At a Network TV Gathering, a New Focus on the Web

At times, it was hard to tell which was which.

At the upfronts, network TV executives spoke the languages of social media and Web science to a greater degree than ever. ABC spoke about designing great “user experiences” just as a Web designer would; both Fox and CBS showed off how many online fans they had on sites like Facebook and Twitter. (Fox says it has 230 million; CBS, 167 million.) Meanwhile, at Internet Week, much of the focus was on video — specifically the kind of high-quality video that television networks have been producing for decades.

The collision between old and new media was sometimes visible in Manhattan — as when partygoers hopped Thursday night from the CW network’s open bar at Colicchio Sons to the Internet Week closing party at Barry Diller’s IAC building two blocks away.

The IAC party was a showcase for Aereo, a streaming TV start-up that the networks are suing. “Stretching a metaphor, it’s a literal tale of two cities,” said Tim Hanlon, a former media agency executive who now runs the Vertere Group, an emerging-media consultancy.

At times, the clash between the sides was audible in the networks’ defenses of their traditional business models. Yes, the CBS chief executive Leslie Moonves joked about having a page on Pinterest, the social Web site, but the real take-away from his Carnegie Hall presentation on Wednesday was the phrase “first screen first.” As the image of a flat-screen television was projected above him, Mr. Moonves said, “We love social media enhancing our product but most importantly, with all of this, everyone is still talking about the first screen.”

But newer — and sometimes, smaller — screens had to be brought up at all the television presentations, if only to satisfy advertising buyers and sellers who spend a lot of time thinking about how to incorporate the Web into their media plans. As the “newfronts” demonstrated — those were digital versions of upfronts held by YouTube, Hulu, Yahoo, AOL and others earlier this spring — TV and the Web are slowly looking and sounding more like each other.

And network executives want to prove that they’re not behind the times. Thus, all the Internet language. Peter Rice, the chairman of the Fox Networks Group, announced a new unit within Fox, internally named the Fox Bridge, that will help advertisers create social media campaigns, branded environments and apps. Mr. Rice said the unit would also “track the social activity of our shows 24/7.”

Anne Sweeney, the president of the Disney/ABC Television Group, started ABC’s upfront by saying, “Our audience is tuning in, logging on, streaming, downloading — devouring our content any way they can get it.”

One of her lieutenants, the ABC ad sales chief Geri Wang, followed up by speaking about “big data,” as a cloud-computing company would, and “rich social engagement,” as Twitter or Facebook would. She promoted the ability of advertisers to buy TV and online ads with one deal and one CPM, short for the cost per thousand viewers. “In a world of fragmentation, we are offering you aggregation,” she said.

Other networks are increasingly offering the same approach, sometimes in collaboration with Nielsen, sometimes in spite of Nielsen.

At one point in Fox’s presentation, a pie chart showed viewership of “New Girl,” a one-year-old sitcom, among adults ages 18 to 49, the sweet spot for marketers. According to the graph, 80 percent viewed the show on traditional television, either live or sometime later with a digital video recorder. An additional 17 percent viewed the show via a legal online stream like Hulu’s. And 3 percent viewed it via a distributor’s video-on-demand system. Fox sells ad packages that will place an advertiser in all three formats.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/21/business/media/at-a-network-tv-gathering-a-new-focus-on-the-web.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Manchester Based Sports Center Appoints New PR Agency From Marketing Quotes To Handle Media Relations And Social Media …

A sports center in Manchester has appointed a new PR agency from the Marketing Quotes website. The PR agency will be handling all press and media relation for the sports club, as well as setting up and running their social media campaigns on Twitter and Facebook.

Basingstoke, UK (PRWEB UK) 20 May 2012

Sports PR is becoming more and more essential in the modern world, certainly this is why Marketing Quotes were called on to help a sports center in Manchester to find a PR agency they can work with. The PR agency was appointed last week to help handle the growing number of press and media enquiries the sports center has been receiving, as well as setting up and managing new social media campaigns on both Twitter and Facebook.

A spokesperson from the sports center commented ‘we did look at a few different PR companies before making our decision, and it really came down to the experience in the sports industry that they had. We have found that due to the increase in gym classes we have been doing, there has been more and more media attention, especially with Zumba, which is our most popular class, particularly with women.’

Anne Richards (who works at Marketing Quotes) added ‘I love Zumba, so can understand why it is such a popular class, and as there is so much media attention around fitness classes, it is really not surprising that they are getting a lot of enquiries from the media. Most PR agencies do engage with social media, as much of social media spills into the PR field anyway, so many PR companies are really more social media agencies as well as offering PR. We hope the campaign works well for both and the fitness classes they run also grow as a result of the media attention.’

About Marketing Quotes – Marketing Quotes is a free service to UK businesses to help get free advice and quotes from local marketing agencies that have industry experience.

David Blackburn
Marketing Quotes
08452249061
Email Information

Article source: http://news.yahoo.com/manchester-based-sports-center-appoints-pr-agency-marketing-070329532.html

Better Business Planning, Inc. Connects its Local Community Through Social Media

With the unveiling of the agency’s Illinois insurance blog, the team at Better Business Planning hopes to better serve both the insurance and social needs of its neighbors.

