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Facebook IPO Or Disclosures Could Come By 2012

MICHAEL LIEDTKE   01/ 6/11 10:00 PM ET   AP

Facebook Ipo

SAN FRANCISCO — With so many investors becoming fans of the company, Facebook will be legally required to begin sharing more information about its finances and strategy by April 2012, according to documents distributed to prospective shareholders.

Some of the numbers that began trickling out Thursday were eye-popping – most notably a net profit margin of nearly 30 percent, much higher than most people had previously speculated.

The owner of the world's largest Internet social network, privately held since it started in a Harvard University dorm room seven years ago, will be forced to open its books because it expects to have more than 500 shareholders at some point this year, according to a person who has reviewed the documents handed out Thursday. The person asked not to be identified because the documents are only being given to an elite group selected to buy a stake in Facebook through a fund packaged by the company's newest investor, Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Surpassing 500 shareholders will catapult Facebook over a hurdle likely to lead to the company's long-awaited initial public offering of stock next year.

After a company with at least $10 million in assets has more than 500 shareholders, the Securities and Exchange Commission requires it to disclose its financial results and other details on a quarterly basis in an effort to ensure investors are adequately informed. 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 Dec. 31, meaning it would have until late April 2012 to comply.

The company, now based in Palo Alto, could still retain a private ownership structure, but an IPO is the more probable scenario given Facebook will have to make many of the same disclosures of a publicly traded company anyway.

But Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, 26, has been in no hurry to take the company public, partly because he hoped to preserve a free-wheeling culture. Some analysts also think Zuckerberg, named Time magazine's person of the year for 2010, wanted to avoid the public limelight so he would have more time to mature as a leader.

To help keep the company private, Facebook sought and received an SEC exemption in 2008 that assured employees who received a class of stock wouldn't be counted toward the 500-shareholder barrier. The stock awarded those employees won't be issued until an IPO or sale of the company occurs, another factor that will pressure Zuckerberg to drop his resistance to an IPO. Zuckerberg owns about a 25 percent stake in Facebook.

Facebook spokesman Jonathan Thaw declined to comment Thursday.

Crossing the 500-shareholder barrier prompted Google to pursue its IPO in 2004 before the Internet search leader had turned six years old.

If Facebook follows a similar timeline as Google did, its IPO would probably occur during the summer of 2012.

Some of Facebook's financial information is being shared for the first time as part of the exclusive stock offering that Goldman Sachs put together in an effort to raise $1.5 billion. The minimum investment in the fund is $2 million, although some exceptions are being made for Goldman's own partners.

Some of the numbers emerging in the limited stock offering help explain why Goldman Sachs itself decided to ante up $450 million for a less than 1 percent stake in Facebook earlier this week. The investment valued Facebook at $50 billion, more than twice the current market value of Internet pioneer Yahoo Inc.

Through the first nine months of last year, Facebook earned $355 million on revenue of $1.2 billion, according to the person who reviewed the offering document. That 30 percent profit margin is in the same range as that enjoyed by Google, which posted net income of nearly $6 billion on revenue of $29.9 billion through the first nine months of 2010. Facebook produced a similar profit margin in 2009, too, with net income of $220 million on revenue of $777 million, according to the person who had seen the Goldman Sachs documents.

Like Google, Facebook is making most of its money so far by selling advertising. Facebook has emerged as a marketing magnet because it now has more than 500 million users worldwide, and the company knows a lot about them because its audience shares so much information about their interests on the website. More than 30 billion links, notes, photos and other types of content get posted on Facebook each month.

As impressive as Facebook's growth has been, just how much the business is worth remains a hotly debated topic.

The $50 billion market value implied in Goldman Sachs' investment is 25 times higher than the $2 billion in revenue that analysts believe the company had last year. Google, the Internet's biggest moneymaker so far, ended Thursday with a market value of $196 billion, about seven times its annual revenue.

