Eric Thayer/Reuters files The prospect of more stock sales means Facebook will need to work even harder to persuade investors that it deserves a higher valuation, compared with earnings, than all but two of its closest competitors including Google Inc.
Facebook Inc. (FB) fell after freeing up an additional 271.1 million shares, boosting by 60% the number available to trade and compounding concerns that have depressed the stock since the initial public offering.
Facebook declined 4.7% to $20.20 at 9:43 a.m. in New York, and earlier dropped as low as US$19.89. Shares haven?t closed above the US$38 IPO price since the first trading day.
Early Facebook investors such as DST Global Ltd., Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Elevation Partners and Accel Partners get a green light Wednesday to start selling part of their holdings, Menlo Park, California-based Facebook has said in filings. That?s after the lifting of restrictions designed to prevent a flood of shares immediately after an IPO.
Buckle your seatbelts for the next couple of months until they make it through all these shares coming unlocked
The prospect of more stock sales means Facebook will need to work even harder to persuade investors that it deserves a higher valuation, compared with earnings, than all but two of its closest competitors including Google Inc. The shares freed up Thursday make up only 14% of the 1.91 billion that will be available for sales in the coming nine months.
?Buckle your seatbelts for the next couple of months until they make it through all these shares coming unlocked,? said Tom Forte, an analyst at Telsey Advisory Group in New York.
The shares subject to Thursday?s lock-up expiry are worth about US$5.75-billion, based on Wednesday?s closing price, and represent almost six times the average daily trading volume in Facebook stock. The restriction is being lifted for early investors, excluding Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg, who sold part of their holdings in the IPO.
Facebook declined as much as 3.2% to US$20.52 in early trading in New York. The shares haven?t closed above the IPO price of US$38 since the first day of trading. Ashley Zandy, a spokeswoman for Facebook, declined to comment.
Why Sell?
Facebook, worth US$51.2-billion, has lost about US$40-billion in market value since the IPO, making it the worst performer among all large IPOs on record, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Still, the decline has been steep enough to make some investors consider holding onto shares instead of selling as quickly as they can, said Mark Harding, an analyst at JMP Securities LLC. Shares have fallen in anticipation of the expiration of the lock-ups, he said.
?It certainly wouldn?t behoove and wouldn?t be in the shareholders? best interest to dump the shares on the market all at once,? he said. ?I would assume that all of the investors that hold the 270 million-odd shares are probably rational, and probably realize that flooding the market with that kind of supply over such a short amount of time wouldn?t help their position.?
Microsoft Corp., based in Redmond, Washington, will probably hang onto its stake after the lockup-ban lifts, a person with knowledge of the matter said on Aug. 10.
Microsoft, Thiel
Microsoft views Facebook as a strategic partner in the combat against Google, rather than as a near-term moneymaker, said the person, who requested anonymity because the plans are private.
Other investors have been preparing for potential sales. Director Peter Thiel, who sold in the IPO, has given himself added flexibility to unload more holdings, according to a regulatory filing. Thiel, one of Facebook?s earliest investors, converted more than 9 million shares to Class A from Class B. Class A shares are easier to sell on the public markets.
Facebook has grappled with concerns about its valuation after reporting sales growth of 32% in the second quarter from the year-ago period, down from 45% in the first quarter and 55% in the fourth quarter. The second-quarter gain was dwarfed by a surge in spending on marketing and sales, which ballooned to US$392-million.
Growing Optimism
Part of Facebook?s challenge is making money from the growing slice of users who access the social network over mobile devices. During the second quarter, the number of ads delivered in the U.S. dropped 2% from a year earlier even amid an increase in overall daily users.
Mobile advertising probably contributed just US$15-million to second-quarter sales that totalled US$1.18-billion, Forte said.
The company has since added a service for software developers, enabling them to entice users to download applications onto mobile devices. The company also said earlier this week that it?s testing a service that lets companies put more ads on mobile phones.
?Despite revenue growth that has decelerated, we see largely organic annual growth of? 25% or more through 2014, S&P Capital IQ wrote in a research note. ?We have grown more optimistic about the company?s efforts related to monetization and mobile.?
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