Itaska, Illinois (PRWEB) May 19, 2012

Local Illinois insurance agency, Better Business Planning, Inc., has proudly launched an interactive social media strategy geared toward strengthening both business and personal bonds within the community. With the unveiling of the agency’s Illinois insurance blog, the team at Better Business Planning hopes to better serve both the insurance and social needs of its neighbors.

The fresh new blog will allow members of the surrounding Illinois community to conveniently access relevant insurance advice, as well as local community news. From video clips and accompanying links to personal greetings and insurance tips, the innovative Better Business Planning blog will provide Illinois companies with truly valuable information. The blog includes access to content regarding both general and specific insurance requirements. Whether individuals need to stay safe on the road with Illinois vehicle insurance or a company wants to obtain Illinois group health insurance to save its employees money, Better Business Planning will use its expertise to effectively address these needs.

This revitalized approach to connecting with local consumers coincides with the agency’s mission to not only continue to serve their loyal customers but to expand its service for all of those in need of reliable coverage. The fresh, new blog also comes with collaborative links to the agency’s Facebook and Twitter, while allowing visitors to grab hold of advanced insurance knowledge by subscribing to the Better Business Planning RSS feed. Current and potential customers can now receive in-depth, community-centered insurance information right at their fingertips.

Better Business Planning’s use of social media will bring a modern feel to the way the agency engages with and markets to the community. Whether businesses want to look into Illinois group health insurance or simply want to know what’s going on in their neighborhood, they can find the answers they are looking for with Better Business Planning.

About Better Business Planning, Inc.:

In 1977, Better Business Planning was founded at a kitchen table in a western suburb of Chicago with the mission of providing quality Illinois insurance solutions. Through the years, the agency has perfected its craft and now offers a variety of group insurance coverages throughout the entire state of Illinois. The staff at Better Business Planning is dedicated to servicing clients’ specialized Illinois insurance needs. We continue to strive to improve the quality and affordability of benefits for all of our customers and their employees.

Jennifer Nottage
Astonish Results
(401) 921-6220
Email Information

Article source: http://news.yahoo.com/better-business-planning-inc-connects-local-community-social-070715953.html

Social media stocks tumble on tepid Facebook IPO

The lukewarm response to Facebook Inc.’s initial public offering sent shares of other social-media companies tumbling Friday.

The sell-off is a sign that Facebook is now a bellwether for the small sector, which is mainly composed of companies that have gone public in the last year. Facebook has a market capitalization more than 10 times larger than that of LinkedIn Corp., the closest equivalent already publicly traded.

One of the biggest losers was game-maker Zynga Inc., whose shares fell so fast that trading was halted soon after Facebook started trading.

When the halt lifted, Zynga’s shares rebounded so fast that they prompted another halt. They finally resumed trading at 1:35 p.m. EDT, sinking to close at $7.16. That was down $1.11, or 13 percent, from the day before.

Shares of the San Francisco-based company hit a low for the day of $6.40, its lowest level since it went public in December priced at $10 a share.

Zynga makes FarmVille, CityVille and Mafia Wars, and gets the bulk of its revenue from Facebook users.

Facebook is somewhat dependent on Zynga as well. It gets most of its non-advertising income from the sale of “credits” for Zynga games, which allow the purchase of virtual objects like cows for FarmVille.

After pricing at $38, Facebook shares opened at $42.05 on the Nasdaq market. The shares quickly fell back to their IPO price. They rebounded in the early afternoon but then sank back toward the offering price to close at $38.23.

Shares of Yelp Inc., which lets people review local businesses, also hit an all-time trading low in Friday at $17.70. It went public in March at $15 a share and closed its first day of trading at $26.11. The shares closed Friday at $18.64, down $2.69, or 13 percent.

For most of the social-media companies, Friday’s declines followed smaller declines Thursday. Stern Agee analyst Arvind Bhatia suggested that investors may have been freeing up money to buy Facebook shares.

Shares of online coupon provider Groupon Inc. closed Friday down 83 cents, or 6.7 percent, at $11.58, after tumbling to $11.33 right after Facebook shares started trading.

Since going public in November at $20 a share, the Chicago-based company’s shares have traded between $9.63 and $31.14.

Shares of LinkedIn, the business-oriented social network, fell $5.93, or 5.7 percent, to close at $99.02.

The stock of Pandora Media Inc., which streams music online, closed down 75 cents, or 7.1 percent, at $9.77.

Jive Software Inc., which creates social networks for businesses, saw its shares fall $1.07, or 5.8 percent, to $17.36.

___

AP Business Writer Bree Fowler contributed to this report.

Article source: http://news.brisbanetimes.com.au/breaking-news-technology/social-media-stocks-tumble-on-tepid-facebook-ipo-20120519-1ywx9.html

Social Media stocks tumble

Shares of social media companies tumbled Friday after Facebook made a lackluster stock-market debut amid reports of a slew technical trading glitches.

After pricing at $38, Facebook Inc. shares opened at $42.05 on the Nasdaq market. The shares quickly fell back to their IPO price but later rebounded, rising $3.33, or 8.8 percent, to $41.33 in early afternoon trading.

Nasdaq initially planned the first trades of Facebook’s stock for 11 a.m. EDT, then 11:05 a.m. The trading finally started at about 11:30 a.m. Just before noon, Nasdaq said on one of its websites that it was “investigating an issue in delivering trade execution messages” from the Facebook IPO.

