share! Never sold since IPO! Own a part of Internet history! $300 or better offer!
      (check other items in my Ebay store)

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    7. Re:When Zuckie himself is selling shares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, due to the way that the IPO deal was framed, Morgan Stanley didn't lose any money in propping up the share price. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenshoe. That's a bit hard to follow, but basically, Morgan Stanley started the IPO by selling more Facebook shares to the public than they bought from Facebook. This leaves Morgan Stanley with a net short position that they have to cover. If the price of the stock goes below the issue price, they cover it by buying back the excess shares they sold, which also happens to prop up the post-issue price. If the price goes above the issue price, they cover it by exercising an option granting them the right to buy those shares from Facebook at the issue price, effectively increasing the size of the issue.

      That said, while Morgan Stanley may not have directly lost money here, they just plain fucked up this IPO and it may hurt their IPO underwriting business.

    8. Re:When Zuckie himself is selling shares by jo42 · · Score: 2

      A Facebook share, much like Facebook itself, isn't worth a wet fart. Douchebag-berg knows this and is cashing out.

    9. Re:When Zuckie himself is selling shares by Specter · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "they just plain [expletive deleted] up this IPO and it may hurt their IPO underwriting business."

      Maybe, maybe not. You could argue that they priced the IPO pretty much optimally, for FB that is. The fact that the shares tanked on day 1 means they didn't leave any money on the table and FB got the most they could have possibly hoped for in the offering. The IPO investors got screwed but if they didn't see this train wreck coming then perhaps they should be looking for a less intellectually demanding line of work.

    10. Re:When Zuckie himself is selling shares by jythie · · Score: 2

      Which because of how they handled the IPO, they are not actually required to file an earnings report. They can keep all their information private yet still reap the 'public' offering.

    11. Re:When Zuckie himself is selling shares by 3dr · · Score: 2

      I've been wondering what a fair value is -- *assuming* that FB is worth investing in at all, which is dubious at this point. But, for the sake of argument, let's say it is.

      At IPO, the $38 was 107 times their annual earning, so that's roughly $0.35/share value, not counting their assets, IP, etc. Last I calculated, Apple had a P/E of 17, which is surprisingly low for a "hot tech property", but Apple has the earnings to fully support their valuation. During the past 3 years, FB has increased their revenues by 71% annually, or increasing it fivefold in this time (5x = 1.71^3). While I don't think that growth rate will continue, I do think it warrants a slightly higher P/E valuation of 20-25. Let's be generous and give 25. That in turn gives a valuation of $0.35*25 = $8.75/sh. No doubt these are hand-wavey arbitrary numbers here...but not unreasonable.

      Last, my final adjustment is simply a value proposition. If I believe $8.75/sh is worth it (AND if their business model matures), then I need a buffer for a profit, at least 15%. So, my buy-in price is (1-0.15)*8.75 = $7.43.

  2. FUBAR by geoffrobinson · · Score: 4, Informative

    "Investors were still shaking their heads over the botched opening trading of Facebook when Reuters reported late Monday that the consumer internet analyst at lead underwriter Morgan Stanley cut his revenue forecasts for Facebook in the days before the offering.

    JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs, which were also underwriters on the deal, each revised its estimates during the road show as well, according to sources familiar with the situation."

    From what I've been reading and listening to that information didn't come out to everyone. That's just awful and this IPO seems like a big mess.

    On the plus side, the market hasn't been going crazy so it seems that the new tech bubble may not be all that bad.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
    1. Re:FUBAR by Liambp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You say that the information didn't come out to every one but nevertheless there was plenty written over the last few weeks saying that Facebook was overvalued. There was no shortage of warning signs so it is hard to feel sympathy for those who lost money on this. Caveat Emptor and all that.

  3. Super tired of these two banks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm sick and tired of these banks screwing over the little guy.

    JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, these companies truly represent the epitome of corporate greed and corruption in america.

    1. Re:Super tired of these two banks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why would any sane person buy into an IPO of a company with a PE valuation of 100:1? I do not even feel sorry for these suckers/gamblers.

