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Facebook Investors Look For Exits

First Posted: 04/27/11 07:52 PM ET Updated: 06/27/11 06:12 AM ET

Facebook Value 2011


By Lauren Tara LaCapra and Jennifer Saba

(NEW YORK) - A group of Facebook shareholders is seeking to offload $1 billion worth of shares on the secondary market, a sale that would value the company at more than $70 billion, according to five sources with direct knowledge of the situation.

It would represent one of the largest transactions of Facebook shares to date and points to a growing wariness among early-stage investors and employees who fear Facebook's market valuation cannot keep pace with its growth.

The sellers have lowered their price after previously trying to offload shares at a price that valued the company at $90 billion, which would make Facebook more valuable than Time Warner Inc (TWX.N) and News Corp (NWSA.O) combined. But buyers balked.

"At the current valuation where it is, it is really hard to justify the investment," said Sumeet Jain, partner at venture capital firm CMEA Capital, who has examined Facebook deals recently and has taken a pass. "It's hard to imagine it will turn into a $270 billion company in the next few years."

The current deal, which includes stock held by Facebook employees, is awaiting approval from top Facebook executives including Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg and Chief Financial Officer David Ebersman, according to two sources.

Facebook declined to comment.

Investors, ranging from venture capital firms to rich individuals to investment banks, have scrambled to get a piece of the privately held company before its expected IPO next year.

Facebook raised $500 million from Goldman Sachs Group, (GS.N) and Russia's Digital Sky Technologies, for instance, giving it a market value of $50 billion. Weeks later, private equity firm General Atlantic piled into the company, valuing it at $65 billion, according to CNBC. [ID:nN04193610]

Tim Draper, the well known venture capital partner who founded Draper Fisher Jurvetson, told Reuters this month he recently looked at buying shares of Facebook deals, but passed because of an unattractive valuation.

One wealthy person, who has fielded calls for the past month involving Facebook pitches in the range of $200 million to $1 billion, is also sitting on the sidelines.

"It's priced to perfection in the private marketplace," said the person, who did not want to be named. The person said the pitches implied a valuation of $90 billion. "I don't like to own anything I can't sell right now."

Created in a Harvard University dorm room in 2004, Facebook rocketed from an online directory created for college students to the world's No. 1 social network with more than 500 million members worldwide.

The company's astounding growth and popularity have put some of the Internet's biggest guns on notice -- including Google Inc (GOOG.O) -- and have made it the darling of investors seeking to stake out claims in private companies before they go public.

Facebook, the world's No. 1 Internet social network, earned $355 million in net income in the first nine months of 2010 on revenue of $1.2 billion.

It is one of a handful of Internet companies including Twitter, Groupon and Zynga whose soaring valuations recall the heady days of the late 1990s.

An array of investors has piled into Facebook. Mutual fund giant T. Rowe Price recently disclosed that several of its funds owned stakes in Facebook, valuing the company at $25 per share, which implies a valuation of $50 billion.

"By the time T. Rowe Price is investing, you know it's too late," the hedge fund manager said.

(Additional reporting by Alexei Oreskovic in San Francisco; Editing by Kenneth Li, Steve Orlofsky and Robert MacMillan)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions

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By Lauren Tara LaCapra and Jennifer Saba (NEW YORK) - A group of Facebook shareholders is seeking to offload $1 billion worth of shares on the secondary market, a sale that would value the compan...
By Lauren Tara LaCapra and Jennifer Saba (NEW YORK) - A group of Facebook shareholders is seeking to offload $1 billion worth of shares on the secondary market, a sale that would value the compan...
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12:57 PM on 04/29/2011
Could Facebook be worth $70 Billion?

