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.
Articles for Google
Amazon’s River of News Ahead of Earnings
Graph ItNEW!Wednesday, January 25th, 2012 by Trefis Team
Amazon doesn’t announce results for Q4 2011 until next Tuesday (January 31). So far we’ve had a good showing from eBay (NASDAQ:EBAY) and Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) missed on revenue and CPCs declined substantially. You can see the Channel Adviser’s eBay coverage here.
eBay and Google’s results have created a veritable cacophony of speculative noise around Amazon’s results:
- eBay was light on GMV growth both domestically and international – also the BMV+CES categories were in serious decline – was Amazon a beneficiary of this (or a cause), or will they show the same trends?
- Google – you can surmise from their Google Prime initiative that they are reacting to what must be a big chunk of consumers (Amazon Prime subscribers) searching for products using google ‘less’. In his Q4 Google analysis, Henry Blodget pins the blame on Google’s revenue miss squarely on Amazon’s shoulders. Here’s the core of his argument: “as Amazon grows and offers a more comprehensive and informative product selection, more people may be starting their product searches at Amazon. This would cut Google out of the process entirely.” Further supporting this thesis, Google announced management changes in their e-commerce group that is adding fuel to the ‘Amazon caused the miss’ fire.
Google Gains from Kindle Fire Sales Despite Absence of Android Market
Graph ItNEW!Wednesday, January 25th, 2012 by Trefis Team
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?
Three Reasons to Avoid the Facebook IPO
Graph ItNEW!Tuesday, January 24th, 2012 by Trefis Team
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.
What Does A Flattening Yield Curve Mean For Gold?
Graph ItNEW!Monday, January 23rd, 2012 by Trefis Team
This article was submitted by Bob Kirtley at www.skoptionstrading.com using our Trefis Contributors tool.
In this article, we look to analyse the relationship between gold and the U.S. bond yield curve. The yield curve is an immensely useful economic indicator and hence can be used as one of the determinants of the gold price.
We have yield curve dynamics, for a refresher the following excerpt should aid in comprehension of this article.
“For those readers who may be unfamiliar with how the yield curve works, we will provide a brief explanation. Bonds of different maturities have different yields. By plotting these yields against their maturities we can build a yield curve. The yield curve becomes steeper if longer term interest rates increase relative to shorter term interest rates. The yield curve becomes flatter if longer term interest rates decrease relative to shorter term interest rates. One way to measure the steepness of the yield curve is to look at the difference between the yields at two different points on the curve. For example one may look at the difference between the yields on 2 year Treasuries compared to the yield on 5 year Treasuries. Such a comparison will often be referred to as “2s5s” and is measured in basis points (bps) by subtracting the shorter term yield from the longer term yield. So if one says “2s5s are trading at +225″ this means that the yield on 5 year bonds is 2.25% higher than the yield on 2 year bonds. If 2s5s go from +225 to +275 then the yield curve has steepened between those two maturities. If 2s5s go from +225 to +175 then the yield curve has flattened between those two maturities.”
Intuitively, one would expect a flattening yield curve to be bullish for gold. Flatter yield curve = economic weakness = safe haven assets (gold) becoming more valuable, especially if such weakening in the economy is followed by monetary easing, or increased expectations of monetary easing. As with any hypothesis, this one is useless without being tested.
The above graph inversely plots gold against yield curve gradient. The early trend is clearly quite strong, ie yield curve flattening and gold rising correspondingly. Around September 2011 the relationship becomes shakier. From September onwards, the trend seems to take a dramatic reversal, switching from negative to positive. Trying to explain this reversal is somewhat a case of speculation. The only thing that can be said with certainty is that other factors are proving more important in determining the gold price.
The graph below plots gold against yield curve steepness rather than time, over the last 12 months.
The trend is clear. Gold is driven higher when the yield curve flattens, exactly what one would expect to see. The R2 value shown of 0.6817 means that 68% of the variation in the price of gold can be determined by changing yield curve gradient.
As a trading service, we have a short to medium term focus. As a result the majority of useful information to us is very timely. For this reason the trends and relationships we observe must hold not only over the long term, but the short-medium term also. We cannot afford to wait five years for the market to return to where a certain model says it should be. As a result the plot below showing the trend since September is potentially the most important of this update.

As hinted at, the trend has shifted mildly positive, meaning a steeper yield curve = gold driven higher. However, the relationship is extremely weak (shown by an R2 value of 0.1348) and is too inconclusive for our purposes. The conclusion is that currently there is no relationship between the steepness of the U.S. Yield curve and the price of gold. We can safely assume other factors have been significantly more important in the determination of the gold price in recent months.
