Version: 2008

Comments on: Facebook gets $200 million from European firm

Social networking investment group Digital Sky Technologies puts $200 million into Facebook in exchange for a nearly 2 percent stake, but no seat on the board.

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by theonlybuster May 26, 2009 9:53 AM PDT
I've always kinda wondered who says Website-A is valued at X amount of money and how is it determined.
I keep getting the picture in my head of FB saying "Hey this profile is worth $0.05, this one's worth $0.94, but oh this one's worth $2.02"
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by DavyBoyWonder May 26, 2009 10:08 AM PDT
@theonlybuster

That's not how it's done at all. How much your willing to pay for a percentage is then used to extrapolate the worth of the company. So if your will to pay $10 for 10%, and the company accepts, and your are both arms length entities, then it's stated that the company is worth $100.

That calculation goes out the window when people try screwing around with the valuation, and they're in cahoots, but that doesn't seem the case here.
by jonathan0766 May 26, 2009 10:22 AM PDT
A company is worth what the next investor / buyer will pay for it, the same is true of the stock market. The DST deal is obviously priced as it is because DST is desperate to get into the US market, and grabbing a piece of Facebook was perceived to be too good an opportunity to pass up. Facebook isn't likely to be worth anywhere near $10 billion outside such a fringe deal. Facebook basically just did what some of the investment banks did to China & the Arabs during the first stages of the economic implosion: convinced foreign investors to pay a high price for the marquee of owning part of an American darling.
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by hutwarmer May 26, 2009 10:35 AM PDT
when is this pig going to make money? that is when we can start putting a value on it.
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by stigmattaman May 26, 2009 11:15 AM PDT
In Soviet Russia, Facebook invests in you.
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by the_ricochet May 26, 2009 11:59 AM PDT
Never turned a profit and worth more than $10 Billion?
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by The_happy_switcher May 26, 2009 12:55 PM PDT
Worth $10B?--ha ha I can hear that Internet bubble re-inflating.
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by strongpimphand May 27, 2009 6:55 AM PDT
I've read in Fortune that Facebook hasn't turned a profit yet.

More money invested??? I think common sense should be exercised! Even Microsoft has money invested in Facebook! Should be incorporating Facebook in Windows 7. Until users start clicking on those ads and generating revenue, Facebook is a bad buy. I predict in 5 years we'll be using another social networking tool because Facebook won't be able to flip the burger and the hungry people who bought the meat are going to leave the party.
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by drstockton May 27, 2009 2:17 PM PDT
Friends, given the poor state of rule of law and the preponderance of hackers, spammers and other exploiters in Russia and former Soviet Union states, maybe we ought to stay the heck away from facebook now; it is just another source of fragments of personal history that can be pieced together for identity fraud.
B. R. Stockton
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