The stock’s tepid initial gains appeared to rattle investors in other social media companies, especially those with ties to Facebook. Shares of those companies tumbled shortly after the world’s largest social network made its market debut.

One of the biggest losers was Zynga Inc., whose shares were halted shortly after Facebook began trading. The company is responsible for the popular FarmVille and Mafia Wars games played on Facebook and it relies on the social networking site for the bulk of its revenue.

According to a Nasdaq website, Zynga’s stock was halted at 11:37 a.m. then resumed trading at 12:27 p.m., only to be halted again at 12:29 p.m. It then resumed again at 1:35 p.m.

Shares of the San Francisco-based company, which went public in December, initially dropped $1.19, or 14 percent, to $7.08 before rebounding and were at $7.59 early in the afternoon. The initial drop easily passed the company’s previous low of $7.34.

Elsewhere in the sector, shares in Groupon Inc. was off 73 cents, or almost 6 percent, to $11.68, after tumbling to $11.33 right after Facebook shares started trading.

Since going public in November, the Chicago-based online deals company’s shares have traded between $9.63 and $31.14.

Shares of Linkedin Corp. also tumbled as much as 8 percent to $96.60 in morning trading, before climbing back to $102.75 later in the session.

The Mountain View, California-based online professional networking service, which went public last year, is probably the closest thing to Facebook Wall Street has seen.

Article source: http://news.brisbanetimes.com.au/breaking-news-technology/social-media-stocks-tumble-20120519-1ywto.html

Schools consider social media limits after scandals

Paul Roberts was “Teacher of the Year” when he was arrested and fired from his job teaching math at Stafford Middle School.

Administrators allege the 52-year-old educator’s Facebook conversations with two students featured lewd dialogue peppered with “profanity of a sexual nature.”

Similar incidents are cropping up across the country as social media tools proliferate.

In January, a California teacher was charged with sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy. Investigators say that relationship began with text messages, Facebook postings and instant messaging.

In Illinois, a former teacher pleaded guilty this month to inappropriate communications with a then-17-year-old student after allegedly sending more than 6,000 texts over a three-month period.

While school administrators recognize technology can foster academic conversations between teachers and students, they are trying to ensure that online communication doesn’t cross legal or ethical boundaries.

“It doesn’t always lead to sex, but we don’t need it to lead to sex before there is a problem,” said Doug Phillips, director of investigations at the Texas Education Agency. “Technology allows direct, unsupervised contact with students.”

During the 2010-11 academic year, state officials documented 111 cases of sexual misconduct and 152 cases of inappropriate relationships between teachers and students. Phillips said he has noticed an “uptick” that he attributes in part to electronic communication. Most sexual relationships begin with social media or texting, he said.

Earlier this month, substitute teacher Tiffany Michelle Amos, 25, was arrested and fired from Westfield High School in the Spring Independent School District after allegedly sending nude photos of herself to a 16-year-old male student. The two had sex a few times after the boy turned 17, court records show.

Taking precautions

More school districts are erring on the side of caution, raising new questions about whether teachers and students should be Facebook friends or use social media to communicate.

Last year, Missouri teachers filed suit alleging that a new law restricting online communications with students violated their constitutional rights. Lawmakers later repealed the measure but enacted a requirement that school districts have written policies regarding electronic communications.

“It’s a balancing act for the needs of the school and the constitutional rights of the teachers,” said Stephanie Bauman, a First Amendment attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas.

She said the Missouri law was too broad and could have prohibited teachers from having Twitter and Facebook accounts.

The Texas education code, as updated in 2010, says teachers, staff and administrators “shall refrain from inappropriate communication with a student or minor, including electronic communication such as cell phone, text messaging, e-mail, instant messaging, blogging, or other social network communication.”

Those are the guidelines followed by the Houston Independent School District, the state’s largest, with 203,000 students. HISD spokesman Jason Spencer said the district plans to develop its own policy this summer.

In the Clear Creek Independent School District, teachers are restricted from “friending” students on Facebook and from communicating with students through texting or other social media. Exceptions exist for family members and certain teachers and coaches who may text students to coordinate extracurricular activities with a parent’s permission.

Boundary issues

“The idea is to get away from secret or one-on-one communication,” said Sheila Haddock, Clear Creek ISD general counsel.

Phillips, of the TEA, said he often finds examples where he cannot prove that a teacher and student had a sexual relationship, but the behavior was clearly inappropriate. He cited the case of an educator who sent messages to several male students asking if they were circumcised.

“There is no crime in asking that question,” Phillips said. “We have boundary issues with teachers in these cases.”

 

erin.mulvaney@chron.com

Article source: http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Schools-consider-social-media-limits-after-3567473.php

Facebook IPO: social network makes stock market debut – live blog

8.30am ET/1.30pm BST: Mark Zuckerberg will ring the bell for the opening of the Nasdaq stock market at 9.30am as he kicks off a share sale that will value the company at $104bn.

We’ll be live blogging the day’s events here in New York, and you can see how the fortunes of Zuckerberg and the social network crew rise (or fall).

