The technorati took me to task. So did Wall Street.
They were agitated by an article I wrote in May explaining why the world's most hotly anticipated IPO,
Facebook (Nasdaq:FB), was worth a mere
$7.50 a share at best.
"Out of touch," one of the critics said. A "luddite" charged another.
"Doesn't grasp the significance of so many users," one Wall Street insider opined--who happened not coincidentally to work for one of Facebook's investment bankers.
Since then the social media darling has fallen another 31% to nearly $22 a share. Ten weeks later, Team Hoodie hasn't done much to merit an upgrade either.
Sorry guys...Facebook is
still only worth $7.50 a share - likely less.
Here's why.
The Cold, Hard Facts for Facebook At the time I reasoned that Facebook's valuation simply didn't merit the 100 times earnings IPO price of $38 a share based on comparable figures from Google (Nasdaq:
GOOG) and Apple (Nasdaq:
AAPL).
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But there were a host of other factors as well.
I cited falling revenues, a lack of control over the mobile market channel, increasing distrust from customers who were voting with their feet and the concurrent departure of major advertisers like GM which will cost Facebook an estimated $10 million a year in revenue alone.
I also posited the assumption that Facebook would be unable to maintain the 100% plus growth that many investors believed was baked into the proverbial cake.
Google couldn't. Apple couldn't. And both of them are real businesses.
That's the key...
real businesses.
Fact is, Facebook still hasn't figured out what it wants to be when it grows up.
Despite the fact that CEO Mark Zuckerberg does have some excellent advisors, the company isn't going to be able to hide the fact that its "business" is nothing more than a colossal time-wasting collection of personal interest items for much longer.
Other problems abound, too. All of them point to a lower share price.
For instance, Team Hoodie seems more intent on creating new applications than they do on making money from customers. There seems to be a disconnect between what's cool and what actually makes money.
Take the recently unveiled tablet-based Facebook application for example.
Sure, it gets Facebook on a mobile device but there's no plan I can discern for how the application creates a different experience nor how it will generate money from all those eyeballs.
Then there's the Facebook phone. First it's happening, then it's not. This suggests that Team Hoodie may have serious internal strategy battles and be fraying around the edges.
Facebook's "Fiscal Cliff" Call me crazy, but I think Facebook's numbers reflect this already.
One quarter into its public life, Facebook's net income dropped by $295 million to a loss of $157 million.
The cost of customer acquisition is going up so that's clearly digging into its bottom line.
So is the way the company chose to account for stock-based pay in adjusted earnings. Had management not chosen to exclude stock-based pay, the loss may have been orders of magnitude worse.
And finally, Facebook has its own
fiscal cliff of sorts.
The 91-day lock up period imposed on employees and company insiders following
Facebook's IPO expires later this month. That means another 268 million shares could come up for sale further depressing the value of the 2.1 million shares already outstanding.
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With the stock now off $16 from its $38 IPO price there's definitely an incentive to sell. A large number of employees are probably anxious to get out before the markets destroy their windfall gains. I know I would be.
As the chart below shows, former employees have already hit the dislike button and sold.
Figure 1: Source: SecondMarket, Inc.
Call me a skeptic but I find it especially convenient and more than a little coincidental that 79% of the total Facebook-related market volume comes from former employees and 86% of the total Facebook-related transactions come from the same group.
Investors are the next biggest group of sellers by total dollar volume accounting for 12.4% of the total and 4.8% of the number of sellers. Perhaps they haven't given up the ghost yet.
Either way, the chart is kind of scary when you consider the exponential growth associated with Facebook stock sales because the old adage certainly applies. What goes up, must come down.
Don't get Zuckered again. The clever folks are the ones who already sold.
Best Regards,
Keith Fitz-Gerald,
Chief Investment Strategist
Money Map Press
Oh, you are going to love this.
That whole Knight Capital fiasco last Wednesday, when a software glitch caused them to flood the market with thousands of unintended orders, it ain't exactly what you think it is.
Sure, they tripped over themselves in the dark pool where they were trying to compete.
But somewhat interestingly (okay, a LOT interestingly), the competitor that drove them to "upgrade" their trading software, which malfunctioned and caused them to actually bid-up share prices erroneously and then buy them at inflated prices, was none other than, wait for it...
The New York Stock Exchange.
That's not the whole story, or even the good part. Oh, it gets better. A lot better
Knight claimed a $440 million trading loss on Wednesday resulted from their computer glitches and sunk the company (at least for now; I'll get to that).
Well, according to Nasdaq (this was on its site:
nasdaq.com), it wasn't a trading loss at all. Knight paid Goldman Sachs a $440 million fee (commission?) to take the errant shares Knight had bought on Wednesday morning off its hands.
Now, I don't know what Goldman did with those shares, but my guess is they held most of them and sold them on Friday when the market soared a few hundred points. Of course, that's not a "prop" trade. Knight is a customer of Goldman's (it is now...).
But who cares?
Goldman Sachs ripped a customer for a $440 million fee, virtually bankrupting it in the process, flipped the shares it bought from Knight to "help" them (and first of all, probably overly hedged itself... as in enough to be net short... the large stake it holds in Knight's convertible preferred) for a tidy profit, and then probably shorted the stock (before "helping" them, and themselves to their little fee) before the stock collapsed, then probably gave it its "lifeline" (that's a guess, and I'm being sarcastic, but it's possible). And maybe we'll find out where that lifeline Knight got on Friday really came from) before buying a ton of Knight's shares back on Friday before hearing (of course... before) that several big firms were looking at buying Knight.
What's my point in the above LONG sentence? Who cares! That's all business as usual at the Golden Vampire Sachs.
That's after-the-fact stuff.
What's more interesting is why all this happened in the first place.
Here's what you probably don't know... To subscribe to Shah's free newsletter, Wall Street Insights & Indictments and continue reading click here....
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