    2. Re:Super tired of these two banks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's why you should vote for Mitt Romney. If only we had less banking regulation, then the Wall Street bankers would finally get a fair shake.

    3. Re:Super tired of these two banks. by rgbrenner · · Score: 5, Funny

      I agree.. Facebook is easily worth 100B. They have nearly 5B in assets. So that's only 20x

      For comparison,
      Nvidia has 6B in assets, and is worth 7.5B
      AMD has 3.5B in assets, and is worth 4.3B
      Amazon has 20B in assets, and is worth 97B
      Intel has 70B in assets, and is worth 130B

      But those companies aren't as cool as Facebook. I mean Facebook is at least 20x cooler than AMD. AMD just makes useless processors.. Facebook lets me send critical status updates to friends. How can you even compare the two?

    4. Re:Super tired of these two banks. by Aaron+B+Lingwood · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm sick and tired of these banks screwing over the little guy.

      I am curious how many 'little guys' actually managed to secure shares in the offering. I would say nil.

      The underwriters decide who will receive shares in an IPO and this is done via an application/bid process meaning that friends and large clients of the bank are given priority. It would be a little suspect if all these shares were not issued to funds and the extremely wealthy.

      In short, don't fret. This is the 1% fucking with the 1%. I approve of this.

      JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, these companies truly represent the epitome of corporate greed and corruption in america.

      Nobody will disagree with you here.

      --
      [Rent This Space]
    5. Re:Super tired of these two banks. by thegarbz · · Score: 4, Informative

      Imagine how uncool BP is. 303B in assets, and is worth 152B.

      Actually no need to imagine. But really given the choice would you invest in a company that is undervalued, makes a tangible product used by billions world wide and is in continuous demand, has a history of high profits and steady dividend payments? Or would you rather a company which has assets which are mostly intangible, who haven't made a decent / steady profit yet and doesn't really know how to monetise what it has?

      I agree with one of the GPs, anyone buying into the Facebook IPO really got what they deserve.

    6. Re:Super tired of these two banks. by Yvanhoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I still feel angry that Facebook managed to get 100 billions of funds this way. Their stock price can go down the drain, this money is there, in their bank account. This is the annual budget of Poland. These funds will now be put at work in order to screw us over.

      I think that this day was a very bad day for our freedoms and privacy.

      Zuckberg will stay a billionaire, even in the most gloomy scenario he will still be a multi-millionaire, I don't see any possible scenario as less than a success for him.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    7. Re:Super tired of these two banks. by ciggieposeur · · Score: 2

      It's BP. If there was ever a company that deserved a corporate raider to break it up into a bunch of tiny bits and bury their name forever, it's BP. Especially if the governments can get involved and put their executives in prison.

      Texas City.

      Deepwater Horizon.

      The Alaskan pipeline.

      If BP was a flesh person instead of a legal one, they would have had a bullet put to their head and the jury would have found in favor self-defense.

    8. Re:Super tired of these two banks. by DarkOx · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes they would get theirs and no Romney won't do it, neither will Obama. We need a real outsider. Had we not done the bailouts and let AIG go down, they would have most likely taken Goldman, and second tier investment banks wit them. JPM would most likely have survived but it would have been pushed out of the F50 for certain.

      We would all be better off in the long run. The great thing about capitalism is its supposed to off mobility; for that to happen the wealthy must be allowed to fail. What we have today is not capitalism its closer to feudalism.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    9. Re:Super tired of these two banks. by roman_mir · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Abolishing government from regulating the market would heal the economy.

      The problem with IPOs is that the idea of what it is was perverted by government regulations. Without government regulations small companies, new companies would be able to go IPO without having to go through all the hoops that government sets in front of the companies - there wouldn't be a need for a company to reach a point where it is already making money in the first place. There wouldn't be a need to wait until the company is overvalued without any real upside.

      What's the upside in buying FB stock in this IPO? There is no upside, FB is overvalued, just like many other companies before it. The upside is eaten by the banks - underwriters, but this is the problem CREATED by the government.

      A company cannot go IPO without a lengthy and a very expensive legal process and this is the problem. If companies weren't prevented from going IPO in the very early stages, then their stock could be bought by small, by tiny investors and there would've been actual possibility for growth.