Not since Google’s initial public offering (IPO) has a share sale been as closely watched. It’s Super Bowl for social media: every commentator in the land has an opinion on whether the firm is really worth that sort of cash, and is lining up to share it.

At $104bn, Facebook is being valued at more than the combined value of Nike and Goldman Sachs. Last year Facebook had revenues of $3.7bn. Goldman’s were 10 times that.

But this is a company with massive potential. Facebook will have more than a billion people logging in to its service this year – that’s more than three times the populations of the US – and it hasn’t got started in China. Nearly 400 million people log on six days a week. In the first three months of this year those people “liked” or commented on Facebook items 3.2bn times a day.

Google added a verb to the lexicon; Facebook redefined “friend” and “like”. Now Zuckerberg has to find a way to make his social network live up to its massive promise.

8.30am ET/1.30pm BST: Mark Zuckerberg will ring the bell for the opening of the Nasdaq stock market at 9.30am as he kicks off a share sale that will value the company at $104bn.

We’ll be live blogging the day’s events here in New York, and you can see how the fortunes of Zuckerberg and the social network crew rise (or fall).

Not since Google’s initial public offering (IPO) has a share sale been as closely watched. It’s Super Bowl for social media: every commentator in the land has an opinion on whether the firm is really worth that sort of cash, and is lining up to share it.

At $104bn, Facebook is being valued at more than the combined value of Nike and Goldman Sachs. Last year Facebook had revenues of $3.7bn. Goldman’s were 10 times that.

But this is a company with massive potential. Facebook will have more than a billion people logging in to its service this year – that’s more than three times the populations of the US – and it hasn’t got started in China. Nearly 400 million people log on six days a week. In the first three months of this year those people “liked” or commented on Facebook items 3.2bn times a day.

Google added a verb to the lexicon; Facebook redefined “friend” and “like”. Now Zuckerberg has to find a way to make his social network live up to its massive promise.

8.52am ET/1.52pm BST: Trading action on Facebook shares is not likely to commence until 10:30am ET at the earliest, as bankers work through the mechanics of the offer, market sources said.

9.13am ET/2.13pm BST: The delayed debut of Facebook stock this morning affords us time for a walk down memory lane… back to 2004, when FB chief Mark Zuckerberg was still just a cocky college student bragging about his hacking exploits in instant messages to friends.

Those messages are now a matter of public record. The Guardian’s Josh Halliday writes:

Zuckerberg appears to confirm in one message that he secretly hacked into the website of the Harvard University newspaper, the Crimson, by guessing the emails and passwords of two people in the college database.

“So I want to read what they said about me before the article came out and after I complained,” he told a friend. “So I’m just like trying the email/passwords of everyone who put that they’re in the Crimson. I wonder if the school tracks stuff like that.”

In another message, Zuckerberg boasts about deactivating college students’ accounts on the internal Harvard social network, ConnectU. “I got bored so I started deactivating accounts on ConnectU haha,” the future cyber-grandee writes.

9.23am ET/2.23pm BST: CNBC, which is tracking the Facebook IPO, is reporting on the overnight “hackathon” at the company’s Menlo Park, California, campus. In the run-up to today’s big splash, employees spent the night at their place of work writing computer code, over-caffeinating and giving their eyes a little extra practice staring at computer screens. The event reflects the company’s youthful, creative, spontaneous, creative culture.

Employees ordered Chinese food and there was talk of them making a run to In-n-Out Burger, CNBC reports. How does the news change your bet on what Facebook stock will do today? Let us know in the comments.

9.28am ET/2.28pm BST: Hackathon Update. It turns out there was one Facebook face who declined to participate in last night’s ritual of camamaderie and computer fun. Zuckerberg apparently called it a night early in the evening, Josh Halliday reports. He went home to his girlfriend Cilla and their Hungarian sheepdog, Beast.

When you’re the boss you get to do that.

9.30am ET/2.30pm BST: Mark Zuckerberg has just rung the bell opening the Nasdaq market. He did so from a stage at the company’s Menlo Park HQ. Then he hugged COO Sheryl Sandberg. The stage is full of other FB execs, with a sea of employees all around. A boom camera is capturing the action in the cheering, waving crowd. Looks like Bonnaroo. “A Woodstock event,” someone on CNBC just called it.

9.39am: The scene at Facebook HQ in Menlo Park in the run-up to the IPO. The company is valued at $104 billion as shares go on sale to the public.


Two Facebook employees share a high five outside of Facebook headquarters
Two Facebook employees share a high five outside Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, California. Photograph: Stephen Lam/Getty Images

9.36am ET/2.36pm BST: The Guardian’s Dominic Rushe has been talking to David Kirkpatrick, author of The Facebook Effect – the only book written so far with Facebook’s cooperation – and a man who has spent many many hours with Mark Zuckerberg.

“His impact on the world will be as least as big as Bill Gates and probably already has been,” Kirkpatrick tells Rushe. “Like Gates I’m positive he is going to end up being one of the world’s great philanthropists. I believe he has a very strong social conscience.”


Guardian Wall Street correspondent Dominic Rushe

He says this will be a big day for Zuckerberg but that while the Facebook boss may party later, he’ll try to keep things as normal as possible once he has rung the bell.