The correlations for differing time frames over the past four years are as follows:
Note: Correlation (r) is not to be confused with the coefficient of determination (R2).
What we can draw from these results is that over the medium term gold exhibits a moderate negative relationship with the gradient of the U.S. Yield curve. True to intuition we still believe a flatter yield curve (usually resulting from monetary easing) is a bullish signal for gold.
Imagine that the Fed eased further, causing the yield curve to become flatter still. This is a scenario observable in Japan, a country currently with an extremely flat yield curve resulting from an extensive period of monetary easing. As an example, assume 2s10s drop to 50 basis points. What is this likely to mean for gold? Depending on what model we use the following values are predicted:
Obviously the most accurate figure depends on one’s current assessment of the relationship between gold and the U.S. yield curve over the relevant investment period. Our estimation is for a moderate negative relationship to re-establish itself over the next 12 months. If we were to be proven correct and the Fed dropped 2s10s to 50bps in the next year, one would expect to see gold around the $1,923 level shown above. The nature of using a moderate relationship rather than a strong one to predict a variable is that the predicted value lies within a very wide range; the stronger the relationship (R2 value) the more accurate the prediction.
Conversely, what would one expect gold to sit at given some miracle economic recovery and the yield curve becoming significantly steeper?
True to intuition a steep yield curve (similar to 2003-2004 peaks) would see gold bottom – according to our model.
It is important to remember that these scenarios are nothing more than estimates based on simple mathematical models and past data. Models and data carry little weight when dealing with an animal such as the commodities market. With so many variables at play anything could happen. We use these scenarios and examples to help communicate concepts and give our readers an understanding of what it means for gold when a flattening yield curve is observed. In practice and behind the scenes we are definitely not using weak relationship yield curve regressions to predict the gold price.
It is important to reiterate the yield curve is an indicator for the whole economy. For our purposes as a trading service the yield curve isn’t the best form of information. It is a reflection of past, present and future expected events. What is of more use to us is present/future orientated information.
For example say the Fed hints at QE3 or some other form of easing tomorrow (further easing is very likely to send gold higher); as soon as we receive this news, our outlook on gold changes on the back of the announcement. We do not need to wait to see a flatter U.S. yield curve in the following hours, days or weeks to change our position.
Although we acknowledge the importance of the U.S. yield curve in the determination of the gold price, it is not the most important factor by any stretch. The relationship between gold and the yield curve varies in strength over time, and hence the curve’s usefulness is somewhat limited. U.S. real rates are a far better predictor and exhibit a much more constant, direct relationship to gold.
The crucial point to take away from this article is it is not economic weakness that drives gold prices higher. It is the policy response to that economic weakness. A weaker economy and flatter yield curve doesn’t necessarily mean that gold prices will go higher, but if this is going to be combated by an aggressive easing of monetary policy such as quantitative easing then gold prices will rise significantly. U.S. real interest rates are therefore a more effective indicator for gold prices over the medium term, since they are sensitive to a wider range of policy actions.
There are always multiple factors that drive asset prices in the financial markets and gold is no exception. One has to incorporate a numerous variables in one’s analysis in order to formulate a view. The yield curve is just one of these variables and sometimes it gives us valuable insights into future of gold prices, but it cannot be expected to work 100% of the time.
In our analysis we look at numerous factors to form our view on gold prices, with the yield curve being just one of these, and we then execute trades based on these views. Our subscribers get market updates, trading signals and our model portfolio for less than $1 per day. Our model portfolio returned 40.95% in 2011, versus a 9.92% return for gold. We trade options on US markets that can be traded as easily as basic stock options. We now also issue trading recommendations that are not options based but simply use ETFs when we feel that that is the optimal way to execute a trade.
So visit www.skoptionstrading.com for more information and to sign up to our service.
To stay updated on our market commentary, which gold stocks we are buying and why, please subscribe to The Gold Prices Newsletter, completely FREE of charge. Simply click here and enter your email address.Winners of the GoldDrivers Stock Picking Competition 2007
Disclaimer: gold-prices.biz or SK Options Trading makes no guarantee or warranty on the accuracy or completeness of the data provided. Nothing contained herein is intended or shall be deemed to be investment advice, implied or otherwise. This letter represents our views and replicates trades that we are making but nothing more than that. Always consult your registered adviser to assist you with your investments. We accept no liability for any loss arising from the use of the data contained on this letter. Options contain a high level or risk that may result in the loss of part or all invested capital and therefore are suitable for experienced and professional investors and traders only. Past performance is not a guide nor guarantee of future success.
Join our contributor network and submit a post powered by data and interactive charts.