      The government comes in and sets all these nonsense rules that are supposedly there to prevent risk to investors, and in doing so the government destroys the very reason to invest into companies. Taking risk IS what investors have to do, in some cases they would lose money and in some cases they would make money and in a few cases they'd lose all the invested money and in a few cases they would make it really big.

      It would be totally up to investors to decide where to take the risk, companies wouldn't have to exist for years before going IPO, the VERY REASON to go IPO would actually become a healthy one again - going IPO with the government rules and regulations means that it is just a way for early investors and founders to cash out.

      Going IPO was MADE by the government into a way to cash out of the company! Going IPO shouldn't be about allowing early investors and founders to cash out, it should be about growing the company - providing the company with the necessary funding to allow it to grow.

      Going IPO should be about the market deciding whether it wants the company to have the resources needed to attempt and build that business, not about having a company with no risk to investors and thus basically insuring the exact opposite. Because of government rules and regulations IPOs have NO upside to the small investors, it all goes to the underwriters and early founders.

      It makes no sense at all, and the public is made so absolutely categorically blind to the fact that it is the government rules and regulations that destroyed the ability of small investors to take risks in investing and manage their own risk, hedge their bets and actually have a real possibility to invest into a company with real upsides.

      A little investor with just hundreds or thousands of dollars is NOT allowed to participate in a company's success from early stages of formation.

      You want more regulations? Really, you so believe that what is needed here is more regulations? You believe that the current amount of regulations surrounding IPO makes your investment opportunities better? Less risky? Safer?

      The government removes the only one risk: the risk that you can actually buy good investments with plenty of upside and participate in building a successful business.

      The government protects you from one thing: from making money.

    10. Re:Super tired of these two banks. by Aceticon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I find any ideological opposition to regulation curious.

      Are you aware that the current crash came after a period of deregulation of the financial industry comparable only to what happened before 1923?

      I recommend that you to read a book called "This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly" - you'll find not only that the current crisis is nothing new, but also that all the greatest banking crisis happened following phases of banking deregulation, just like this one. In fact the credit bubble that resulted in the current crisis started when the Glass-Steagal regulation was repealed.

      Think of banking regulation like the economic equivalent of regulating an industry that deals in explosives - the side effects of a fireworks factory exploding right in the middle of a residential neighbourhood are so bad that the industry has severe restrictions about where and how they setup their business.

      In your no-regulation world, how would you avoid that a fireworks factory is setup right next to your house (or maybe a nice nuclear waste treatment plant)?

    11. Re:Super tired of these two banks. by roman_mir · · Score: 2

      Yes, people would all be completely honest if it wasn't for that damned government getting in the way!

      - you know, I can write a 100 page essay just on this topic and give probably 100 points that would prove how stupid that quote is, give at least a 1000 examples proving my points. Would it change your understanding of this issue? I doubt it.

      Here is a small subset:

      1. Gov't is not honest, never was, never will be. Patriot Act isn't patriotic, home land security does not make anybody more secure, 'affordable housing' helped to destroyed any housing, etc.

      2. Gov't doesn't give a shit about anybody being honest unless it's the kind of honesty that hurts the gov't. SEC never gave a shit about Enron, Madoff or the National Inflation Association, which has been running pump and dump schemes for at least 2 years now and SEC was and is notified on all of these, and so what?

      3. I never claimed that people will be more honest, if you think so, you are completely misguided. The dishonest people always exist, all systems, all circumstances, forever. However in free market the dishonest people can only damage a small subset of all people, but when dishonest people are somehow connected to government, that's when their dishonesty becomes truly damaging to everybody in a major way.

      So I gave you 3 simple points right here, even some examples why those points are correct. Will you be honest and admit you don't know shit and are just spouting nonsense in your comment?

  4. Re:tagged failbook by Joce640k · · Score: 4, Funny

    We wanted free money!!

    (pass me the tiny violin...)

    --
    No sig today...
  5. could this be the end? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    if the stock price goes below certain level, will facebook close its doors?. it will be a gift for humanity if they disappear forever.

