Facebook
IPO: US$ 100 Billion Crime Against Humanity
... By Mansoor Durrani*
Facebook
(FB) Initial Public Offering (IPO) was launched on 18 May 2012 with
unprecedented fanfare. At over $38 per share, the company was valued in
excess of US$ 104 billion. The IPO instantly created 800 new
millionaires, mostly FB employees and a handful of early investors. But
the stock plunged more than 13% on its debut on NASDAQ wiping out US$
15 billion. Within 48 hours, FB founder Mark Zuckerberg married his
longtime sweetheart Pricilla Chan – gifting her a multi-million dollar
wedding ring!
421 million FB shares were offered mainly to retail
investors. The FB valuation was 3 times more than the combined
valuation of the last 10 technology companies IPOed in the US over the
last 12 months! That valuation was also larger than Ford Motor or Kraft
Foods - two of the largest companies in the world making real products
and meeting genuine human needs. This is not to say tech companies do
not benefit the humanity.
There are big-4 technology companies in
the Silicon Valley, California. They together make the Valley a global
technological hotspot. Three of them: Apple, Amazon and Google offer
real products and services. They cater to the legitimate needs of our
society. FB serves none. "I am trying to make the world a more open
place," says Zuckerberg. Millions like him for it, but some are now
clicking "unlike."
Time spent on FB is proving to be a huge
liability for those addicted. A recent survey in UK blamed FB for
nearly a third of all divorces. In India, "Facebook is fast becoming a
reason why many marriages are faltering," said celebrity divorce
lawyer, Mrinalini Deshmukh. "Spending more time, especially at night
before bedtime, with friends on Facebook or merely playing games on the
site is no doubt eating into couples' together-time or intimacy," the
lawyer explained in 3 June 2012 Times of India. The Bandra family court
in Mumbai is struggling to figure out where to even send summons to a
"wife" who a man says he married after “meeting” on FB.
A May 2012
survey of individual investors and traders, released by
WhisperNumber.com, showed that 49% think FB is a passing "fad."
Apparently the demise of MySpace, Friendster and other Web services is
still on the minds of consumers. An Associated Press-CNBC poll was
based on phone interviews with 1,004 U.S. adults. It was conducted
between 3-7 May 2012. Among FB users polled, 30% said they don't trust
FB "at all" to keep their personal information private. And 29% said
they only trust FB "a little" in that regard. That's a total of 59% of
FB users that trust FB only a little or not at all when it comes to
privacy.
David Weidner, a Wall Street Columnist says "The company
and its products keep making fools of us. As consumers, Facebook
encourages us to overshare our lives, even though we know we’ll live to
regret it. As investors we are tempted to overbuy, and we are
regretting that, too. It’s as if Mark Zuckerberg is having the ultimate
nerd’s revenge: He’s humiliating all of us and taking our money in the
process".
It’s one thing for unholy masses like us to get snookered.
It’s quite another for Wall Street egos to get whacked. But there was
Morgan Stanley, whose self-satisfaction in winning the chief
underwriting role was only outdone by its humiliation: first, in having
to support the stock by buying it in its first-day trading; and then by
giving up and declining to comment as FB shares sank.
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Not
just FB and Morgan Stanley who were humiliated on that fateful day of
18 May. It was the Nasdaq’s turn too. Satisfied at having stiff-armed
the New York Stock Exchange by landing one of the top five IPOs of all
time, Nasdaq chief Bob Greifeld went from opening trading to a
90-plus-minute delay, to utter confusion to apologies and unfilled
orders at the close of the session. “Not our finest hour,” he said, in
the understatement of a career. Those spared from buying FB above US$40
because of a trading glitch might be the only ones who disagree with
him.
Indeed, the only ones who look smart are Zuckerberg, FB's
management and their financial backers. Almost all of them sold out at
$38 a share, nearly 20% higher than the original price expectations.
There were few regular people who made fortunes on FB. Its private
placement and exclusive club ensured that Zuckerberg and his backers
decided who would get rich and when.
In many ways, it’s not so much
unlike FB itself. FB users thrust everything of theirs out there:
photos, thoughts, likes and dislikes. They share everything. A hundred
or so friends, most of whom miss their updates, ignore them or make
stupid comments on them. It’s as if they’ve devalued their own lives so
others can make jokes of them.
At the end of a FB session, there is
said to be a feeling of an anticlimax. David Weidner wrote “We hope for
contact and more often than not get silence. We exploit our own privacy
to our friends, advertisers, strangers. We rarely, if ever, make that
connection that’s worth the investment of putting so much of ourselves
out there. In the end, it’s clear FB's was the rare IPO in the markets
that catered to that same kind of person, an exclusive sort of
investor: the sucker.”
We’re now less than 20 trading days into FB's
life as a public company and the stock has already lost roughly a third
of its value. No wonder FB investors have filed a class action lawsuit
against Zuckerberg, alleging that he had inside information that the
company's stock was overvalued that led to his dumping of shares ahead
of their post-IPO collapse.
Eric Jackson, the Houston based founder
of Hedge Fund Ironfire Capital predicts FB’s future: "In five to eight
years they are going to disappear in the way that Yahoo has
disappeared. Yahoo is still making money. It's still profitable, still
has 13,000 employees working for it. But it's 10 per cent of the value
that it was at the height of 2000. For all intents and purposes, it's
disappeared."
Barely 18 months before this mega crime against
humanity, Time magazine chose Mark Zuckerberg “Person of the Year” in
December 2010!
*Trust me, I’m not on FB!
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