Apple Goes After the Nexus, Kicks Off 2012 Patent Wars
Graph ItNEW!Monday, January 23rd, 2012 by Trefis Team
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.
Google Earnings Preview: Strong Results Expected, Android in Focus
Graph ItNEW!Friday, January 13th, 2012 by Trefis Team
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.
Google Updates: Buys More IBM Patents to Strengthen its Moat
Graph ItNEW!Wednesday, January 11th, 2012 by Trefis Team
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
- Week of 2012-01-22
- 01/26/12 Google’s New Privacy Policies Have Users Worried
- 01/25/12 Amazon’s River of News Ahead of Earnings
- 01/25/12 Google Gains from Kindle Fire Sales Despite Absence of Android Market
- 01/24/12 Three Reasons to Avoid the Facebook IPO
- 01/24/12 Google’s Earnings Show Impact of Mobile Push, Market Reaction Overdone
- 01/24/12 YouTube Crosses 4 Billion Mark; Facebook Makes a Jab at Google+
- 01/23/12 What Does A Flattening Yield Curve Mean For Gold?
- 01/23/12 Apple Goes After the Nexus, Kicks Off 2012 Patent Wars
- Week of 2012-01-08
- 01/13/12 Google Earnings Preview: Strong Results Expected, Android in Focus
- 01/11/12 Google Updates: Buys More IBM Patents to Strengthen its Moat
- 01/10/12 Google’s Mobile Search Business As Valuable As PC Based Search
- 01/09/12 Google TV Adds New Partners LG and Samsung in Race to the Living Room
- Week of 2012-01-01
- 01/04/12 Google and Facebook Face Indian Censorship Challenges
- 01/04/12 Apple Will Continue Tormenting Android in 2012
- Week of 2011-12-25
- 12/29/11 SAP and Google Team Integrate Google Apps with SAP’s Business ByDesign ERP Suite
- 12/29/11 Google’s Nexus Tablet Sounds Good, Too Early to Compare to iPad
- 12/28/11 Google+ Resorts to Ads to Gain Traction
- 12/28/11 Google Continues Partnership with Firefox to Retain Search Dominance
- 12/27/11 Google Flexing Muscles in Travel, Is FTC Watching?
- 12/26/11 Android Partners Learn that Free Cost More Than Expected
- Week of 2011-12-18
- Week of 2011-12-11
- 12/13/11 As Master of Search, Google Now Focuses on Growing Display Ads
- 12/12/11 Samsung Fails to Block iPhone in France as Android Wars Rage On
- Week of 2011-12-04
- 12/09/11 Google Wallet Faces Hurdles in Gaining Mobile Carriers Support
- 12/08/11 Android Making Rapid Strides in Apps Business, Monetization Elusive
- 12/06/11 YouTube Gets a Makeover as Google Strives for Higher Monetization
- 12/06/11 Google Wallet is an Amazon Like Service With Low Margins
- 12/05/11 YouTube Looks to Crash Netflix Comeback with Rentals, Original Content
- 12/05/11 Google’s AdMeld Acquisition Might Finally Go Through
- Week of 2011-11-27
- 12/02/11 Google’s Indoor Mapping at Malls, Airports Brings Advertising Opportunity
- 12/01/11 Google Wallet Can See Formidable Challenge From Square This Holiday Season
- 11/30/11 Google Renews Focus to Take Apple and Facebook Head-On
- 11/29/11 Google Sheds Deadbeat Initiatives, Sharpens Focus on Mobile Search and Google+
- Week of 2011-11-20
- 11/25/11 Google, Samsung Finally Acknowledge Bug in the Nexus
- 11/25/11 Google’s Dilemma: Making Great Search Apps For Competitors
- 11/21/11 Google Secures Motorola Shareholder Approval as it Takes on Mobile Market
- Week of 2011-11-13
- 11/18/11 Microsoft Working on Socl, a Social Network to Take on Facebook, Google+ & Twitter
- 11/16/11 Is Google Ready to Tango With Apple, Facebook in Digital Music Biz?
