I dont see what makes that site so valuable. It reminds me of when I was trading internet stocks back in the late 90s. All the trash came to market and all it had to have was a .com in the name and it was almost a guaranteed double.
The worst stock I could remember was some little money losing pip squeek piece of garbage internet site similar to geocities. It debuted at $30 and hit $90 intraday during its IPO in 1999. By early 2001 it was delisted and going for .25 cents a share. Total trash.
Likewise, I dont see what makes LNKD so valuable. I suspect once the hoopla of this business networking site dies down it will come to its offering price or below, maybe just before the lockup expires and insiders can legally dump en masse. There is usually a pop afterwords about a month following passage of said lockup date if no percipitous decline happens then a gradual return to the mean depending on earnings.
LNKD is not Google, its not FaceBook (another potential short after its expected 'stunning' market debut, which I plan to short the ever living crap out of as indicated in post 319 and the intense debate that followed), its not Zynga and its not even Groupon. I have checked it out and I dont see the appeal nor do I see the growth potential, so I think its just hype. But of course I will need to see earnings reports to confirm my suspicions.
Even Google fell once it reached the moon (before going back up again). I even remember comming to have a laugh at Apple once when the shorts came to kick it in the teeth and chuckle at longs in late 2000. It experienced a near 50% correction to $19 after iMacs were no longer hot. After languising for nearly three years afterwords, who knew that Steve Jobs would move away from PCs to portable consumer devices like mp3 players then PDA/smart phones, and that the stock would go up 20 fold over time. He found his niche - appeal to the masses and their love of high margin "Monster Cable" type solutions to everyday technology. :sneaky: