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-   -   Are you investing in Face Book? (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1055725)

dave90210 01-31-2012 06:38 PM

Are you investing in Face Book?
 
Facebook is expected to file initial paperwork with regulators on Wednesday morning for a $5 billion initial public offering. This should be good for the next few months then sell the shit!

Nothing last forever when it comes to social networking, example: My Space so this should be interesting

Anyone in here going to buy some FB shares?

oscer 01-31-2012 06:57 PM

No i am not going to risk jumping in and having to deal with a sell off that drops the price

epitome 01-31-2012 06:57 PM

Myspace was a website, Facebook is a platform. I wish people would start understanding that.

They are nothing alike, except on the surface.

SomeCreep 01-31-2012 07:19 PM

Probably not.

Trend 01-31-2012 07:34 PM

Yes. I'll be investing in FB significantly.

Houdini 01-31-2012 07:35 PM

It's just the filing tomorrow. Actual shares won't be for sale until April or May.

suesheboy 01-31-2012 07:37 PM

Too much already in google

d-null 01-31-2012 07:40 PM

no

in fact, I would much rather invest/donate towards the cause of seeing facebook go under :2 cents:

Brujah 01-31-2012 08:06 PM

I'm going all in.

keysync 01-31-2012 08:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by d-null (Post 18724621)
no

in fact, I would much rather invest/donate towards the cause of seeing facebook go under :2 cents:

+1 :thumbsup

SlammedMedia 01-31-2012 08:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dave90210 (Post 18724528)
Facebook is expected to file initial paperwork with regulators on Wednesday morning for a $5 billion initial public offering. This should be good for the next few months then sell the shit!

Nothing last forever when it comes to social networking, example: My Space so this should be interesting

Anyone in here going to buy some FB shares?

Facebook isn't Myspace, it doesn't even start to make sense to compare them.

stocktrader23 01-31-2012 08:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by epitome (Post 18724560)
Myspace was a website, Facebook is a platform. I wish people would start understanding that.

They are nothing alike, except on the surface.

8 characters

lagcam 02-01-2012 02:52 AM

I will be investing my Hands Free Adult earnings into it.

glamourmodels 02-01-2012 02:57 AM

facepalm.jpg

eroticsexxx 02-01-2012 03:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by epitome (Post 18724560)
Myspace was a website, Facebook is a platform.

This. :2 cents:

pornmasta 02-01-2012 03:31 AM

i'm waiting that it collapses

Chosen 02-02-2012 07:02 AM

No :pimp

Evil Chris 02-02-2012 07:05 AM

Hopefully this is what KILLS Facebook and people will all start spending time on other sites on the web. Like porn sites.

bronco67 02-02-2012 08:03 AM

I'm no expert on stocks, but I would say get in at the beginning, make a few bucks then get out, because this shit won't last forever.

CyberHustler 02-02-2012 08:11 AM

You guys who think facebook won't eventually suffer the same fate as myspace are kinda delusional... Website/platform doesn't matter, it's all the same sheeple who flock to the new and "better" thing.

L-Pink 02-02-2012 08:13 AM

Fuck the "I don't have a real life" website.

DamianJ 02-02-2012 08:14 AM

1) When they launch Facebook currency, it will be a game changer for online payments

2) When they IPO, Zuck will lose control and they will have a responsibility to the shareholders to make as much money as possible and it will fuck up the site

You need to buy and sell within 10 seconds and only the pals of the brokerage will be able to do that.

imho

porno jew 02-02-2012 08:15 AM

zuck is still going to retain plenty of control.

seeandsee 02-02-2012 08:19 AM

gold gold gold, cant go down too much, probably will rise!

Verbal 02-02-2012 08:44 AM

Every quarter they will have an obligation to shareholders to make more money. They won't be able to do that without pissing off it's users, which eventually will open doors for other social networks to thrive. Eventually the 'user experience' that makes Facebook as popular as it is will be compromised by additional privacy issues as well as intrusive and blatant money-making additions ... I see the IPO as the beginning of the end for Facebook.

brassmonkey 02-02-2012 08:47 AM

sure i have some extra

takehersleazy 02-02-2012 08:52 AM

FB will probably be overvalued out of the gate so I will wait and see how it plays out. It's not quite like Google who had a monopoly on the search engine game so you knew they would make mad ad $$$. If Facebook doesn't wow them with sales figures in the first 12 months the share value will come back down to earth.

eroticsexxx 02-02-2012 08:57 AM

Persons who don't have a clue about investment IPO's seem to be the loudest in proclaiming that Facebook is going to simply drop off the map like Myspace.

