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Facebook fervor fierce ahead of IPO

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SAN FRANCISCO: Facebook frenzy is spreading ahead of the company’s big-time stock market debut, with anything from Mark Zuckerberg’s hoodie to the billion-dollar buy of Instagram sparking controversy.

 

Speculation about the promise or pitfalls of owning a piece of the world’s  leading social network was so feverish by the weekend that one report contended  there was too much demand for the stock while another said it was lacking.
 
Facebook, already assured of becoming one of the most valuable US firms  when it goes public, has been on an intense marketing drive ahead of its  expected trading launch on the tech-heavy Nasdaq on May 18.
 
In a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, Facebook set a  price range of US$28 to US$35 for its shares, which would value the firm at between  US$70 billion and US$87.5 billion.
   
When Google went public in 2004, its valuation was US$23 billion, and now it  has a market value of US$200 billion.
   
Some are offended by the price set for Facebook, a site founded by  Zuckerberg just eight years ago from his Harvard dorm room. Still only 27, he  will retain 57.3 per cent of the voting power of the shares. 
   
Others expected better — some analysts predicted a price of US$44 a share in  the short term, and a much higher figure in the long term.
   
At the midpoint of the price range, the sale of 337 million shares would  generate US$10.6 billion, making Facebook’s offering the largest IPO of a tech  firm.
   
Despite the intense spotlight on Facebook coffers swelling with a stock  sale, analysts agree that for most of the social network’s more than 900  million users, the focus will be on changes to the service — not ownership of  the firm.
   
“What they hope, I think, is that Facebook will continue to innovate and  make the service more interesting and more relevant,” said Creative Strategies  principal analyst Tim Bajarin.
   
“Facebook is not extremely specific on what they will do with the money.”    The IPO also means wealth will be heaped on longtime employees compensated  with stock at the startup launched in 2004.
   
“You give a group of people in a company a ton of money, you get some weird  behaviour,” said independent Silicon Valley analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group.
   
“Facebook itself is going to change, and not necessarily for the better.”    Workers made rich with company stock have been known to leave for new  endeavors or to follow dreams. Sudden wealth can change people’s attitudes or  inspire spending binges, Enderle noted.
   
“A lot of stuff unrelated to work happens that can lead to turmoil,”  Enderle said. “It is going to be an interesting few months. Already Zuckerberg  is acting outside the envelope.”    Zuckerberg was bashed by some analysts for wearing his trademark hoodie and  jeans to pre-IPO roadshow meetings with Wall Street types accustomed to  business attire.
   
“Showing up in front of suited financial analysts in a hoodie is not the  smartest thing,” Enderle said. “It just pisses off people who can wreck your  IPO.”    
 
Zuckerberg was also second-guessed for orchestrating a billion-dollar  stock-and-cash deal to buy the startup behind hot smartphone photo-sharing  application Instagram.
 
The price tag evidently caught the attention of the US Federal Trade  Commission (FTC), which is reported to be reviewing the takeover. Facebook  declined to comment regarding an FTC probe of the Instagram deal.
   
Companies going public usually wait until takeovers are completed to spare  investors uncertainty.
 
Becoming a publicly traded company could result in Zuckerberg being more  constrained because of accountability to stockholders and regulators, according  to Bajarin.
 
“To be fair, once you go public you have fiduciary responsibilities and are  in a different scenario,” Bajarin said. “(Zuckerberg) could never do that  Instagram deal for a billion dollars like that after an IPO.”    Facebook has kept busy in the weeks leading up to the IPO.
 
The social network unveiled an online center for smartphone applications  synched to Facebook and bought mobile discovery startup Glancee. Microsoft  announced it is weaving feedback from Facebook friends into personalized Bing  search results.
 
Facebook confirmed Friday it was creeping into the territory of Dropbox,  Google and others with the roll-out of a service that lets people store files  in the Internet “cloud” for access from a variety of devices.
 
“Facebook wants to create an open social network that allows them to get  more aggressive in the way they connect people,” Bajarin said.
 
“Mark wants Facebook connected to all kinds of other sites, and this new  model can be backed with more cash.”  -- AFP
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