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SAN FRANCISCO — With so many investors becoming fans of the company, Facebook will be legally required to begin sharing more information about its finances and strategy by April 2012, according ...
SAN FRANCISCO — With so many investors becoming fans of the company, Facebook will be legally required to begin sharing more information about its finances and strategy by April 2012, according ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lisa Hanock-Jasie
Renaissance woman
09:52 AM on 01/10/2011
When it happens, we'll be unfriending Wall Street.
01:17 PM on 01/09/2011
GS' current vehicle will blatently and fraudulently attempt to circumvent what little remains of US securities law. It is highly unlikely that in truth, the current proposed arrangement will remain below the SEC threshold of 500 investors. Facebook should be forced to go public now. The whole purpose of the delay is to inflate the perceived value of stock prices as much as possible before the IPO, while assuming that the SEC will be too slow to respond.
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uneeda
Make Peace in Our Time
11:00 AM on 01/09/2011
pump so that soon you can dump
09:11 PM on 01/07/2011
It's another financial pyramid bubb...I would prefer not to bail out FB or GS on this one.
I am going to go buy a lottery ticket though right now on the way back from taking my daughter to the winter high school dance. If I win I can pay for her University/College career and health care.
07:37 PM on 01/07/2011
Another pyramid hype and bubble. I expect to get telephone cold calls from stock brokers soon after it tanks. The goal is to sell before the bottom falls out. That will be soon.
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09:38 PM on 01/07/2011
Unless you're an accredited investor (which I highly doubt), you're phone won't be ringing...don't kid yourself.
09:54 PM on 01/07/2011
I get tel calls from the SBs every month or 2. The ask after my husband. He fell for it once 15 years ago. No kidding. Stock dumpers. This is another bubble hype. But you may still want to invest your life savings in GS and FB.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jheinze007
07:28 PM on 01/07/2011
Have you all noticed that Mark is get a little plump in the midriff these days? Just wait until Goldman sinks his teeth into him in earnest, it may get ugly!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jheinze007
12:17 AM on 01/08/2011
correction: getting a little plump!
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FreedToChoose
...lest my wife says I'm not.
07:26 PM on 01/07/2011
Is it ironic or just me? I'm amused that Facebook is concerned about its privacy more than that of its users.
06:04 PM on 01/07/2011
Facebook and Goldman Sachs, what a surprise they would be bedded up together. Why doesn't any business article that dissects internet players ever discuss Craig's List -- completely private, completely free, completely cooperative with the police to prevent/solve crimes. Facebook is a menace, and it should HAVE to go public, where it will FAIL, and then we can be done with this nonsense of collecting private information for commercial reasons, that no body wants.....and meanwhile, many human crimes are easily committed by "social" network giant, Facebook. Aarghh.
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06:32 PM on 01/07/2011
Are you seriously extolling the virtues of Craigslist?...Marketplace that is responsible for multiple sexual assaults and murder? Yikes -- think you're picking the wrong side here...
07:15 PM on 01/07/2011
Yes, I am seriously extolling each individual to use their own judgement to share or not share information with others.....where someone (or few) don't sit back and earn billions of dollars on it.......without putting a single person to work. That doesn't sound like an awesome company to me. That's "my side" since you seem to indicate that a "side" must be taken. I'm for clean business. Always.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chipchuck
Rethink that...
05:54 PM on 01/07/2011
This is how the GOP "spreads the wealth" to all their wall street middle men.
05:45 PM on 01/07/2011
Wow, these crooks have it all figured out don't they, no one is safe.

To the Progressives who are so angry with Prez Obama, I can picture Palin/Bachmann as President, and all of you eventually out there with Ted Williams OLD SIGN!
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cvbnm67
Pursuing truth, and all those who threaten it.
05:42 PM on 01/07/2011
Facebook has a completely unsustainable business model: "get more subscribers and let's see what happens." Facebook's only model is, getting angel investors to sink money onto their company based on data they are collecting. However the investors are betting facebook can sell data to the highest bidder. The problem is, that when the public gets wind of Facebook selling their information, the game is over and the investors will be left holding the bag.
Further, if they are making $1.1B per year selling ads, why would they need to borrow $500M from Goldman? Something stinks, and this is why social network sites never disclose their financials. When is the last time you have seen a financial statement from MySpace? When you have an advertising firm (and that is all that a social networking site is) who's very success depends on not advertising, there is a flaw in the business model.
MySpace makes $600M per year from 80M users and is on the verge of financial collapse. Facebook meanwhile, has 500M users and is only getting $1B. Facebook should have revenues of at least $3B per year to be on par with MySpace (and MySpace is technically dead). Facebook will be the next great bubble, as it continues to borrow money to run its operation. I only hope the investors that Goldman sells the shares to are not pensions or municipalities.
Facebook has to be run by the government to collect data.
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05:23 PM on 01/07/2011
I refuse to use FB. It is nothing but money hungry privacy stealing corporate america f@cism
04:37 PM on 01/07/2011
Facebook is a whole lot of nothing.
04:06 PM on 01/07/2011
Personally I wouldn't get too excited "After a company with at least $10 million in assets has more than 500 shareholders, the Securities and Exchange Commission requires it to disclose its financial results and other details on a quarterly basis in an effort to ensure investors are adequately informed." I imagine they'll find some kind of loophole by then?
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03:42 PM on 01/07/2011
I would never invest in Facebook, for the same reason I wouldn't invest in MySpace.

The landscape is changing too quickly. What was worth billions one day could be worth nothing the next if just one person came up with a better idea.
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06:33 PM on 01/07/2011
Everything's good then...because you'd never be suitable for an investment in FB anyway...
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03:26 PM on 01/10/2011
But all my money would.