    1. Re:could this be the end? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It won't happen. Facebook is too important as an information gathering tool for the CIA and other government agencies. If it looked like it was about to fail some venture capital angels would swoop in and save it. Of course the VCAs would be the government agencies that are skimming the information from Facebook that they'd need to pay much more for if they had to hire actual information gathering resources.

    2. Re:could this be the end? by micheas · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Probably, but that price is probably about 0.002.

      If the bankers did their job, an IPO should fall below it's IPO price at some point. The IPO (and secondary offerings, and warrants, and employee stock options) are the only time that the company makes money from the sale of shares.

      A company that goes public rarely puts out any news that would cause the company to go up in value for 90 days after the stock goes public. Therefore if the stock goes up significantly from the IPO price in the 90 days after the IPO it is almost definitely because of a wink shake agreement between management and the bankers to bleed money out of the company to investors at the expense of the long term health of the company.

      No matter what happens to the stock price, facebook put $8,000,000,000 in its bank account. If the price had been lowered to 16 Facebook would only have raised $4,000,000,000 and would be in a much worse position financially, despite the fact that everyone would be going on about how great the stock was doing.

      IPO's that pop like in the dot com days are the sign that the company is actively being looted, and probably won't make it as a public company very long.

      The question of whether or not you think Facebook is a good investment or not is whether or not you think that they are going to successfully use their cash to figure out how to make money off of their mobile users.

    3. Re:could this be the end? by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 3, Funny

      That's da bomb!

      An unfortunate choice of words you may regret having chosen when the black vans park in your driveway.

  6. The value of investments can go down as well as up by grahammm · · Score: 2

    As the adverts all say, "the value of investments can go down as well as up". The stock market is gambling pure and simple, so punters (investers) should not be surprised if they sometimes lose. Following the initial floating of the shares, the price will naturally settle to their current true value - sometimes this will be up and sometimes it will be down. The people who bought the shares at their opening value obviously thought they were worth it, otherwise they should not have bought them at that price. They took a gamble and lost!

  7. where's the bottom? by cratermoon · · Score: 4, Funny

    I was telling a friend just yesterday I thought Facebook would be a good buy at $17/share. Thomson Reuters Starmine's price makes my recommendation look like irrational exuberance.

  8. HAHAHAHAHA, suckers!! by registrations_suck · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Anyone buying Facebook deserves to lose money.

    That said, a stock is like anything else. people will pay what they think it is worth. If they don't think it is worth it, they should not pay!

    I could bid $100/share for FB right now and I would find lots of people willing to sell it to me at that price. If I feel it is worth that much, I shouldn't complain later when I find out someone would have sold it to me for only $10/share.

    It's a lot like salary. If I accept an offer to work for $100K/year, I do so believing that is a fair value for what I offer, and I should feel good about it. If I later find out that my neighbor in the next cube offer, who has the same qualifications and start date that I do, managed to negotiate for $200K/year, I shouldn't complain. I'm still getting what I agreed to, and what I agreed was a fair price.

    Bottom line - lots of people are just bitching because they didn't get rich quick, for doing nothing, like they thought they would. Too bad for them.

  9. Re:Hard to value by dAzED1 · · Score: 5, Informative

    you recall incorrectly. It had a pre-IPO sale price of 84, which then went to 100 the day of IPO, and was a very clean and steady climb from there.

  10. Facebook buys Instagram by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They need to take a look at the Instagram deal:
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-17658264

    The deal was Facebook buys Instagram for mostly FB shares. The pair of them talked about the deal being worth $1 billion, and it was nuts. Buying an app with so few user for $1 billion made no sense. The real game here was that Instagram would PRETEND that it really was a $1billion deal and thus the shares were worth that much.

    It's a trick similar to a mock auction, where a third party accomplice pretends the things being sold are of high value while knowing they are low value to create an inflated perception of value. There's been a lot of these dog IPOs lately. SEC seems to be turning a blind eye to them, and letting investors get ripped off. IMHO SEC will just whitewash this one too.

    1. Re:Facebook buys Instagram by rhook · · Score: 2

      No taxes until the shares are liquefied.