Then the real work begins…

“I spoke to Peter Thiel [Silicon Valley investment legend and one of Facebook's early backers] and he said Facebook had this peculiar quality, it will either completely dominate or it will completely go away. I don’t think it’s going away anytime soon though.”

Fitzpatrick predicts that Zuckerberg could soon be the world’s richest man.

9.40am: One take on the big offering.

10.10am ET/3.10pm BST: Facebook is summoning great spectacle in its rollout this morning – but will the stock price hold up? When the excitement dies, will the company warrant its $104 billion valuation, and the $38 share price?

One main place investors locate value in Facebook is its potential power as an advertiser. With 900 million users and counting – and a potentially vast market in China still waiting to be tapped – Facebook has an unparalleled capacity to put ads in front of eyes.

But earlier this week, US auto manufacturer GM decided that those ads weren’t worth it, ending its Facebook campaign. The company had been spending $10 million a year to advertise on the site, but none of the reports measuring those ads’ profitability came back positive. The Economist spoke with Chris Perry, marketing chief for GM’s brand Chevrolet, who confirmed that “a routine marketing review concluded that the site delivered ‘insufficient’ results.

Companies still believe that Facebook is an indispensable tool for spreading buzz about new products, however:

That viewpoint was echoed by the senior media buyer at a major Detroit ad agency, who asked not to be identified by name because he is not authorised to discuss strategy with the press. Based on clicks-throughs alone, he says, Facebook “doesn’t pay off.” His agency’s approach is to use the service as part of broader social media campaigns.

10.21am ET/3.21pm BST: Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin came in for a drubbing last week when it was revealed that he had disclaimed US citizenship in favor of residence in Singapore, which does not have a capital gains tax. Saverin responded to the criticism by saying that his move was not a tax dodge; he simply prefers Singapore.

Last night Saverin set the controversy aside to offer his former colleagues a hearty congratulations on his personal Facebook page. He misspelled his co-founder’s name – but it’s the thought that counts?

On the eve of the Facebook public float, 8-plus years in the making, I as co-founder wanted to look back and cherish Facebook’s early beginning. Congrats to everyone involved in the project from day one till today, and I especially wanted to congratulate Mark Zukerberg [sic] on keeping tremendous stead-fast focus, however hard that was, on making the world a more open and connected place.

10.37am ET/3.37pm BST: A major status update for the Facebook cofounder: as Mark Zuckerberg rang the bell to open the Nasdaq exchange, his account automatically spread the news.


Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook status update
Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook status update.

Zuckerberg tagged fellow executives Chris Cox, vice president of product; the chief finance officer David Ebersman; the vice president of finance Cipora Herman; and his trusted No 2, Sheryl Sandberg.


Chart of Facebook growth.
A chart illustrates the growth of total Facebook users.

10.46am ET/3.46pm BST: Facebook as a growing concern. Whatever happens with the stock price today, the immense market draw of the company is plain to see in a chart tracking users, from about 300 million in March 2009 to 900 million today (blue is all Internet users worldwide; brown/gray is FB users):

10.42am ET/ 3.42pm BST: T-minus three minutes and counting: Nasdaq has just announced that trading in Facebook shares will begin at 10.45am ET.

11.02am ET/4.02pm BST: Reuters is reporting that the opening of trading has been pushed back a bit:

11.23am ET/4.23pm BST: Nasdaq has announced that there has been a delay in the start of Facebook trading. We’re reaching out to sources at Nasdaq to find out more about the holdup.

The latest delay is the third or fourth of the morning. Nasdaq itself puts out time call information. Meaning the market itself is failing to predict when the market will go to work.

The Wall Street Journal is now reporting that traders are having problems changing or canceling their orders ahead of the Facebook IPO.

Will Zuckerberg have to change his status again?

11.27am ET/4.27pm BST: IPO delayed indefinitely by glitch in market: This isn’t the headline Facebook was looking for this morning.

11.30am ET/4.30 pm BST: Mark Zuckerberg and colleagues ringing the opening bell for Nasdaq at 9.30am ET.

Looks anticlimactic now.

11.30am ET/4.30pm BST: And they’re off. Facebook is now on sale – and the first shares cross at $42.05, a good deal higher than the $38/share rollout price.

For the time being, at least, the company has 100 billion reasons to cheer.

11.34am ET/4.34pm BST: How big is trader interest in Facebook? 82 million shares were traded in the first 30 seconds, according to Nasdaq.

The stock price is bumping along at the $40-$41 level. You can follow the stock price here.

11.36am ET/4.36pm BST: How will Facebook shares perform in the first day of trading? Tell us what you think.


What do you think Facebook’s share price will be at the end of Friday?

For extra credit, let us know in the comments what you think the high price and the low price of the day will be.

11.50am ET/4.50pm BST: As the Facebook share price settles back to $38, The Guardian’s Nils Pratley contributes his analysis of the pricing dynamics. If the stock goes too high, insiders who sold in advance of the IPO may resent the investment bank. A share price of around $41 would satisfy most everyone, Pratley writes:

A 10% pop should satisfy the IPO advisers. When you start getting to 20%-plus, the insiders who are selling feel short-changed and accuse the investment bank advisers of misjudging demand. 10% is ok – it meets the “leave something on the table for the next person” rule.

