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by scarface74
2561 days ago
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No there really weren’t people saying FANGs were overvalued at their IPOs. Facebook - was profitable and only IPOd because they had to. They had too many investors. Apple - IPOd in the 80s Amazon - maybe Netflix - wasn’t seen as a tech company. Their business was just shipping DVDs. Google - was a clear leader and already profitable at their IPO. |
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On to FANG IPOs. If there weren't people saying they were overvalued at their IPO, their underwriters would have done a very bad job.
Facebook[0] - 'The problem is that the smart money on Wall Street simply doesn't think the company's prospects justify the $105 billion that the offering price implied. And no wonder. That values the company at 108 times 2011 earnings, requiring almost ridiculous financial growth to make sense.'
Amazon[1] - 'Online bookseller Amazon.com's push to sell some 3 million shares for as much as US$13 per share would value the company at $300 million - a pretty penny for a firm that lost about $6 million last year. And Amazon.com's prospectus suggests those losses could grow larger. Bill Bass, an analyst at Forrester Research, attributed the high valuation to "Internet inhalant" - the extra high that Net-related stock offerings can carry with investors. "Some people smoke Internet inhalant and their judgment gets bizarre," Bass said.'
Netflix[2] - 'Netflix is not profitable with an accumulated deficit of $141.8 million. The company had $4 million in operating losses on $30.5 million in revenue for the quarter ended March 31 on $20.4 million in operating losses on $17.1 million in revenue for the same time period the year before.'
Google[3] - '"Although Google enjoys faster growth and higher profitability, we see several risks to its valuation, which may mean the stock ultimately trades at a discount to its peers," says Susquehanna Financial Group analyst Marianne Wolk.'
[0] - https://www.sfgate.com/business/article/Facebook-IPO-undersc...
[1] - https://www.wired.com/1997/03/amazon-com-high-on-ipo-so-is-i...
[2] - https://money.cnn.com/2002/05/23/markets/ipo/ipos/index.htm
[3] - https://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/lessons-from-goo...