Have any of you been paying attention?

Facebook has Morgan Stanley as their primary underwriter, along with three other companies. That right there is a MAJOR sign that Facebook is here to stay and that the stock has nowhere to go but up. Investor confidence in this IPO is through the roof.

Carefully note that Morgan Stanley also backed Google's IPO in 2004. Morgan Stanley does not mess around with their clients' money and their clients have DEEP pockets.

Paul Markham 02-02-2012 09:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DamianJ (Post 18729993)
1) When they launch Facebook currency, it will be a game changer for online payments

2) When they IPO, Zuck will lose control and they will have a responsibility to the shareholders to make as much money as possible and it will fuck up the site

You need to buy and sell within 10 seconds and only the pals of the brokerage will be able to do that.

imho

What will FB currency do?

I don't think some bright college kid is the best person to run a multi billion dollar company. Maybe share holders will find someone better.

The "targeted" advertising as far as I see is Geo targeting. All the ads I see are in Czech and absolutely of no interest to me. Maybe they will start targeting on the keyboard and computer settings. Then do some testing to see what I am interested in.

As for buying, it depends on the price. This is like betting on cards or horses, it's gambling.

eroticsexxx 02-02-2012 09:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18730007)
zuck is still going to retain plenty of control.

Indeed. 57 percent of the vote to be exact.

eroticsexxx 02-02-2012 09:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 18730173)
What will FB currency do?

When Online Gambling is made legal once again in the US, buy Zynga's stock if you can get your hands on it in some form or fashion. That is just one of many profitable channels for Facebook credits that is impending.

Facebook Credits will deal a serious blow to Paypal. Trust that.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 18730173)
This is like betting on cards or horses, it's gambling.

While this assertion is loosely correct, there are varying factors in this case. The Facebook scenario is being calculated carefully and one has to watch all of the pieces of the financial puzzle to see what exactly is happening.

Last year one of my offshore investment clients recommended that I pay closer attention to what was happening with the company after I brought it up in passing conversation. I was sceptical at first as well, but I'm beginning to see what he was implying.

DamianJ 02-02-2012 09:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porno jew (Post 18730007)
zuck is still going to retain plenty of control.

I imagine Steve Jobs thought that too, until he was sacked from the company he started.

alextokyo 02-02-2012 09:29 AM

the fuck are they going public again? Beyond making a few key people rich, as far as investing in social networking goes... all I can picture is a bus full of passengers driving off a cliff...

Until Warren Buffet has his top guys creating GFY accounts, the opinions in this thread are worth as much as they cost, and that includes mine. :321GFY

DamianJ 02-02-2012 09:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 18730173)
What will FB currency do?

Revolutionise online payments. You think paypal is big? Just wait.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 18730173)
I don't think some bright college kid is the best person to run a multi billion dollar company. Maybe share holders will find someone better.

I agree. He'll be out.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 18730173)
As for buying, it depends on the price. This is like betting on cards or horses, it's gambling.

AFAIK, all stocks are gambling, aren't they?

eroticsexxx 02-02-2012 09:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DamianJ (Post 18730252)
I imagine Steve Jobs thought that too, until he was sacked from the company he started.

Flawed comparison.

Jobs was running Apple into the ground and made serious mistakes in leading the company at that time.

He needed to be fired.

On the other hand, Zuckerberg led Facebook to where it is today. The IPO is being made based on the products of his leadership and their ongoing potential.

Any attempt to cast him out as a primary element of the equation when the company shows nothing but growth potential, even in the face of privacy and interface complaints, would be shooting themselves in the foot.

It surely would not happen on Morgan Stanley's watch. Changing the roles and responsibilities of the CEO of a solid investment shortly after pushing the IPO automatically poisons confidence in said investment. The clients would be furious as to why they were not informed that the leadership configuration was going to be modified in such a manner before they made the investment. Morgan Stanley would not deal in such frivolousness.