11.56am ET/4.56pm BST: A look back at the hot tech IPO of 20 years ago:

12.03pm ET/5.03pm BST: One stock that really doesn’t like what it’s seeing in the Facebook IPO: Zynga, the Internet gaming company.

Zynga, which depends on Facebook for a platform for its games, had an underwhelming IPO of its own in December, when it fell 5 percent in its first day of trading.

So far today Zynga is down 13 percent.

UPDATE 12.07pm ET: Trading in Zynga shares has now been halted.

12.18pm ET/5.18pm BST: Facebook stock has been out of the gate for 50 minutes. After opening at just above $42 the stock dropped to the break-even level of $38. But instead of continuing to fall, the stock staged a resolute recovery:


Facebook stock
Facebook’s share price dropped to $38 before staging an abrupt recovery.

So what happened? Here’s Dominic Rushe:


Guardian Wall Street correspondent Dominic Rushe

Facebook’s shares came dangerously close to falling below $38, the offer price, and have now rallied. This chart shows what happened. The speculation is that the underwriters have piled in and supported the price that we are chasing now. If it’s true, they can’t support the price forever and you can expect FB’s shares to fall next week.

But – and it’s a big but – there have clearly been problems with the IPO at Nasdaq, orders for shares were backed up and may have caused these weird price movements.

There are however signs that investors are underwhelmed. Zynga shares were suspended after they crashed this morning – not a good sign as the game firm is largely dependent on Facebook for its business.

12.34pm ET/5.34pm BST: Have underwriters stepped in to hold Facebook shares above $38?


FacebookBids
A screen grab of the order book for Facebook. The big yellow block represents bids for shares at $38.

Business Insider gets a look at the order book, sent in by Twitter user @Bourbon_Meyer.

“It strongly appears that there’s a huge perma-bid at $38 on Facebook,” Joe Weisenthal writes. “Check out the big mass of yellow on the left column… all those bids at $38.”

12.39pm ET/5.39pm BST: If you don’t own Facebook shares yet, are you currently missing an historic opportunity to get in on the ground level of a company that’s about to break all previous records for stock growth?

Warren Buffett apparently doesn’t think so. Here’s what the Oracle of Omaha has to say about IPOs in general:


Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett

It’s almost a mathematical impossibility to imagine that, out of the thousands of things for sale on a given day, the most attractively priced is the one being sold by a knowledgeable seller (company insiders) to a less-knowledgeable buyer (investors).

12.55pm ET/5.55pm BST: Facebook staffers have flocked to the social network to bask in the post-IPO glow, the Guardian’s Josh Halliday reports.

Lindsey Cochran, who works in marketing at Facebook, writes: “I vividly remember signing up for facebook in the upstairs quad of 508 Thurston … in April of 2004. I can’t believe I am now going to be a part of such a historic moment. Feeling incredibly lucky!”


FacebookCochran
A status update from Lindsey Cochran of Facebook.

Gabe Hernandez, another staffer, says: “While I won’t be in any of the Facebook offices to celebrate today, I am wearing my hoodie in solidarity. Thanks everyone for making my job far from the last place I ever want to be. Now stay focused and keep hacking!”


Facebook Hernandez
A status update from Facebook staffer Gabe Hernandez.

Meanwhile, Zuck has returned to his Facebook to note: “This is a pretty awesome hack.”

1.09pm ET/6.09pm BST: Till death do us part – or your company doth go public. Will the Facebook IPO cause a spike in shareholder divorces as new millionaires are created and relationships become more liquid, as it were? The Financial Times has a morbidly droll (and paywall-protected) report:

“When Google went public, there was a wave of divorces. When Cisco went public there was a wave of divorces,” says Steve Cone, a divorce attorney based in Palo Alto, near the social network’s Menlo Park headquarters. “I expect a similar wave shortly after Facebook goes public.”

1.16pm ET/6.16pm BST: Dominic Rushe checks in on the Internet gaming company Zynga, and what the poor performance of its stock today could mean for Facebook:

Facebook’s shares have recovered after dropping worryingly close to their $38 offer price. But over at Zynga there are still problems.

As we mentioned earlier, it looks likely that Facebook’s battalion of bankers moved to make sure FB didn’t drop below $38. Zynga had no such luck and was down more than 13% at one point. It’s now down nearly 6%.

Zynga is basically a way to trade Facebook, since nearly all of its business comes from the social network. So is this what FB’s share fall would look like if the bankers hadn’t piled in? Just sayin’.

1.22pm ET/6.22pm BST: Guardian tech editor Charles Arthur looks at what’s next for Facebook:

What to expect now? Don’t be surprised if the next big thing is a Facebook phone – running its own software and developed from top to bottom to involve you in the site all the time.

Zuckerberg’s team has been advised to do this directly, because it needs to reach the “next billion” internet users, and they are mainly going to be using mobile phones, not desktop or laptop computers. Selling its own phone would mean it could make itself the background hum of many peoples’ lives everywhere – and show adverts and collect data on its own terms.

Read Charles’ full analysis here.

1.55pm ET/6.55pm BST: Bloomberg reports that Facebook underwriters did in fact start buying shares at $38 to keep the stock from falling below its offer price:

Facebook Inc. (FB) underwriters purchased the company’s stock to keep it from falling below $38 a share after debuting on the Nasdaq Stock Market, people with knowledge of the matter said.

