Guess we have a difference in the word beautiful... uninformed people were manipulated. I see what you're saying, it was an easy read, but don't you think that seeing that as beautiful you're rewarding the behavior that caused the IPO.
These type of IPO deals weed out the pros who actually think before they act and those who just follow the news like sheeple. I stopped and thought it might be nice to jump on the facebook IPO bandwagon even though I've never been in stocks before, but I did some research on that $100 billion figure wall street was throwing around and found it to be absolutely ludicrous.
First, they did their own analytics and found that 80% of the clicks Facebook was charging them for were from automated "bots."
Second, the company changed their name. They requested that Facebook change the company name on the business page. But Facebook told them (allegedly) that in order to change their name on Facebook, they would have to spend $2,000 more per month on advertising.
I feel sad for people with 401Ks that bought Facebook and those poor people unknowingly own the stock now. Pretty much the same goes for people with Mutual Funds.
This is why Wall Street is shit. They screw the average working person.
The tax loss selling of Facebook shares at the end of the year is going to be epic. Will be sub $15 by then.
Yep, basically this.Because it isn't worth nearly as much as these investors were speculating. It's a beautiful thing to watch people lose money over such an obviously horrible investment. At the rate they were going and valuing the company at 100 billion with the IPO they would have to exist for another 99 years for it to even out and actually be worth it. There's no way in hell they are going to increase their profits that much, and even if they did increase their profits to 3x as much (3 billion/year) they would still have to exist for like 33.3 years for it to make sense.
Just look how fast myspace died. Granted facebook has more of a market stronghold, I think they are at their pinnacle right now, or very very close.
There's nowhere more private than a ghost town.Good, now that we're all concerned about our privacy and moving away from FB, maybe we can all sign up for Google+?
Errr...
Breaking News: 83 million FB accounts may be "questionable".
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/tech...million-questionable-accounts/article4457596/
I woulda thought it'd be higher, but the source is FB itself, so...
At what point is FB worth owning? I put in buy order at $15 thinking there is no chance it will ever get there but I'm starting to think that was too high...
The problem with a site like this as a "money maker" is that people are fickle. It only takes the next great social network for everyone to migrate to it and FB be a ghost town, just like Myspace.
The problem with a site like this as a "money maker" is that people are fickle. It only takes the next great social network for everyone to migrate to it and FB be a ghost town, just like Myspace.
At what point is FB worth owning? I put in buy order at $15 thinking there is no chance it will ever get there but I'm starting to think that was too high...
I am detecting a vibe that people are losing interest in using FB. The Farmville fanatics seem to be growing disinterested in it. And the people who post photos of everything they do are getting tired of it also. I guess that stuff can only hold your interest for so long before it becomes meh.
Right, well uninformed people with money deserve to be manipulated if they don't do their research or even stop to think about what they are doing. I've met some billionaire/millionaire investor types that are stupid as hell yet find some way to make money just by dumb luck. These type of IPO deals weed out the pros who actually think before they act and those who just follow the news like sheeple. I stopped and thought it might be nice to jump on the facebook IPO bandwagon even though I've never been in stocks before, but I did some research on that $100 billion figure wall street was throwing around and found it to be absolutely ludicrous.
I'm in no way rewarding it, just saying it's funny to see people put so much money into shit like facebook and not even stop to think twice about it. The absolute first thing I did when I heard the $100 billion figure was to look up why facebook would even be worth that much money. That alone is like some HUGE red flag waving straight in front of your face.
If those sheeple actually followed the news, they would have seen the dozens of "FB overpriced, P/E of 100/1, greater than Google, Microsoft, Apple, and Exxon Mobil - also with market cap higher than some other well established companies.
Down below $20! How low will it go?! I'm thinking somewhere around $12.
Based on the fiancnials only, that's what I figure. I don't knwo what Facebook plans to do for growth though other than the phone that HTC is making for them for 2013 release.
Who wants a Facebook bradned smart phone though? Should be the first nail in their coffin.