When Facebook makes its long-expected debut as a public
company later this year, the social-networking company will
likely vault into the ranks of the largest public companies
in the world, alongside McDonald's, Amazon.com and Bank of
America.
The Wall Street Journal reported that Facebook is
preparing to file initial paperwork for an offering that
could raise as much as $US10 billion and value the company at
$US75 billion to $US100 billion. The filing with the
Securities and Exchange Commission could come as early as
Wednesday (local time), with an initial public offering of
stock in three or four months.
The targeted amount would slot it among the world's 25
largest IPOs, although as recently as November 2010, General
Motors raised $US15.8 billion when it shed majority control
by the U.S. government.
The IPOs of 14 companies would rank higher than Facebook's,
according to investment adviser Renaissance Capital. Among
them were Visa Inc.'s $US17.9 billion IPO in March 2008, the
largest for a U.S. company, and world-topper Agricultural
Bank of China Ltd., which raised $US19.3 billion in July
2010, not including extra shares issued to meet demand.
Facebook spokesman Larry Wu said the company will not comment
on IPO-related speculation. The Journal had cited
unnamed people familiar with the matter.
The Journal also said that Facebook was close to
picking Morgan Stanley as the lead underwriter, which would
be a setback for rival Goldman Sachs. Both declined comment
to The Associated Press.
The buzz surrounding an outsized haul for Facebook's
founders, employees and early investors remains a hopeful
sign for capital markets following a deep recession. At the
reported price, Facebook's IPO would be the biggest for a
U.S. Internet company ever - topping the debut of one of its
main rivals, Google Inc.
"We are expecting 2012 to be a year of recovery for the IPO
market led by the Facebook IPO," said Kathy Smith,
Renaissance Capital's principal.
The event will follow a string of tepid debuts by technology
startups including social game maker Zynga and discount
advertiser Groupon. The stocks of both companies are just
pennies above their offering prices in December and November
respectively. Zynga's stock fell 5 percent below the IPO
price on its first day of trading.
Facebook's will be the most anticipated tech IPO since Google
went public in August 2004. Not including shares sold by
early investors, the Internet search giant raised $US1.2
billion and grabbed a market value of $US23 billion, the
biggest so far for a U.S. Internet company. The IPO raised
$US1.9 billion, including shares sold by early investors and
extra stock issued to meet the heavy demand. It's not known
whether Facebook's $US10 billion target includes shares owned
by early investors.
Facebook's reported valuation of $US75 billion to $US100
billion compares with about $US100 billion for McDonald's
Corp., $US90 billion for Citigroup Inc. and Amazon.com Inc.
and $US75 billion for Bank of America Corp. It would exceed
the market cap of $US55 billion for Hewlett-Packard Co., one
of the world's largest technology companies by revenue.
Both Facebook and Google earn most of their money from
advertising and are now competing to gain as much information
as possible about their users to help advertisers target
niche audiences.
According to eMarketer, Facebook is expected to grow its
share of the U.S. display ad market to about 20 percent this
year from 16 percent in 2011, above second-ranked Yahoo's
expected share of about 13 percent. For overall online ad
revenue, Facebook is seen grabbing just 8 percent of the
market this year, compared with 45 percent for Google.
EMarketer estimates that Facebook's ad revenue will grow 52
percent to $5.78 billion this year and will reach $7 billion
in 2013.
Despite presumably topping Google's public launch, Facebook
spent more time growing behind the veil of private ownership
than its rival.
Facebook was founded by Mark Zuckerberg and his college
roommates in 2004 and is debuting on stock markets in its
eighth year. Google's IPO came six years after being founded
by Larry Page and Sergey Brin. When Google turned eight in
August 2006, its market cap was roughly $US116 billion.
Today, the company is worth nearly $US190 billion - down from
a peak of about $US235 billion in November 2007.
Investors may be asked to bet heavily on the belief that
Facebook will continue to revolutionise the way people
communicate around the globe. Even with Facebook's heady
growth rate, Google had ad revenue last year of more than
five times what Facebook is expected to get in 2013. Yet it
is Google that is mimicking Facebook in building a rival
social network called Plus.
"There's the general feeling that Facebook might be the
future of the way the Internet works," said eMarketer analyst
Debra Aho Williamson.
Zuckerberg, 27, is already worth $US17.5 billion, based on
the latest estimates from Forbes magazine. Most of
that wealth is drawn from the value of Facebook shares that
have traded among a small universe of well-heeled investors
that buy stakes in companies before they go public.
As the company gauges public demand for its stock, the number
of shares offered and the price asked could change
significantly. Groupon had to refile its securities paperwork
repeatedly as regulators questioned some of its accounting
methods. Even Google took in less than it hoped as people
shunned an unorthodox auction-based offering.
John Fitzgibbon Jr., publisher of IPOScoop.com, said it's too
early to get excited.
"Until they actually put the ink on the paper and push it
across the desk of the SEC, it's all speculation," he said.
The possible filing next week isn't all that surprising.
Federal rules require companies with at least $US10 million
in assets and more than 500 shareholders to disclose its
quarterly financial results and other details. The reporting
requirement kicks in 120 days after the fiscal year in which
a company exceeds the shareholder threshold for the first
time.
Facebook's fiscal year ends on December. 31, so it has until
late April 2012 to comply with this requirement, having hit
the 500-shareholder threshold last year. Because it typically
takes three or four months after filing paperwork to issue
the IPO, a Wednesday filing would allow it to meet the
deadline. If it happens in May, it could become a lucrative
birthday gift for Zuckerberg, who will turn 28 that month.
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