    2. Re:Facebook buys Instagram by rhook · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Which is paid when a stock is sold. In this case no stock was sold, it was simply transferred. Once those stocks are sold the proceeds become taxable. The very definition of capital is "cash on hand".

  11. HOW was this a surprise? by Dahamma · · Score: 5, Informative

    I posted this on a previous article Friday after about *5* minutes of "research". If someone investing large amounts of their own money can't do this same trivial research, they deserve what they get.

    Summary: Facebook was valued about 3-4x multiple of what Google was at its IPO with similar financials, and that *without* the literal explosion of revenue income that Google was experiencing at the time. It should have been priced closer to $15-20 (at the most!), with a *very* conservative forecast for growth (ie. expecting it to triple in a year like Google without the growth to justify it is investing in fantasyland!)

    ====

    Google had $3.2B in revenue in 2004, and their IPO made them worth about $24B. Their net income the quarter preceding the IPO was $80M, and diluted EPS was $0.30.
    Facebook had $3.7B in revenue in 2011, and their IPO made them worth over $100B. Net income last quarter was $137M, and EPS was $0.09.

    Revenue and income are clearly in the same ballpark, but valuation and EPS sure aren't. Seems to me FB is in fact way overvalued right now...

    And even more interesting to note is Google's revenue and income took off like a hockey stick in the quarters following their IPO (and thus so did the stock). I just don't see Facebook's revenue doing the same. There may soon be a lot of disappointed investors who naively assumed FB stock would be going the same route as GOOG just because it's a "trendy company" rather than actually looking at the financials...

    1. Re:HOW was this a surprise? by thoughtsatthemoment · · Score: 4, Insightful

      To make things worse, FB has to do the same things google has been doing for years in order to grow like google. Though far from perfect, gmail, gdoc, mobile are great. It is really hard to see how FB can out-do that. When google went IPO, its future seemed ahead. This time it seems FB just jumped the shark.

  12. Press headlines can be misleading by m.dillon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually, MS came out with a statement indicating that the all IPO members (both retail and institutional investors) received updated guidance during the roadshow via a revision to the S1, and that the pricing of the IPO included that guidance. The analyst opinion was simply reflective of the revised guidance.

    You'd have to be pretty stupid to assume that analysts wouldn't revise their opinions based on the change in guidance.

    Well, you'd have to be pretty stupid to participate in the IPO in the first place, let alone invest in the stock. The thing was overpriced, the talking heads said it was overpriced, a simple high school math calculation would tell you it was overpriced, most people KNEW it was overpriced... and bought it anyway hoping for another 'sure bet' circa the internet frenzy leading up to the internet crash circa ~2000.

    In some respects this is a good thing, it brings a much needed dose of reality to fuzzy-brained armchair investors.

    If you want to complain about something you can complain about the NASDAQ screwing up the opening and not providing trade confirmations for 3+ hours to investors whos money was locked up and who could only watch the price start to drop without knowing whether they even owned shares, or being able to sell.

    -Matt

  13. Get-rich-quick greed backfired by Mannfred · · Score: 4, Insightful

    To be fair, in the days and weeks ahead of the IPO I can't remember anyone thinking USD 38.0 was a reasonable price for this stock - it was obviously overvalued in relation to the company's revenues and arguably overvalued in relation to its growth potential. Everyone I know knew this, so I can't imagine people purchasing the stock at the opening price except for greedy speculators who hoped they could make a quick buck on the FB bubble before it popped. Regardless of what Jim Cramer et al will say in the coming days it's very difficult to feel bad for anyone who lost money betting on this overvalued IPO.

  14. Re:The value of investments can go down as well as by whoever57 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The people who bought the shares at their opening value obviously thought they were worth it, otherwise they should not have bought them at that price. They took a gamble and lost!

    The stock market is like a casino where the odds favor the customers. Overall, investors on the stock market make money, however, some investors will lose money.

    In this case, however, the decks were stacked against the small guy. Some people had inside information that Facebook's financials were not likely to be as good as the rosy projections that were made public. That stinks and, until a lot of bankers and analysts go to jail for such actions, it won't stop (a tiny number of people are prosecuted, most pay a fine that is broadly the same as their gains, so no real loss and an even smaller number of people go to jail -- but the number is too small to make individuals think there is a realistic chance of them going to jail for inside trading).

