Articles for Google

Google’s New Privacy Policies Have Users Worried

 Graph ItNEW!
Share
Share retweet
Subscribe:    RSS  |   Email
Thursday, January 26th, 2012 by

Facebook has several times riled up users and observers over the way it handles user data and protects their privacy. Google’s (NASDAQ:GOOG) latest attempts to make a single, unified privacy policy might see similar issues cropping up given how much data the search giant collects from users online habits. To clear the air, the company flatly states that if a user is signed in, Google has the freedom to collect information from one service, say Gmail, with another service, say Google Search. Of course this is all in the spirit of personalization and giving the user what he or she wants, but those users are not starting to get nervous about how far Google’s tentacles reach and what’s actually, if anything, off limits.

Read More »

Google Gains from Kindle Fire Sales Despite Absence of Android Market

 Graph ItNEW!
Share
Share retweet
Subscribe:    RSS  |   Email
Wednesday, January 25th, 2012 by

The biggest unique selling point for Android is that its free. Android’s manufacturing partners like Samsung and HTC heavily rely on Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) as they compete against Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) in a fiercely competitive smartphone market. However, companies like Amazon and Baidu have utilized Android’s foundation in their devices while not having the other money-making feature for the company, namely Google’s applications like Gmail and Google Maps.  This brings us to the big question: Is the free Android being too easily misused by other tech giants?

See our full analysis for Google’s stock

Read More »

Three Reasons to Avoid the Facebook IPO

 Graph ItNEW!
Share
Share retweet
Subscribe:    RSS  |   Email
Tuesday, January 24th, 2012 by

Friending fever is about to hit Wall Street!

On Monday, multiple sources reported that Facebook is planning its initial public offering (IPO) for the third week in May.

It’s rumored that the social networking giant plans to raise $10 billion. That would make it one of the largest IPOs ever. It would also make Facebook one of the most valuable companies in the world, with a market cap of about $100 billion.

Talk about some serious hype!

Whatever you do, though, don’t buy into it. Instead, I recommend you avoid the Facebook IPO like the plague.

Here are the three most compelling reasons why…

(See the full Trefis analysis for Facebook)

Social Media Flops on Wall Street

The trend is supposed to be our friend on Wall Street. And considering that 19 social media IPOs debuted last year, before we even bother dissecting Facebook’s fundamentals, we should at least see how they performed.

In two words: Not good!

Kevin Pleines of Birinyi Associates found that 82.4% of last year’s social media IPOs are now trading below their opening day prices. And 57.9% (or 11 out of the 19) are trading below their offering prices.

Two of the most notable flops were Zynga (Nasdaq: ZNGA) and Groupon (Nasdaq: GRPN).

(See the full Trefis analysis for Zynga and Groupon)

The former traded below the offering price on its first day of trading. As for the latter, it zoomed 55.7% higher on the first day of trading. Within weeks, though, the stock collapsed to trade below its IPO price of $20 per share.

Of course, I warned you about both IPOs well before they hit the market (see here and here). So I guess the trend is in my favor!

In all seriousness, though, the reasons to avoid Facebook’s IPO extend beyond Wall Street’s poor reception for social media stocks as a group…

Slowing Growth Kills Stock Prices

When it comes to investing in IPOs, we’re investing in the future of the company. And if the company can’t keep growing, our investment is doomed.

One thing I can guarantee is that Facebook can’t keep up its torrid growth.

Case in point: In about four years’ time, Facebook’s user base went from 66 million to 800 million. If Facebook grows at the same rate over the next four years, its user base would hit 9.7 billion.

Like I said, I can guarantee Facebook isn’t going to keep growing that fast. There literally aren’t enough potential customers on Earth, as the world’s seven-billionth person was just born last October.

Realistically, Facebook should top one billion users this year, which is a growth rate of about 25%, year-over-year.

In other words, the growth is already waning. And slower growth doesn’t translate into higher stock valuations.

Especially since Facebook is already overpriced.

Sorry Mark, Profits Matter on Wall Street

Facebook Founder and CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, contends he focuses on products over dollars.

As he said in a recent interview with The Wall Street Journal, “The thing to take away isn’t that we don’t care [about business]. People for years were asking me why aren’t we trying to make more money. I would say I’m trying to build a business for the long term…”

Not focusing on profits is fine and dandy when you’re a private company. Not so much when you’re a public company. As we all know, Wall Street obsesses over profits. Every quarter. As a result, share prices ultimately follow earnings.

