> valuing Microsoft (MSFT) when they went to IPO was tricky - back then what was going to happen was hard to predict. Valuing Google was a lot easier, and valuing Facebook is a cinch.
Right, it's just a cinch. The ineffectual ads Facebook has been toying with are the only endgame. There's no possibility they could you know, improve the ads, or completely overhaul them, or make money from other channels. I mean the guys who built the biggest, stickiest social network in the world that destroyed all the myriads before them could never possibly come up with a fresh idea for how to make money.
Instead let's just do a traditional market analysis so that we can feel very smug and turn the snark up to max.
We can only really judge Facebook on what they are doing now, not a revolutionary new way of making money which no-one has yet thought up.
Everyone is concerned that they are plateauing, but that's just because of the tremendous numbers they have. Just because they're running up against the limitations of human population at this time doesn't mean the product has plateaued.
What I needed to know were the number of shares outstanding, the current stock price, and their revenues. A simple lookup gives me the first two items, and I have the last one from the article itself.
To get the values in terms of revenues, I multiplied the number of stock outstanding with the stock price, and then divided by the revenue. This gets me the stock to revenue ratio of GOOG.
Shares * Price
-------------- = Stock to Revenue ratio
Revenue
GOOG's equation looks something like this: 326M * 613 / 36.5B ~= 5.475 S:RKnowing this, I can now start calulating FB's ratio and solve for it's stock price.
2140M * FBStockPrice / 3.71B = 0.576 * FBStockPrice
Solving for FBStockPrice...
0.576 * FBStockPrice = 5.475, FBStockPrice = 9.4917
Refs:
[GOOG]: https://www.google.com/finance?client=ob&q=NASDAQ:GOOG
[FB]: https://www.google.com/finance?client=ob&q=NASDAQ:FB
TL;DR: This doesn't mean anything. I just like math.
Besides, claiming that the fair value is $10 but you should only buy at $5 is really odd. You must be extremely risk averse to require a 100%/year return. And that's after he discounted 30% relative to Google. Also, if predicting Facebook's financials is easier than it was to predict early Microsoft's, why should anyone expect returns as large as early Microsoft investors?
I suggest the saner, and much more concise estimate by NYU's Prof. Aswath Damodaran:
http://www.businessinsider.com/valuation-guru-facebook-is-wo...
So I'd say it's worth at least around $18.