FED Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress today that the economy is growing more slowly than expected, and should this anemic growth continue, the FED is ready to launch more stimulus.
“given the range of uncertainties about the strength of the recovery and prospects for inflation over the medium term, the Federal Reserve remains prepared to respond should economic developments indicate that an adjustment in the stance of monetary policy would be appropriate.”
The markets seem to have come to the same conclusion, as the major indexes are all up over 1% as of 1:30pm. Gold has jumped to 1585.60.
Speaking of Gold, Ron Paul asked the Bernank an interesting question:
Paul: Do you think gold is money? Bernanke: (pause) .. No. Paul: Even if it’s been used as money for 6,000 years… somebody reversed that? Eliminated that economic law? Bernanke: Well, it’s an asset. Would you say treasury bills are money? I don’t think they’re money either. Paul: Why do central banks hold it? Why don’t they hold diamonds? Bernanke: Well it’s tradition. Long term tradition. Paul: Well, some people still think it’s money.
Classic Bernank!! Sure, the banks could hold gold out of “tradition” but we never really got an answer from Ben on why he thinks gold isn’t money. Is gold a medium of exchange? Is it a store of value? Does Ben even understand this, or is gold just an intrusion on his fiat-money fantasyland? Who knows?
-Bill
PS: Alyx just informed me that we went through something similar in March.
This Reuters article says that, according to a source, News Corp is close to selling MySpace soon. And the selling price will be a mere fraction of what they paid for it.
As the auction of the troubled MySpace.com site continues, 2 companies have emerged as possible buyers. One is Specific Media, an online advertising company. The other is Golden Gate Capital, a private equity firm. Nether companies are willing to comment about it.
The unnamed source says:
The deal will probably be a mix of cash and stock for less than $100 million
More than 50% of MySpace’s workforce (500 of them) will be laid off due to the sale
The deal should be complete in a few days time
Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp bought MySpace in 2005 for $580 million. As you all know, MySpace got its ass handed to it by Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook. In 2010, News Corp tried to relaunch MySpace as a “social entertainment site with a focus on music, movies and celebrities.” Because, you know, we don’t have enough social entertainment sites with a focus on music, movies, and celebrities. So I’m glad they were able to fill that niche. Oh, they also changed their logo to a version which removes the word “Space” and replaces it with a little “space” bar symbol.
How cute! Now you can fill in the blank: My_Crap, My_Loss, My_Fail, etc… Use your imagination!
I also find it interesting that there’s a nice “Connect With Facebook” button on MySpace’s main page. Talk about defeat with a capital D.
Speaking of Facebook, there’s a related story on Reuters concerning the investment fund called GSV Capital Corp. It seems that GSV Capital has taken a small stake in Facebook – about 225,000 shares, at an average price of $29.28 each.
Facebook is almost sure to go public. Observing the IPO is certain to be lots of fun.
And how much is Facebook currently valued at? Would you believe.. $70 billion ?
Yeah, and anybody who believes that Facebook isn’t a massive bubble waiting to pop hasn’t learned a damn thing from MySpace.
“Here today, gone tomorrow.” A constant in the universe of the Internets. If you don’t believe me, go ask Friendster and pets.com.
- Bill
Update
MySpace has gone to Specific Media. For $35 million, according to news reports. How the mighty have fallen!
What has explosive revenue growth but massive losses on its books, even more expenses forecasted for the foreseeable future, a highly competitive business model but will still probably rake in a ton of cash, at least at the outset? Why, it’s a tech IPO, of course, in this case Groupon. As always, no investment advice here, folks, just me being my usual contrarian self…
In case you’ve been living under a rock, Groupon offers daily deals in almost all major markets for a % off various goods and services provided by vendors in markets with high competition and low barriers to entry: salons, medical spas, restaurants, etc. Typical deals are “$10 for $25 at Bob’s Restaurant” or “90% Off Laser Hair Removal” type stuff.
And supposing you buy that Bob’s deal, Groupon keeps half, or $5, and then a few weeks after the deal runs on the site, Groupon cuts Bob a check for the other $5. So Bob is essentially giving you a meal for $5, which probably doesn’t cover his costs, but he can justify it as a marketing expense, because you’ll be back… right? Based on my extensive interrogations of every Groupon user I know, it’s pretty unlikely you’ll be back unless you were already a regular there, as your next meal will probably be at Chuck’s down the street, when Chuck offers a $10 for $25 Groupon. (This is the kind of deal that is really only going to work for operations like events that are not even close to selling out – if you’re performing a play in a 1,000 seat theater and it’s two weeks off and you’ve only sold 175 tickets, by all means try some kind of discounting to fill the rest of the seats, and if anyone comes back for another performance that’s gravy. Unfortunately, this application is much more limited than preying on small business owners convinced that all they need to do is get people in the door in order to win thousands of converts to their particular Botox salon.)