    --
    The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
  15. Re:WWWBD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I don't see what's misleading about, "she pays a higher percentage of her income as tax, even though she makes a tiny fraction of what he does".

    Certainly he wasn't confused when he said it.

  16. Facebroke.. by bdwoolman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My feeling is social sites are like restaurants. They have a fashion clock. Players in the F&B biz sell a popular restaurant after 18 months. They know that it will come off the boil. The in crowd will move on. They have to... in order to stay in... Myspace anyone?

    Facebook will be history in five years. It is a walled garden. Relief is just a click away... a click away. All it offers is a kind of critical mass. And the market knows it.

    And shows it.

    --
    "No fear. No envy. No meanness." Liam Clancy
    1. Re:Facebroke.. by DerekLyons · · Score: 3, Informative

      My feeling is social sites are like restaurants. They have a fashion clock. Players in the F&B biz sell a popular restaurant after 18 months. They know that it will come off the boil. The in crowd will move on.

      That's true for the percentage of restaurants that require the 'in' crowd to be profitable.* That's not true of all restaurants. That's not true of *most* restaurants.
       

      Facebook will be history in five years.

      Slashdot has been saying that ever since Facebook debuted - eight years ago.
       
      *Generally because they're over tightly tied to a theme or a trend. They literally can't with the times without cannibalizing themselves. Most don't need to, and sail along for years or decades if they survive the first year or so.

    2. Re:Facebroke.. by tipo159 · · Score: 2

      Bingo. Facebook is a reasonably good service, but all it doesn't take much to launch a competitor.

      How's that working for Google Plus?

      I think that Facebook is poorly done. Most of their attempts to "improve" it make it worse (in my opinion). Knowing how iOS apps work and seeing the delays that I have seen running the Facebook iPhone app, it appears to be poorly coded. I would love to stop using Facebook, but it is the primary way that I am able to stay in touch with a lot of the people that I know. Facebook's advantage is that there are so many people on Facebook.

  17. Good news everyone by mseeger · · Score: 5, Funny

    "This week investors will be able to buy shares of Facebook stock for the first time ever. It's great â" now you can lose all your money in the same place you lost all your time." -Jimmy Fallon

    1. Re:Good news everyone by gweihir · · Score: 2

      Yes, quite. And you can display the same stupidity in investing your money that you did before in spending your time. My guess is that in 4-5 years nobody will face about Facebook anymore. That is why they had to do the IPO now and sell as high as possible. Which they have done. And they are now really, really rich and the "investors" (a.k.a. "userful idiots") will have to pay for that.

      Fair FB stock value? My guess is around 1-2 USD max., but that may already be overvalued.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  18. Re:The value of investments can go down as well as by m.dillon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Generally speaking (and ignoring FB which I've already commented on)... but generally speaking this is NOT true. The small guy actually has the advantage in this market, which makes it ironic that the small guys have mostly abandoned it.

    The big guys have been fighting amongst themselves since the crash and it has created lots of opportunities for smaller retail investors to find really excellent entry points. Simply put, the reduced liquidity in the market gives the advantage over to the smaller players whos trades don't move stocks while the bigger ones get stuck fighting each other.

    It used to be that 'dumb money'... a euphemism for the 'retail investor', gave the markets enough liquidity to allow the bigger players to enter and exit positions without excessively moving stock prices. These days with the big boys playing against each other and reduced liquidity it's more a matter of one big boy outwitting another because their trades move the underlying stocks too much. The small guys can take advantage of the much more obviously oversold conditions to buy, and overbought conditions to sell. The big guys can't.

    The problem that a lot of retail investors have is that they don't actually know how to invest... they think they are investing when they are actually just day-trading. They pile into dangerous spaces that have already built up momentum to the upside instead of buying when they were low. For example, smaller players are STILL piling into the muni/govt bond markets even as we speak despite the huge risks involved as the Fed QE2 ends. Most retail investors sell during the inevitable pullbacks in these spaces (instead of selling during the rise), or buy well after a security has risen (instead of when it was closer to the bottom and still falling). They believe the crap that is fed to them by the media, believe the hype, believe the stories written by 13 year olds or guys with fancy titles and obvious conflicts of interest, and don't bother reading the financials of the companies they invest in or even listen in on the conference calls.

