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Facebook confirms $50 billion valuation

by Scott Bicheno on 24 January 2011, 10:56

Tags: Facebook

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At the start of the year it was reported that giant US investment bank Goldman Sachs was investing $500 million on social networking site Facebook, at a valuation of $50 billion - i.e. one percent of the company.

At the same time Goldman also acted as a broker, via a ‘special purpose vehicle' (SPV) to offer a billion dollars worth of Facebook stock to investors. As Facebook is not a public company, this latter move was contentious because there are laws in the US compelling companies to make their financial records public once they have 500 shareholders.

Goldman thought it had cunningly got round this law with the SPV, because only it would be registered as a shareholder, despite selling on the stock to loads of others - seems like a silly loophole to us. But in the end it had to limit the re-offering of Facebook stock to overseas investors only.

All of this was officially confirmed by Facebook in a recent press release, which commenced: "Facebook today announced it has raised U.S. $1.5 billion at a valuation of approximately $50 billion."

"Our business continues to perform well, and we are pleased to be able to bolster our cash position with this new financing," said David Ebersman, Facebook's CFO. "With this investment completed, we now have greater financial flexibility to explore whatever opportunities lie ahead." Financial flexibility - that's one way of putting it.

In the release, Facebook addressed the 500 shareholder issue: "Even before the investment from Goldman Sachs, Facebook had expected to pass 500 shareholders at some point in 2011, and therefore expects to start filing public financial reports no later than April 30, 2012," it said.

Presumably, therefore, there were other reasons for Goldman's move. Regardless, the $50 million valuation puts Facebook ahead of tech giants such as Nokia, if we compare it to their market cap, and values it at almost double that of Dell. Impressive.

 



HEXUS Forums :: 3 Comments

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Hmmm.

That tells me one of two things. Either Goldman Saschs have their heads firmly buried where the sun don't shine with that valuation, or they're right about it and in that case, the implied value of the company pretty much has to come from the commercialisation (read advertising) opportunities it offers, and a good deal of that pretty much has to come from data mining information members provide. And that tells me that there's no way this side of hell I'll ever give them any of my personal information.

If I ever join Facebook (which is extremely unlikely), it'll be with fictitious information, starting with name and DOB, and if I do that, is there any point in joining at all?

The more I see of operations like Facebook, the less I like what I see.
Farmville and all that crap is a bit of a cash cow, as well. But yeah, it's a bit of a pie in the sky guesstimate.
Value based mostly on the size of the user base I assume, just look at myspace to see how the mighty fall.