| Nice to see eBay invest further on its search side. This paper is too dense for me to read through at this moment, but eBay must be a real disappointment for its shareholders: Despite its head start at being a platform for online retail open to anyone, eBay stock has only doubled in 10 years, or in other words, added $12b in equity value (currently $24b). Imagine that: a successful tech company with a real product in a market that’s going stratospheric (online shopping) has lagged the S&P 500. Meanwhile Amazon has octupled, which works out to adding $864b in market value. In other words, Amazon has added 36 eBays worth of equity to itself in the last 10 years. Ok, I haven’t looked at corp debt to calculate these numbers based on enterprise value, but that could make the numbers worse: eBay is asset-light with little physical infra compared to Amazon. eBay’s fees have gone through the roof, so I suspect its volume has been decreasing. |
Maybe with more listings eBay can lower their fees so that low margin items are able to be sold. And maybe with some competition between the two there might be a reduction of fees and a return to quality. Sadly I don’t think eBay is competing effectively, their website still sucks and I can’t get anything resembling an invoice for taxes, maybe it’s there but I haven’t seen it, I don’t use eBay very often.