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Now you can call it a bubble – Facebook massively over-valued
If you need any proof that we’re in a bubble around Web companies, the valuation of Facebook at $15 billion thanks to the $240 million Microsoft just paid for a 1.6% share, must be it. Even the TechCrunch guys seem a little flummoxed by it – the comments are worth a scan.
To put that into perspective, if we assume $150 million in revenues next year is solid we’re talking about 100:1 price-to-earnings ratio there. If you’re the kind of person who normally yawns when hearing about P/E, here’s why it’s important.
There are lots of reasons a company might be valued with a high P/E. The six most common are:
- The market expects earnings to rise rapidly in the near future. This is normally the case with oil or gold companies who have little in the way of earnings right now, but who have secured income in terms of drilling/mining rights
- The company makes piles of cash normally but has had to take a one-time hit on something showing earnings being lower for this year
- The company has a business advantage that guarantees revenue for low risk. Think “monopoly”.
- Investors need to shove a large amount of money into the market to get it out of other vehicles, so the law of supply and demand means prices go up
- High demand for a particular share for some reason, for example a takeover bid
- The company is hyped, and we’re in a bubble
Going through each of these in the case of Facebook:
- Facebook’s revenues are not going to rise dramatically any time soon. They have not suddenly secured a huge pot of advertising revenue they have yet to “mine”, and my P/E is based on next year’s optimistic revenue figures, not past figures.
- They’re not making a lot of cash at all, and they’re not taking any major hits in terms of infrastructure, so that’s not it.
- Whilst everybody is raving about them, they don’t have a monopoly. It would be relatively easy to replicate the Facebook platform in open source (in fact, that’s an idea going onto the site tomorrow – unless you now put it up first and claim credit), so it’s hard to see how this sticks. The value is in the user base, but talk to MySpace if you want to hear about how fleeting they can be.
- Microsoft are in no hurry to diversify risk or in need to get money out of other “vehicles” – they might need to show their shareholders they’re hitting hard with their new advertising-driven model, but that doesn’t justify the expense
- 1.6% is no basis for an immediate takeover bid
That leaves us with…
- We’re in a bubble
It’s not like Microsoft are going to miss $240 million. It’s not that we’re in big trouble if this doesn’t hold up when Facebook floats in a couple of years.
It’s the mindset that bothers me.
People are no longer looking at figures. They’re thinking irrationally. They’re buying shares because they want to hold a chip. I’m not an IFA or your banker, but I suggest you make sure you don’t pay too much for any chip you want to hold on to yourself.

