Wall Street likes Facebook again. Shares in the social network todayreturned to their flotation price briefly for the first time since its disastrous initial public offering last year.
Facebook's shares touched above the milestone $38-a-share float price on New York's Nasdaq exchange, before slipping down to $37.63 by the close.
The shares have soared by more than 40% since last Wednesday, when Facebook reported a surge in mobile advertising revenue.
The rapid share price increase values the company, founded by a 20-year-old Mark Zuckerberg in his Harvard dorm room less than a decade ago, at just under $92bn (£60bn) – about eight times the value of Marks & Spencer (founded 1884).
Zuckerberg's paper fortune has risen by just under $5bn in a week to nearly $17bn, according to the Bloomberg billionaires index.
Now 29 – and known for his blue hoodies and desire to maintain a relatively simple life despite his vast wealth – Zuckerberg jumped from the 75th to 42nd-richest person in the world, leapfrogging Steve Ballmer of Microsoft and Michael Dell, founder of Dell, along the way.
Bill Gates, 57, the Microsoft founder, remains the richest person in the world, with a net worth of $72bn. Carlos Slim, 73, the Mexican telecoms magnate, is $5.5bn behind Gates.
Facebook's shares have not been able to hold above the $38 float price since its 18 May 2012 debut, when its underwriters were forced to buy stock to stop it falling below the issue price.
By the end of that month the shares had crashed by more than $10, wiping more than $4bn off the value of Zuckerberg's fortune in less than two weeks.
By August, the shares had dropped a further $10, wiping out almost $50bn of the company's market value. The recovery only really began in earnest last week when Facebook reported a much better than expected 53% year-on-year increase in revenue to $1.8bn in the three months to the end of June.
Wall Street was particularly impressed with the company recording a 51% increase in mobile users to 819m. Previously, analysts had openly mocked Zuckerberg's "mobile first" promise.
"We are investing in mobile, measurement and product innovation," Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook's chief operating officer, said on a conference call with analysts. "The results we're reporting today demonstrate the early returns on these investments."
David Kirkpatrick, author of The Facebook Effect, a history of the company, said: "Very few people saw the pace at which the entire activity of the planet's internet connectivity was going to move toward mobile.
It's clearly under way now." "They've really done a 180-degree shift toward mobile, even if it was somewhat belatedly," he told Bloomberg.
theguardian.com
Facebook's shares touched above the milestone $38-a-share float price on New York's Nasdaq exchange, before slipping down to $37.63 by the close.
The shares have soared by more than 40% since last Wednesday, when Facebook reported a surge in mobile advertising revenue.
The rapid share price increase values the company, founded by a 20-year-old Mark Zuckerberg in his Harvard dorm room less than a decade ago, at just under $92bn (£60bn) – about eight times the value of Marks & Spencer (founded 1884).
Zuckerberg's paper fortune has risen by just under $5bn in a week to nearly $17bn, according to the Bloomberg billionaires index.
Now 29 – and known for his blue hoodies and desire to maintain a relatively simple life despite his vast wealth – Zuckerberg jumped from the 75th to 42nd-richest person in the world, leapfrogging Steve Ballmer of Microsoft and Michael Dell, founder of Dell, along the way.
Bill Gates, 57, the Microsoft founder, remains the richest person in the world, with a net worth of $72bn. Carlos Slim, 73, the Mexican telecoms magnate, is $5.5bn behind Gates.
Facebook's shares have not been able to hold above the $38 float price since its 18 May 2012 debut, when its underwriters were forced to buy stock to stop it falling below the issue price.
By the end of that month the shares had crashed by more than $10, wiping more than $4bn off the value of Zuckerberg's fortune in less than two weeks.
By August, the shares had dropped a further $10, wiping out almost $50bn of the company's market value. The recovery only really began in earnest last week when Facebook reported a much better than expected 53% year-on-year increase in revenue to $1.8bn in the three months to the end of June.
Wall Street was particularly impressed with the company recording a 51% increase in mobile users to 819m. Previously, analysts had openly mocked Zuckerberg's "mobile first" promise.
"We are investing in mobile, measurement and product innovation," Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook's chief operating officer, said on a conference call with analysts. "The results we're reporting today demonstrate the early returns on these investments."
David Kirkpatrick, author of The Facebook Effect, a history of the company, said: "Very few people saw the pace at which the entire activity of the planet's internet connectivity was going to move toward mobile.
It's clearly under way now." "They've really done a 180-degree shift toward mobile, even if it was somewhat belatedly," he told Bloomberg.
theguardian.com
No comments:
Post a Comment