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May 19, 2012

Facebook shares spike on stock market debut

Shares in the social networking site rose to $42, having been initially priced at $38 each, before falling back to trade flat. Founder Mark Zuckerberg, 28, who started Facebook while at Harvard University, officially opened trading on the Nasdaq earlier.


He appeared via a video link from a celebration at the firm's headquarters. There had been a delay of about half an hour in the start of trading in Facebook shares, in what analysts say reflected the huge demand for the stock.

The $38 initial share price values the eight-year-old social network site at $104bn (£66bn). Strong demand had led the company to increase both the price and the number of shares available for sale.

Facebook's owners are releasing just under a fifth of the company's total shares, about 421 million, which could raise about $18bn. Facebook's valuation means the social network site is worth about the same as internet shopping giant Amazon, and more than the value of stalwarts such as Disney.

The initial public offering (IPO) of the shares is the third-largest in US history, after the financial giant Visa and General Motors.

Facebook employees have been up all night ahead of the event, taking part in a "hackathon" at the company's headquarters in Menlo Park, California. It is an event in which programmers work on projects and come up with new ideas.

Future profits?

Facebook's profits are tiny in relation to its size - it makes about $5 a year for each of its 900 million users - and its plans to increase profitability are unclear.

David Kirkpatrick, author of The Facebook Effect, says there is an army of potential stock holders among its users who are likely to push the share price higher. "People want to own the [Facebook] stock because they love it so much. I find people all the time who are just devoted to Facebook," he said.

The site is largely used for social updates, and although Facebook has said its use on mobile devices are the key to new profits, analysts question how much room there is for advertising on such platforms. Car giant General Motors added to those doubts by saying on Tuesday that it would no longer pay to advertise on the site.

Mixed fortunes

Other internet companies have had mixed experiences when they have started selling shares. Online games maker Zynga's shares fell 5% on their first day of trading in December 2011.

But shares in business networking site LinkedIn more than doubled on their debut in May last year and are still trading well above that level, while Groupon shares jumped 30% on their debut in November.

However, they have since fallen back, particularly after the daily deals firm admitted in April that it had overstated its previous revenues and earnings.

Voting power

The feverish anticipation for this market debut did not extend to all investors.  Oliver Pursche, president of Gary Goldberg Financial Services, told the BBC ahead of the flotation: "We're telling our investors to hold off.

"Number one, we don't know what the guts and the balance sheet of the company looks like yet so that's a big red flag for us. We want to understand the business before we tell people to invest."

The new shareholders will not have much say in how the business is run. The shares on offer are "A" shares, which carry one vote per share, as is normal, but the current owners' shares are "B" shares, which carry 10 votes each.

They will control more than 96% of the votes after the flotation, with founder Mark Zuckerberg holding just under 56% of the voting power of the company. Mr Zuckerberg, who owns about 25% of the company, stands to gain the most from taking Facebook public.

Fellow founders Dustin Moskovitz and Eduardo Saverin will also become paper-billionaires overnight, as will Napster founder and former employee Sean Parker.

US venture capital firm Accel Partners and Russian internet investment group Digital Sky Technologies also hold significant stakes in Facebook, while software giant Microsoft and U2 frontman Bono also stand to make a huge profit on their investment in the company.

bbc.co.uk

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