DamianJ 02-02-2012 09:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eroticsexxx (Post 18730316)
Flawed comparison.

Jobs was running Apple into the ground and made serious mistakes in leading the company at that time.

He needed to be fired.

On the other hand Zuckerberg led Facebook to where it is today. The IPO is being made based on the products of his leadership and their ongoing potential.

Any attempt to cast him out as a primary element of the equation when the company shows nothing but growth potential, even in the face of privacy and interface complaints, would be shooting themselves in the foot.

It surely would not happen on Morgan Stanley's watch. Changing the CEO of a solid investment shortly after pushing the IPO automatically poisons confidence in said investment. The clients would be furious as to why they were not informed that the CEO was going to be changed before they made the investment. Morgan Stanley would not deal in such frivolousness.

I didn't say 'shortly' afterwards.

After the IPO they will have a legal duty to make as much money as possible for the shareholders.

Zuck doesn't like intrusive ads. He doesn't like 'fucking' with what works. However, what works isn't making as much money as he could.

I give it a year.

Apple was 3 weeks away from going bankrupt when Jobs returned. Now it's the largest company in the world according to marcap. Think on't.

stocktrader23 02-02-2012 10:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul Markham (Post 18730173)
What will FB currency do?

I don't think some bright college kid is the best person to run a multi billion dollar company. Maybe share holders will find someone better.

The "targeted" advertising as far as I see is Geo targeting. All the ads I see are in Czech and absolutely of no interest to me. Maybe they will start targeting on the keyboard and computer settings. Then do some testing to see what I am interested in.

As for buying, it depends on the price. This is like betting on cards or horses, it's gambling.

You are so far out of touch it's almost impossibly to believe. The one and ONLY reason Facebook is where it is today is Zuckerberg. That 'college kid' knows what in the fuck he's doing and like DJ said, they throw a stick in his spokes and Facebook will lose popularity and value.

Glad to see you have suggestions even for Facebook though, one of these companies should hire you so you can show them how the billions they clear is wrong.

Hey Paul, if he charged all of his members $10 per month to be on the site they would bring in a whopping $96 million a year extra!

DamianJ 02-02-2012 10:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stocktrader23 (Post 18730403)
You are so far out of touch it's almost impossibly to believe. The one and ONLY reason Facebook is where it is today is Zuckerberg. That 'college kid' knows what in the fuck he's doing and like DJ said, they throw a stick in his spokes and Facebook will lose popularity and value.

Glad to see you have suggestions even for Facebook though, one of these companies should hire you so you can show them how the billions they clear is wrong.

Hey Paul, if he charged all of his members $10 per month to be on the site they would bring in a whopping $96 million a year extra!

We all know Paul values a company based on the number of lavatories they have.

eroticsexxx 02-02-2012 10:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DamianJ (Post 18730349)
I didn't say 'shortly' afterwards.

After the IPO they will have a legal duty to make as much money as possible for the shareholders.

Zuck doesn't like intrusive ads. He doesn't like 'fucking' with what works. However, what works isn't making as much money as he could.

I give it a year.

Apple was 3 weeks away from going bankrupt when Jobs returned. Now it's the largest company in the world according to marcap. Think on't.

I understand the point you're attempting to make, but the advertising revenue isn't what investors are banking on.

Facebook is looking to become the leading micropayment provider of the world, among other things. The integration of that, along with detailed demographic data and the social networking/communication layers (skype included), is what will drive Facebook's future growth.

Yes, they have done extremely well with advertising, but there is an opportunity for them to evolve that revenue generator beyond what even Google has done with it. Zuckerberg has a focused plan of what he will need to do to make this happen.

Zuckerberg is untouchable at this point, as long as he remains consistent in his planning and vision. Thus Facebook indeed will offer a significant return on investment. Removing the heart of the company (Zuckerberg) soon after its IPO would kill it faster than anything else.

stocktrader23 02-02-2012 10:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DamianJ (Post 18730451)
We all know Paul values a company based on the number of lavatories they have.

I should have used Paul math. I forgot when you turn a free service paid you don't lose traffic so $10 per month would be 96 billion dollars a year. No way they'd lose 99% of their users. :upsidedow


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