Even if Zuckerberg immediately wakes up to this reality, Facebook’s IPO is still grossly overvalued.

Consider: Internet giant, Google (Nasdaq: GOOG), trades at a market cap of about $200 billion and generates about $9.6 billion in profits. That means for Facebook to support its $100 billion valuation it would need to generate about $5.3 billon in profits.

That’s not going to happen before May. The company won’t even be generating $5 billion in annual sales by then.

Bottom line: If you believe that success in investing boils down to buying low and selling high, then don’t buy into the Facebook IPO. To profit from it will require buying high and selling higher… to a fool greater than yourself.

This article was originally published by Louis Basenese at Wall Street Daily. Join our contributor network and submit a post powered by data and interactive charts.

Google’s Earnings Show Impact of Mobile Push, Market Reaction Overdone

 Graph ItNEW!
Share
Share retweet
Subscribe:    RSS  |   Email
Tuesday, January 24th, 2012 by

Google’s (NASDAQ:GOOG) stock saw close to a 9% drop after its fourth quarter and full year 2011 results came out. The primary factor behind this seems to be the 8% drop in cost-per-click (CPC) levels over last year. However, given the 34% growth in aggregate paid clicks for the same period, we believe that these metrics are a result of the relatively lower monetization on mobile search which is growing rapidly, hence the divergence in paid clicks and CPC trends. We continue to remain bullish on Google, which has consistently dominated the search business amongst floundering competitors like Yahoo (NASDAQ:YHOO) and AOL (NYSE:AOL), and believe that the market has over reacted to these earnings.

Read More »

YouTube Crosses 4 Billion Mark; Facebook Makes a Jab at Google+

 Graph ItNEW!
Share
Share retweet
Subscribe:    RSS  |   Email
Tuesday, January 24th, 2012 by

YouTube’s daily streamed videos recently crossed the 4 billion mark, which is a 25% increase since May 2011. However, Google’s (NASDAQ:GOOG) future focus would clearly be to monetize videos rather than increasing their volume, given that most of these 4 billion videos are not making money for the company. Meanwhile, Facebook and other prominent social networks launched their own bookmarklet titled “Don’t be Evil”, which clearly takes a jab at Google’s Search Plus your World (SPYW) feature.

Read More »

Apple Goes After the Nexus, Kicks Off 2012 Patent Wars

 Graph ItNEW!
Share
Share retweet
Subscribe:    RSS  |   Email
Monday, January 23rd, 2012 by

After Samsung’s infringement claim against Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) was rejected by a German court, Apple is now focused on Google’s (NASDAQ:GOOG) latest Galaxy Nexus smartphone claiming that it infringes on Apple’s “slide-to-unlock” technology. After the bans and licensing on the Galaxy S-II in 2011, this year could be full of legal sparring and pose similar problems for Google’s homegrown phone.

Read More »

Google Earnings Preview: Strong Results Expected, Android in Focus

 Graph ItNEW!
Share
Share retweet
Subscribe:    RSS  |   Email
Friday, January 13th, 2012 by

Android dominated the news in 2011 for both the right and wrong reasons. While Google’s (NASDAQ:GOOG) mobile OS market share inched above the 50% mark globally, Android partners continuously suffered a bout of patent lawsuits and sales bans. Going forward into 2012, the patent tussle between Google, Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) is expected to rage on with the iPhone 4S’s bumper sales already weighing on Android.

Read More »

Google Updates: Buys More IBM Patents to Strengthen its Moat

 Graph ItNEW!
Share
Share retweet
Subscribe:    RSS  |   Email
Wednesday, January 11th, 2012 by

Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) recently expanded its patent portfolio further by acquiring over 180 patents from IBM (NYSE:IBM). Having already acquired 1,000 patents from IBM last year, the search giant looks to be building its patent portfolio to defend itself from the patent wars going on between companies like Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Samsung and various manufacturers.

Despite the 17,000+ patents for which Google acquired Motorola, Android partners are still being flooded by patent lawsuits, with recent ones like Apple’s injunction against certain HTC smartphones. Steve Jobs himself had made it clear that he has a personal interest in making sure Android suffers, and the company seems to continue to strive for the same. For now, the IBM patents could build some more strength to Google’s intellectual property, given that these patents are strategically chosen to be in the mobile technologies and social networking space.

We currently have a price estimate near $628 for Google’s stock, which is roughly 5% below the current market price.

See our full analysis for Google’s stock | Understand How a Company’s Products Impact its Stock Price at Trefis

Google : All Articles