No.
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PathofTotality
Regret serves no purpose
10:28 AM on 04/29/2011
My view of all this is like grownups playing with Monopoly money pretending it's real.
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dtallwalk
11:35 PM on 04/28/2011
The way I see it is that Wall Street was a place that invested in Co that had a outlook for the
Long hall for the Co that sold stocks then used the money generated from the stock sale was used to
Help that Co grows and prosper. But now there seems to be a gambling element to Wall Street
That bets on losers as well as winners. And if this is some kind of game where some are betting
On when the bubble will burst. And so of the employees have info that shows this is going to
Happen and it is time to get out. Time will tell
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leftLibertarian
Don't vote for Obama or Romney
07:17 PM on 04/28/2011
FB is worth at least 700 skillion! Hey, I just posted pics of my dinner on my FB page!!
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jflorish
05:56 PM on 04/28/2011
I would buy Facebook stock if it ipo'd, but certainly not if it was valued that high.
04:51 PM on 04/28/2011
Facebook bubble, facebook has no infrastructure,trucks, factories,land, products. This thing will collapse and the last person holding it will jump out a window. Its a website people!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RecoveryRoad
CPA, Economics guy, and truth teller
03:18 PM on 04/28/2011
while i understand the popularity of facebook, i just can't see a business model sustaining its lofty valuation today. Is this going to be the biggest dot com disaster ever?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Quotidien
03:01 PM on 04/28/2011
Facebook has about 3 more years of relevance. That's just how it goes.
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jflorish
05:53 PM on 04/28/2011
So who's going to pass them? It's not just going away.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Quotidien
11:02 AM on 04/29/2011
There was a time when Prodigy and Compuserve were the two biggest internet service providers. Techology is always about change. Nothing stays at the top for an extended period of time.

The current appeal of Facebook is it's interactivity.

Just about every website is moving in the direction where people can set up profiles, make friends, share opinions, photos and ideas, likes and dislikes, polls, etc...

Huffpo itself is now allowing mini-bio information and thought of the day info to be posted under each poster's user name.

In 5 years Facebook will be the abandonded neighborhood amusement park eyesore with the unsafe rollercoasters and the out-dated arcade room.
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cvbnm67
Pursuing truth, and all those who threaten it.
01:21 PM on 04/28/2011
Goldman Sachs provided their clients with "financial information" about Facebook, not "Financial Statements." Further, Goldman would not disclose how Facebook made the $1.2B in revenue. Also, it cost considerably more than $1.2B to operate a social network with 500M users. Who are they kidding? There is no way for Facebook to post a profit, no way. When a company like Facebook starts to get involved with Goldman and T. Rowe Price, you know they have run out of ideas. Next step is employees unloading their stock.

http://slatest.slate.com/posts/2011/04/28/facebook_stock_sale_employees_early_investors_look_to_sell_off_1.html

Shocking.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
12:32 PM on 04/28/2011
This is Wall Street fantasia run amok. You've got to be kidding me.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JackHoffman
Pundit
12:15 PM on 04/28/2011
I hear the sound of a bursting bubble.
11:33 AM on 04/28/2011
$355 million in net income; even if that doubled its still not worth $70 billion because the risk of their business model evaporating in 2 - 3 years is enormous. people are starting to get sick of having their personal data sold.
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cvbnm67
Pursuing truth, and all those who threaten it.
01:23 PM on 04/28/2011
It is a lie. They could not have posted a profit. Impossible.
10:13 AM on 04/28/2011
70 billion? Haven't we been here before in the early 90's with gross over-valuation? It's worth millions - not even 1 billion. Not too many years back MySpace ruled social media. Now they're nothing more than vapor. FB, if they play their cards wrong, could be in the exact same place a few years from now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anthony Garnett
11:28 AM on 04/28/2011
I seems Wall Street and the public has forgotten the early 90's. The next bubble to burst facebook, twitter, and groupon
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jflorish
05:55 PM on 04/28/2011
Not even close to the 90s. Co's then weren't profitable, today there are not only profitable but very profitable. Anyone comparing it to the 90s just has no idea about the stock market then and now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DomainDiva
Aviation SaaS Entrepreneur and Technical SME
09:13 AM on 04/28/2011
The GM re-IPO listed at somewhere around 32-33 a share. I just checked the price 31.25.Totally flat. People know a dud when they see it. My husband the trader has put FaceBook on his list of equities to ignore when it goes public.

They don't have a product that people really pay for...others pay them for the information they provide about their users, advertising and those silly games.
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Robert SF
09:11 AM on 04/28/2011
Facebook, the world's No. 1 Internet social network, earned $355 million in net income in the first nine months of 2010 on revenue of $1.2 billion.
===

That's all you need to know to determine a sensible price. It's not $70 billion.