So… yeah, $750 million IPO based on that. And why not let’s take a look at their prospectus for s**ts and giggles? A few fun numbers: Net income from selling Groupons: $279 million Net losses in 2010: $456 million
Amount spent on acquisitions: $203 million Advertising costs: $263 million (Those ubiquitous and irrelevant Google banner ads don’t come cheap, people) Costs of overhead: $233 million (salaries etc)
They claim much of these are one-time expenses. But if they don’t continue to acquire competitors or advertise… how will they keep growing? Magic, I suppose, because here are some of the risk factors they cite in the prospectus that suggest that growth and engagement will be challenging (and thus, one can infer, expensive):
- we have experienced rapid growth over a short period in a new market we have created and we do not know whether this market will continue to develop or whether it can be maintained; - our business is highly competitive and competition presents an ongoing threat to the success of our business; - if we fail to retain our existing subscribers or acquire new subscribers, our revenue and business will be harmed; - if we fail to retain existing merchants or add new merchants, our revenue and business will be harmed;
Eh, I guess it’s no big deal, as long as they keep sending everyone emails written in “Groupon Voice” that tell us “This full-body-waxing deal will leave you hairless, like one of them cats” we’ll all stay engaged and tell all our friends.
So okay, it’s bleeding money, but to be fair it’s not all garbage. What real asset do they have? A huge email list (some 83.1 million, per the prospectus – and since they acquired almost all of them in 2010 by buying competitors/advertising, this gives me a CPA of about $5.61 per email – daaaamn), and some demographic data. A database of millions of people who want to buy things, I suppose, does have its value, but it’s also a database of people who want to buy things cheap. I noticed this morning that they also appear to have a partnership with Expedia to send out travel deals, but it is a LONG leap from dropping $10 for $20 in burritos to dropping $5K on a “$10K value” cruise leaving out of Reykjavik. So, good luck with that.
I’d also be remiss if I didn’t mention what they did with the last money they raised (which is, they gave it to previous investors even though they’re bleeding cash):
Most concerning of all, however, might be how their most recent capital raises have been handled. Their Series F and G capital raises, which occurred in April and December of 2010, raised a combined $1.08 billion. Of that $1.08 billion, $150 million went to the company for working capital purposes. The other $930 million? Paid back to founders and early backers by buying their shares from them.
So a company that owes $230 million more than it has, and appears to be burning through $100 million or more a quarter, is using money raised from later investors to pay back early investors…
I couldn’t get a quote from Triumph The Insult Comic Dog for this post but I think it might be because he’s busy composing an email of his own for an up-and-coming pet deal site. I got a look at the subject line and I think it said “$0.19 for $11 in Pets.com Stock.”
For nostalgia’s sake, anyone remember the pets.com vs Triumph lawsuit? –
In a story we would like to see more of, Warren and Maureen Nyerges, a couple of Florida homeowners, tried to repossess a local Bank of America.
The foreclosure nightmare started when Warren and Maureen Nyerges paid cash for a home owned by Bank of American in the Golden Gate Estates. They never had a mortgage whatsoever. But, the bank fouled it up and wound up issuing a foreclosure through their attorney.
That sounds like the kind of thing that could happen to anyone, honestly: you buy your home in cash, the bank thinks that not having a mortgage is un-American, and decides to foreclose on your home when you fail to make payments on a mortgage you do not have. Really, we’re almost on Bank of America’s side here. Where do these people get off, owning their home outright?
So anyway, the couple decides that they want to keep the home they have bought and paid for, and take BoA to court over this. Since it’s such an open-and-shut case (here’s the deed, your honor, with our name on it and nothing on the lienholder line), it only took eighteen months to settle. In that year and a half, our intrepid heroes racked up some legal fees, which Bank of America was ordered to pay.
You might have guessed where this went: BoA didn’t pay. For five months. So, since one has a lot of free time on one’s hands when one doesn’t have a mortgage to pay, the Nyerges called their attorney, who showed up at the local bank branch with a couple of deputies and some moving trucks, where they proceeded to seize the bank’s assets – much as the bank would do to a homeowner if the homeowner was months behind on his mortgage. And we do mean all of the bank’s assets.
“I instructed the deputy to go in and take desks, computers, copiers, filing cabinets, including cash in the drawers,” Attorney Todd Allen told WINK News.
Sadly, cooler heads ultimately prevailed and the Nyerges did not wind up with free desks, computers, copiers, filing cabinets, and cash from the drawers. The branch manager wrote the couple a check for the settlement amount (plus, we hope, the cost of renting two moving trucks for a day) and everyone went home with a little less faith in our banking system.
The branch manager blamed the error on an attorney who was no longer in business, an excuse we’re a little hesitant to buy. How can a foreclosure attorney go out of business in 2011?
Links! Been a while since we did a roundup (sorry, I know, worst blogger ever). But without further ado…
- There’s been much flap this week about the LinkedIn ($LNKD) IPO, and whether or not the company got “ripped off”, the exact quantity of German performance cars being procured in Silicon Valley this weekend as shares were sold off, etc. Props to The Epicurean Dealmaker for summing it all up as such:
“Frankly, I have always suspected that the stentorious outrage about special favors and secret deals investment banks allegedly dispense on IPOs really boils down to simple envy. Nine times out of ten, I suspect the person whinging is just pissed off he did not get shares in a hot IPO himself.”
Or, as we might say around here, haters gonna hate.
- The Reformed Broker finds that the most hilarious risk factor for the Yandex IPO is, well, that in Soviet Russia, government divests you, anytime it feels like it.
- Earlier this week, in the European markets, we noticed that Greece took a page from Rebecca Black: Friday, Friday, their rating went down to B+ on Friday. (Which seat should they take? Any of them, provided it’s on the failboat.)
- Ann Taylor ($ANN) recently indicated they’re bullish about Q2. So I went to the mall this weekend and did some research.