Was Facebook stock overhyped?

The company made a big splash in the stock market last week, raising a whopping $16 billion. This week, its share price is already plunging.

By TheWeek.com May 22, 2012 1:13PM

To much fanfare, Facebook (FB) began selling shares on the Nasdaq (NDAQ) stock exchange last week, capping an improbable journey from Mark Zuckerberg's Harvard dorm room to global tech supremacy.


However, while the company sold an enormous $16 billion worth of shares, its stock price climbed a puny 23 cents over the course of the trading day, closing at $38.23 a share. And on Monday, the stock plunged by more than 10%, ending at $34.26. 


Is Facebook's troubled debut evidence that the company was overhyped?


Yes. Ordinary investors got suckered: Many people had expected Facebook's stock to pop on the first day, but its early struggles suggest that "professional money managers viewed all the hype as just that," says Gretchen Morgenson at The New York Times.


"Indications are that Facebook was bought primarily by individual investors, not institutions," which means that small-time buyers with big-time dreams of getting rich fast were left holding a lot of Facebook stock that no one else wanted to buy. "It's an old line on Wall Street: If you can get your hands on a hot new stock, you probably don't want it." 


And clearly, Facebook's business model is flawed: No one is sure that Facebook can make enough money to justify a $100 billion valuation, says The Economist. And some analysts expect the share price to dip as low as $30 "as the euphoria surrounding the world's largest internet IPO fades."


Facebook simply hasn't proven to investors that it can draw in enough advertising revenue, and Zuckerberg and Co. "need to show they can increase revenue fast enough to justify a stock market valuation that is more than 100 times Facebook's 2011 profit." 


C'mon. Facebook is doing just fine: "Dismissing the company as hype and the offering as a bust is yet another sign that it is the financial world that's in need of fixing, not Facebook," says Zachary Karabell at The Daily Beast.


With stock markets weighed down by the European debt crisis, and investors "fleeing stocks and anything risky," the fact that Facebook is holding up at all "should be seen as a small victory." Against a background of decline and crisis, we should be celebrating "Facebook's golly-gee optimism" that it can "create a future brighter than many now believe possible." 


More from The Week


Tags: FB
3Comments
May 22, 2012 1:30PM
avatar
Why dont we treat  this ponzi scam like we treated the housing scam. People lost money investing in homes they thought they were going to make money in,and the government has spent hundreds of millions of dollars bailing out the wall street gangsters and the greedy flippers. How about some of that Obama money for the foolish investors that bought Facebook.Same dog different fleas.
May 22, 2012 4:19PM
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Plain and simple answer is YES, FB initial share price of $38 was way over valued, tbh when they announced that they were up'ing the price from $28 to $38 that is when the alarm bells should have sounded. I feel that the true value of the FB share price is actually about $18-$22. Just remember this was never about FB the company is was about how much certain people could make on that opening day.
May 22, 2012 3:00PM
avatar
The news and stock analiste   are guity as rest of the underriders and  people that  own the stock offered    Ramria  B   said she thought it would reach   60.00 dollars  and you showing people waiting  to see how hight the stock woulds  go  put the greed out there       Hope you  all are happy   Wayne H Gue   In Southern CAlif   
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