The bankers supported the stock after Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. (NDAQ) faced difficulties delivering trade execution messages after the initial public offering, said one of the people, who asked not to be identified because the transactions are private.


Facebook stock
Passers-by are reflected in the window of the Nasdaq media center as they view reports of trading activity on Facebook’s stock. Photograph: Bebeto Matthews/AP

1.42pm ET/6.42pm BST: If you haven’t checked out our live tracker of top Facebook shareholders’ wealth based on today’s fluctuations in the FB share price, you can have a look here. For the record, Mark Zuckerberg is currently “worth” more than $20 billio

2.59pm ET/7.59pm BST: One person we haven’t heard a lot from today is Sheryl Sandberg – but expect that to change. Here’s Dominic Rushe:

Sandberg is one of the most impressive execs in the US with a resume that includes the US Treasury, Google and McKinsey. You can read my profile of her here.

Sandberg was late to the Facebook party; she joined in 2007 when Zuckerberg poached her from Google. Back then Facebook had 70m users and no profits. How things change. She holds 1.9m shares and has made a small fortune today.

Sandberg stands to make a far larger fortune in the near future. She has 39m restricted stock units, most of which are tied to performance targets. If she hits them – and history suggests she will – Sandberg will become a billionaire, which is a rarity for employees. That kind of reward usually goes to the founders, not the help.

2.52pm ET/7.52pm BST: Dominic Rushe places the Facebook stock performance in the context of the lackluster Nasdaq showing this week:

“OK I admit it. I’ve had a bit of a downer on Facebook at $100bn plus. It’s an amazing company but I just don’t think it’s proven worthy of that kind of valuation yet. And maybe bankers are propping the share price up.


Nasdaq index
A tough week for Nasdaq.

“Even so, today’s performance needs to be set against what has been happening to the rest of the Nasdaq companies this week. One look at this graph of the Nasdaq over the last five days shows, this wasn’t an easy week to launch.”

3.02pm ET/8.02pm BST: With an hour to go until the Nasdaq close, Facebook’s shares are at $39 a share and Mark Zuckerberg has outpaced several of the world’s richest men.

With wealth of over $21bn, Zuckerberg is now worth more than Jeff Bezos at Amazon or either of the Google founders, according to the Forbes list of billionaires. He was briefly richer than New York mayor Mike Bloomberg, but has now just slipped behind B’s $22bn pile. Poor thing.

3.20pm ET/8.20pm BST: Has the Facebook IPO been a success? With 45 minutes to go until the closing bell, the stock is slowly sinking from around the $40/share range back to its opening price of $38. In the New Yorker, John Cassidy sees a party that fizzled:

At 11:30, the stock opened at $42, jumped up to $43, fell back $42—and kept falling, back to $40. “For market sentiment, this is not going to be positive,” said Simon Hobbs, the network’s resident Brit. Melissa Lee was equally crestfallen: “Forty minutes ago, I don’t think anybody thought $40,” she said. David Faber had been working the phones, and he reported that his sources had told him the stock might well fall below the issue price of $38, which would be a big embarrassment to the banks underwriting the deal, led by Morgan Stanley. “The big story is that Facebook, the social network, is now a public company,” he said. “The smaller story is that after five minutes, it’s only up six per cent.”

Henry Blodget, in contrast, congratulates the investment banks for rolling out a stock that was “perfectly priced”:

This price level was ideal for almost everyone involved–with the exception of short-term traders who bought the stock only to instantly flip it. (And no one should cry for them).

With such a modest pop, Facebook and its selling shareholders did not leave tens or hundreds of millions (or even billions) of dollars on the table–an expensive mistake that most companies make.

When LinkedIn went public, for example, the bankers underpriced the deal, and the company needlessly handed $100+ million to institutional investors.

Heidi N. Moore has been arguing that the failure of the stock to lift and hold above its initial offer price of $38 is making for a “rocky” debut.

3.26pm ET/8.26pm BST: Here’s a eye-catching list from Heidi N. Moore, comparing Facebook to other big companies in terms of market value and revenue. She calls the list “One of These Things Is Not Like the Others: Facebook Edition.”

At $40/share, Facebook ranks 6 out of 10 in terms of market value ($112bn).

Guess where Facebook ranks in terms of revenue?

Google: Market value $200 billion; 2011 revenue $37.9 billion
JP Morgan Chase: Market value $127 billion; 2011 revenue $99.8 billion
Verizon: Market value $117 billion; 2011 revenue $110.9 billion
Merck: Market value $115 billion; 2011 sales $48 billion
GlaxoSmithKline: $112 billion; 2011 sales $44 billion
Facebook: Market value $112 billion; 2011 revenue $3.7 billion
Anheuser-Busch: Market value $111 billion; 2011 revenue $39 billion
PepsiCo: Market value $109 billion; 2011 revenue $66.5 billion
McDonald’s: Market value $91 billion; 2011 revenue $27 billion
Cisco Systems: Market value $89 billion; 2011 sales $10.4 billion

3.41pm ET/8.41pm BST: Facebook stock on the day of its IPO after four hours of trading: $38.


FB38
Facebook share price at 3:38pm ET. Looks familiar.