    It doesn't take all that much work to actually invest properly, it just takes a bit of patience and a minimum of a medium term view (instead of a short-term reactionary view). The best investors in this market aren't the idiots who day-trade, it's the people who might do one or two small trades a week, maximum, slowly working long-term positions and collecting dividends while the big boys rattle the market back and force and provide the great entry and exit points.

    The deck just isn't stacked against us, people only believe it is.

    -Matt

  19. Re:Broader implications by 5um0F1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    but the goal for Zuck was to cash in and get out. Has he done that? If so mission accomplished. we all know its always been about him....

  20. Re:Hard to value by micheas · · Score: 2

    It opened at 100 went to 113 over a few days, then fell back to 99 and then went on a run. So the miss remembering of the grandparent is that GOOG fell below the opening price, but it never fell to the IPO price.

    Clearly GOOG was under priced. as Google would have raised 20% more had it been priced correctly, but due to wanting to get people to buy the IPO's the bankers really try to convince management that it is OK to under price the offering for all the good press it will generate.

    Was the 16% discount worth it to Google? Nobody will know, but clearly it survived the discount just fine.

  21. Re:Uh-Oh! by TubeSteak · · Score: 5, Informative

    *Somebody* was a naughty little corporation, and didn't pay enough in "campaign contributions", lobbying , and political favors, hmm?

    Let their example send a warning to you others out there that think you can just go around doing business without us getting our "vig", like it was a free country and open & fair marketplace or something!

    What the hell are you talking about?
    Facebook's IPO was a clusterfuck from one end to the other.

    The insiders got greedy and bumped the # of shares offered by 50%.
    The main underwriter, Morgan Stanley, quietly issued negative recommendations for Facebook and allegedly told their biggest clients first.
    NASDAQ (allegedly) knew their system was broken before Friday, but went ahead with the IPO.
    NASDAQ caused prices to plummet again on Monday, with their "oops we fucked up" paperwork having a noon deadline.
    The unsophisticated stock buyers (mom & pop) saw the colossal mess and stayed the hell away.

    So many things went wrong that it was inevitable the SEC would get involved.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  22. Dumbfuck Investors? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How could you, in about 80 comments now, miss the great Zuckerberg quote: "Dumbfucks, they trust me!"?

  23. Re:Everyone loves watching a car crashes by gmhowell · · Score: 2

    Zuckerman testifiying in front of the house banking committee will be fun.

    Wonder if he'll wear a suit, or 'keep it real' in his hoodie and sneaks?

    --
    Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  24. Re:Fair pricing? by 0-9a-f · · Score: 2

    Naturally the big banks win, that's the nature of underwriting a low risk, fabulously popular IPO - it's easy money. The problem is they they either get accused of failing (new) shareholders if the IPO price is too high and drops, or accused of favouring their own high-value clients if the IPO price is too low and rises. In the public's eyes, it's all the underwriters' fault.

    Nobody likes the big banks and their tactics, but given the cash grab that is an IPO (and especially looking at the last-minute changes in FB's valuation), you have to remember that FB are playing their investors as much as the banks, only FB ended up with most of the cash.

    --
    With each breath in, a flower somewhere opens; with each breath out, a flower withers away. In between lies beauty.
  25. The difference with GOOG by caywen · · Score: 2

    When people bought GOOG, they thought, "this is the next Microsoft, I'd better get in now."

    When people bought FB, they thought, "this is what a bunch of other people probably think is the next GOOG. It's not, but I can't be the greatest fool."

  26. Re:WWWBD? by Hognoxious · · Score: 2

    What would Warren Buffet do?

    Laugh, because he was smart enough to not touch it with a borrowed bargepole.

    If the overvaluation wasn't enough, the shenanigans about voting rights should have set alarm bells ringing.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  27. Re:WWWBD? by Kijori · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You don't have to pay any income tax at all - there are plenty of places that don't charge it. Go live on the Cayman islands and make your fortune there - I don't think they have any income tax or capital gains tax, so you can keep 100% of your money!

