| > If "Can it go up 5X" were the threshold for going public, investors would price this in, so the actual threshold would drop. I agree with this. All I'm saying is that most companies can in general grow, and so it depends on you whether or not you want to buy stocks. In Google case, they underestimated it. And who bought might be doing quite well right now. In Facebook case, in my opinion they aren't underestimating it, and I just think it's hard to grow much more than they are already. First, they have already 1 billion users (order of magnitude). There is no way they can go to 10 billions, just because they don't exist. Second, I believe that the external pressure from other companies will somehow kick in, not allowing one only company to rule the world. Maybe some anti monopoly laws, some other platform, a yahoo -> google effect, I don't know. It just seems unlikely to me that Facebook will be doing much much better. I may be wrong, but in the long run I'd still buy GOOG or AAPL towards whatever Facebook code will be. What the stock will do in the short run is a different thing, maybe boosted by the media, who knows... |
The bull case on Facebook doesn't rely on a linear increase in the number of users; it's about an increase in the amount of revenue per user. (That's the case with Google, too; searches per year are going up at ~10% per year in the US; Google is making money by directing more of the end clicks to stuff that monetizes.)
So the people who are bullish on Facebook largely agree with you; they're just bullish based on stuff you haven't mentioned.
In finance, it's not enough to know that you disagree with the market. It's important to articulate what other people think, and why they're wrong. You can't truly say that you'd be willing to bet against the consensus unless you can explain what that consensus is.
It's a little bit like religious debates; someone like Dawkins or Dennett doesn't just have a theory of existence--they have a meta-theory explaining why other people would believe in a different explanation, and why such beliefs are compatible with their general worldview.