Category Archives: IPO

Twitter IPO price at $26

Stock market is expensive. Twitter IPO is expensive (without profit). More expensive than Facebook and LinkedIn. But anyway, I think the stock will soar today. The question is: for how long? For all I know we will be forced to buy shares in the aftermarket if we want to grab some.

Twitter say this stock is more risky themselves and that is bad news for the investors considering what happend to Facebooks IPO in the aftermarket. The demand for this stock is huge, and we will probably see the stock skyrocket in the beginning.

Twitter is unprofitable at the moment and they are headed in the wrong direction. In the first six months of 2013, they increased the loss by 41% to $69,3 million. Like I have said before: Shareprice follow earnings, so what are you thinking about the Twitters share price? Based on the info we have so far, it doesn`t bode well for the Twitter shares.

Another ting is the market timing. Expensive shares in an expensive stock market is not a good mix. Everyone is buying into the Twitter IPO hype, and the analysts predict a target price as high as $50. Facebook and LinkedIn appear cheap at about twelve times forward sales, while Twitter is valued at about thirteen times forward sales. That`s not cheap with a company with so many losses.

It`s effective to look at the companys price to earnings if you wonder what price should be. What you really do is comparing the price of the company today to its ability to produce earnings in the future (cash). But the corporate earnings are very influenced by the business cycle.

The U.S experiences a boom approxomately once every ten years. At times like that, the companys will have higher price to earnings than other times because of the business cycle. That is the reason why we see high stock prices. Sometimes it all end up to build a huge bubble.

“CAPE” adjusts for this by measuring the stock price against the average of ten years worth of earnings adjusted for inflation. Doing it this way, you will better see the companys ability to produce cash in any economic environment.

CAPE is a good measurement for long term investors. It measures future stock returns. CAPE outperforms P/E ratio, Government Debt/GDP, Dividend yield, The Fed Model and many other metrics used to predict the market value.

Take a look at the chart below. It tells us that the S&P500 has a CAPE of over 24, which means that the market is trading 24 times its average earnings of the last ten years.

CAPE

In other words; if you bought the entire stock market today, it would take you about twenty four years to make your money back. Is that cheap? No way, but every time (only a handful of times in the last 100 years) we`ve been closer to a market top, then a new bull market run.

Important news today: Unemployment Claims, Advanced GDP and ECB press conference at 8:30am. ECB president Draghi speaks at 2pm.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Shiny bull. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Shiny bull nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in precious metal products, commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Shiny bull and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

Leave a comment

Filed under IPO, Stock market, Stocks

Twitter IPO

In september, Twitter announced it had plans to submit documents to the US SEC (US Securities and Exchange Commission). They wanted to go public but at that time they didn`t reveal anything about their IPO plans. Yesterday they made it`s S-1 filing. Wow!

Twitter has been valued at about $10 billion dollars. But who are the guys behind this micro-blogging site success? Evan Willians (co-founder), has 12 percent stake. Peter Fenton (board member), has 6,7 percent stake. Jack Dorsey (also a co-founder), has a 4,9 percent stake, and Twitter CEO Dick Costolo, with 1,6 percent.

The ticker code for Twitter is planning to be TWTR. According to the S-1 filing, Twitter is trying to raise $1 billion, and I don`t think they will have any problems to find investors to do that. The big question now is how many share are they going to print, and what will the share price be?

We all remember the listing of Facebook last year. Startet on $38 and plummeted to $17,73. Now the stock have made a comeback and are above $50. What a great bull. So far this year the Facebook stock is up 84,76 percent. YTD it`s up 120,85 percent.

Twitter will change the marketing rules, like Facebook, LinkedIn and Google. We can see it in their revenue. Last year Twitter`s revenue was up amazingly 198 percent! At the same time the net loss decreased by 38 percent!

The revenue for the first 6 months this year was $253,6 million. Up from $122,4 million in the same periode last year. Net loss for the fist 6 months this year was $69,3 million. Most of the money comes from advertising, and their products are promoted tweets, promoted accounts and promoted trends.

Daily they have 500 million tweets. Twitter have 200 million montly active users and 100 million of them is daily active users. What marketing managers can ignore so many users? We can expect the revenue to continue to rise up to the sky. The only way is up.

Institutional shareholders who have more than 5 percent is Spark Capital, Benchmark, Rizvi Traverse, Union Square Ventures and DST. Twitter started seven years ago, and without the investors who have raised hundreds of millions of dollars, we wouldn`t have twitter today.

In an interview from 2007, the co-founder Evan Williams (41 years old) say this about the service: «a no-brainer» for «social animals». It`s fun to write about billionaires and share it with the rest of the 99,99%!

twitter_newbird_boxed_blueonwhite-11

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Shiny bull. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Shiny bull nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in precious metal products, commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Shiny bull and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

Leave a comment

Filed under IPO, Stocks