    Of course it's a bit more difficult to make your money without an educated workforce, or lots of infrastructure, or developed labour and financial laws, or trade connections, or any of the other things that government provides for business. But who needs any of that? People who make money make it entirely through their own effort and talent and don't owe one iota of a debt to the government.

    On the other hand if you want to make use of the advantages that government spending provides in order to make your fortune it behoves you to pay the tax that finances that spending.

  28. Re:WWWBD? by TapeCutter · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is the culture in Scandanavian countries, who have been at the top end of the standard of living charts for a very long time now. It's also a common* attitude here in Australia and we rank high in those charts, (*common but not the prevalent one, which is closer to UK culture ). It was also a common attitude in the US until the 1970's when, as the song goes - "We all got stoned and driffted away".

    At 50+ I've seen the political pendulum swing a few times but it's slow on the scale of a human life time, the spring driving it even unwound a bit with the civil rights movement, the disintergration of the USSR and "Gang of four" in China. Yet internet forums across the planet are chock full of angry young men who would tear all that down and start again because they don't like (say) the current IP laws. I may be wrong but I think I can understand where they are coming from because I was an angry young man once,whereas they have yet to fully experience actually "seeing it all before".

    Having already made myself unpopular with at least half of slashdot I'm going to alienate the rest of you by saying that this attitude was also displayed by both Bush and Obama when the GFC exploded in their faces. They set aside their ideologies to take unpopular and decisive joint action that in my opinion avoided a global panic run on bank deposits and the subsequent great depression senario that would follow. For a trully serious problem they put society first and I think history will eventually thank them for it.

    To head off any angry young men posting BraveHeart style freedom rants on my lawn. - You are alreay free from everything except consequences. Nature (AKA -The great JooJoo in the sky) intended it to be this way. Just like Ayn Rand, she does not care about your existance any more than a road train cares about the bunny hypnotized in it's headlights

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  29. Re:WWWBD? by Hognoxious · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No-one's taking anything from you - it wasn't yours to keep in the first place.

    Yeah you tell yourself that the next time someone steals your car. It wasn't yours to begin with. You were merely holding it for the thief.

    An excellent response, the situation is 100% analogous.

    I was born in a thief-provided hospital, educated at a thief-endowed school and the villains even gave me money for college and I'm sure the same goes for most of us.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  30. Re:WWWBD? by RaceProUK · · Score: 2

    What would Warren Buffet do?

    You misplelt 'Brian Boitano' :P

    --
    No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
  31. Re:WWWBD? by jo42 · · Score: 2

    For a trully serious problem they put society first and I think history will eventually thank them for it.

    Except the greedy fucktards that caused these "serious problem" in the first place 1) Got away with it. 2) Are still there. 3) Are fudge packing buddies of Bush'tard, Obama-man and their cronies.

    - Angry, old man

  32. Re:a "meager" 10.8 per cent annual growth rate by chad_r · · Score: 2

    Fun fact : those "meager" 10.8% would multiply your money by 2 in less than 7 years, and by 28400 in 100 years.

    Funner fact: With 900 million active users at a 13.4% growth rate, there will be 230 trillion users in 100 years.

  33. Re:WWWBD? by jythie · · Score: 2

    Thing is, in the Cayman islands you still pay taxes, just not income taxes. The people who use it as tax haven only exist there on paper so they avoid both the income taxes and the taxes involved with living there,.. though they also do not consume any resources there either.

    So for people who actually live there the tax burden (and services) are pretty comparable to the US.... but all people outside the territory see is 'no income tax' and make all sorts of examples from there.

  34. Re:tagged failbook by jhoegl · · Score: 2

    This only goes to show the greed in this country is still at peak levels.
    Anyone with 5th grade education and 2 years in the real world would have realized the hype was driving the market, and even Facebook was buying into it by increasing the number of available shares. Attempting to cash in on as much as possible.
    Farewell facebook, I will miss your drunken postings, and ignorant comments made by the simple minded that is your user base, of which you base your value.