3.50pm ET/8.50pm BST: Facebook shares seem to be trying their hardest to sink below the $38 offer price. The underwriting banks are in the market to shore up that price. And they’re dealing with a lot of volume: record volume, in fact.

The previous record for most shares traded on the day of an IPO was set by General Motors Co. (GM), at 458 million. With 10 minutes to go in the trading day, Facebook has already smashed the record with 532 million.

3.54pm ET/8.54pm BST: And this, folks, is as good as financial TV gets.

4.00pm ET/9pm BST: And the close: Facebook shares end their first day of trading at $38.23 – up 23 cents a share on record volume.

4.06pm ET/9.06pm BST: Here’s what the last hour of trading looked like for Facebook. Down to $38 and then flat, flat, flat. It’s almost as if there was an artificial floor holding it there.


Facebook last hour
Facebook investors held the stock at $38 for the better part of the final hour of trading.

4.10pm ET/9.10pm BST: It’s hard to see how the headlines now aren’t hard on Facebook. The market didn’t want the stock at that price.

Some schadenfreude on Twitter:

After final trading volume of 565 million shares, an IPO record, the price didn’t move.

4.47pm ET/9.47pm BST: Heh.

4.50pm ET/9.50pm BST: The Securities and Exchange Commission announces that it will investigate what caused the delay this morning in the Facebook rollout, CNBC is reporting.
The regulator will look into why it apparently was that not all traders had the same information at the expected time.

4.55pm ET/9.55pm BST: We’re going to wrap up our live blog coverage of the Facebook IPO. It wasn’t the fireworks display some investors expected to see.

This morning market watchers were discussing whether Facebook would post double-digit gains in its first day. Precedents such as LinkedIn, which jumped 107 percent in its May 2011 IPO, made it seem possible that Facebook could hit $50 or higher.

It has been a tough week for the markets in general – the worst week for stocks in all of 2012 so far, in fact. The Dow dropped 450 points this week, or 3.5 percent. The Nasdaq and SP 500 were both down.

But the spectacle of the underwriting banks that set Facebook’s offer price of $38 having to buy shares for the final hour of trading to shore up that price made the offering feel flat.

Here’s a summary of what happened:

Facebook ended the day virtually even. The stock opened at $38. The stock closed at $38.23 (up .61 percent).

The company shattered the record for IPO volume, with 565 million shares changing hands. GM held the previous IPO volume record with 458 million shares.

Because of a Nasdaq glitch, in which traders were unable to get confirmation of their trades early in the day, the IPO was rolled out about a half-hour later than expected. The first Facebook shares traded at 11.30am ET. The SEC has announced it is investigating.

At today’s valuation, Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook fortune tops $20 bn.

Article source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2012/may/18/facebook-ipo-stock-market-live

Billionaires Take To Twitter To Talk Up Facebook

PEBBLE BEACH, CA - FEBRUARY 13:  Bill Gross re...

PIMCO’s Bill Gross said via his company’s official Twitter account that Facebook is a bubble. (Photo: Getty Images)

On the day when the world’s biggest social media company was officially unveiled as a public entity, the world’s billionaires took to another form of social media to discuss the implications.

A number of billionaires headed to their Twitter accounts to discuss Facebook‘s initial public offering in 140-character bursts of nostalgia, reason, and even mockery.

Billionaire and Pacific Investment Management cofounder Bill Gross was quoted by his company’s Twitter feed, @PIMCO, with a surprisingly sarcastic take on the whole offering.

“Gross: Go #Facebook!,” read a PIMCO tweet at about 11:07 AM in New York. “I don’t know how to use it but I know a Bubble when I see one!!!”

While Gross’ comments will undoubtedly stoke the coals of the current Web 2.0 bubble debate, another billionaire has used the Facebook IPO as a time of reflection. AOL founder Steve Case has been tracking the company closely in the days leading up to the offering on his account @SteveCase. Presenting a stark contrast to Gross, Case tweeted: “Celebrating Facebook IPO today while reflecting on AOL IPO 20 years ago. Valuation was $70 million. Most thought Internet was a fad. #wrong.”

Before congratulating Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg–a future billionaire by Forbes’ calculations–Case also quoted Winston Churchill and compared great companies to kites that ”rise high against the wind, not with it.”

Yesterday, business magnate and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban called Facebook’s IPO as the “most important IPO to EVER hit the StockMarkets [sp]” and took to his blog to convey his perspective. Cuban believes that the interest generated by the Menlo Park, Calif.-based company going public could attract the average retail investor back to public stocks.

“ If lots of individual, retail investors do buy into Facebook and they make money at it, that could lead to individual retail investors coming back into the market,” he wrote in a blog post yesterday. “Something that individuals smartly have avoided for the last several years.”

An account for billionaire Eli Broad, however, countered Cuban’s argument–at least for the super rich.

“Nothing can get you into more trouble than dabbling in the market,” read a tweet from Twitter account @UnreasonableEli. “You would be surprised how few billionaires do much day-to-day investing.

 

Follow a Twitter list curated by Forbes of the world’s billionaires here.

Follow me on Twitter (and read my tweets about Facebook) at @RMac18.

Article source: http://www.forbes.com/sites/ryanmac/2012/05/18/billionaires-take-to-twitter-to-talk-up-facebook/