- 11/16/11 Gmail Withdraws From Blackberry as RIMM Loses Relevance
- 11/15/11 Google+ Pages with Search Features Could be a Game Changer to Improve User Adoption
- 11/14/11 Google’s Stock Still Robust as Company Pushes for Better Integration
- Week of 2011-11-06
- Week of 2011-10-30
- 11/04/11 Google’s Stock Good for $630 as Nexus Anticipation Grows
- 11/03/11 Samsung Does a Pre-emptive Patent Strike on Apple
- Week of 2011-10-23
- 10/27/11 Google’s Recipe for Growth: Google+ and Ice Cream Sandwich
- 10/25/11 Yahoo’s Stock Finds Support Despite Unimpressive Q3 Results
- 10/24/11 Google Hungry for Integrated Mobile Platform, Market Share with Ice Cream Sandwich
- Week of 2011-10-16
- 10/21/11 Google Could Earn Higher Ad Revs through Custom Search Ads on Mobile Phones
- 10/19/11 Google Buzz Demise in Favor of Google+ Generates Little “Buzz”
- 10/18/11 Google’s Results Confirm Mobile Search Dominance
- Week of 2011-10-09
- Week of 2011-10-02
- 10/07/11 Google Q3 Earnings Preview: What We’re Watching
- 10/07/11 With Original Content, YouTube Hopes to Woo Advertisers
- 10/03/11 Google Keeps Chromebook Dream Alive by Opening Retail Store
- 10/03/11 Internet Weekly Notes: Google, Yahoo and Amazon
- Week of 2011-09-25
- 09/30/11 While Microsoft Earns Extra Dough From Android, Google is Slugging it Out with Oracle
- 09/30/11 Insecurity Complex: Will Android’s Security Woes Drag on Google?
- 09/29/11 Google Groans as Microsoft Strikes Samsung Licensing Deal
- 09/28/11 Google’s Cloud Storage ‘GDrive’ Could be Rolled Out Soon
- 09/27/11 Google+ Reaches 50 Million Users, 8th Most Visited Social Site
- Week of 2011-09-18
- 09/22/11 Samsung’s Plan to Make Bada Open Source is Risky
- 09/22/11 Security & Scale Are Google Wallet’s Biggest Hurdles
- 09/22/11 Can Speedy Flight Searches Lift Google’s Search Revenues?
- 09/21/11 Google+ Opens Its Doors To All Just Ahead of Facebook’s f8
- Week of 2011-09-11
- 09/15/11 Android Has Gained in Europe But Patent Wars Loom Large
- 09/12/11 Internet Weekly Notes: Google, Yahoo and Groupon
- Week of 2011-09-04
- 09/09/11 Google Offers Adds Zagat’s Ratings and Recognition to Local Deals Business
- 09/09/11 Android, Chrome Can Push Google Past $600
- 09/08/11 Does Google’s Product Shake Up Signal a Shift in its Culture?
- Week of 2011-08-28
- Week of 2011-08-21
- Week of 2011-08-14
- 08/18/11 Samsung Moves to Shore Up Bada After Google-Motorola Deal
- 08/15/11 Motorola Mobility’s Cash Pile & 3 Key Business Drivers
- 08/15/11 Are Cheap Google-Motorola Smartphones on the Way?
- Week of 2011-08-07
- Week of 2011-07-17
- Week of 2011-07-10
- 07/15/11 Google Shares Jump on Earnings, Fully Valued at $600
- 07/12/11 Google Earnings Preview: What We’re Watching
- Week of 2011-07-03
- 07/07/11 Google Rivals Scoop up Nortel Patents in High Stakes IP Tussle
- 07/06/11 Facebook’s Group Chat & Skype Supported Video Calls Take on Google+
- Week of 2011-06-26
- 07/01/11 Software Weekly Notes – Microsoft and Oracle
- 06/29/11 Google’s New Search Features Help it Defend $576 Value
- Week of 2011-06-12
- Week of 2011-05-29
- Week of 2011-05-15
- 05/18/11 Netflix’s Android App Steals Some of Google’s Thunder
- 05/17/11 Google Adds Spark to Telcos
- 05/16/11 Google Looking to Build Android Momentum with New Version
- Week of 2011-05-08
- Week of 2011-04-17
- 04/22/11 Amazon’s Server Crash Raises Reliability Questions Surrounding the Cloud
- 04/20/11 Tablet Makers’ Delays a Boon for Apple’s iPad
- 04/20/11 Innovation is Google’s Key to Maintaining Search Leadership
- 04/19/11 Adjusting Google Estimates on Higher Expenses
- Week of 2011-04-10
- 04/15/11 Upside to Apple’s Stock from Higher iPad Sales
- 04/15/11 Chrome Growth Looks Promising for Google
- 04/13/11 Google Earnings Preview, What We’re Watching
- 04/12/11 The Trefis Top 5 – April 12 Insights
- 04/12/11 Google’s Search Business Gets Stronger with ITA Acquisition
- 04/11/11 Mobile Searches Will Help Bing’s Search Revenues
- Week of 2011-04-03
- 04/08/11 Amazon’s ‘Cloud Drive’ Goes After Digital Music, Mobile Storage
- 04/07/11 The Trefis Top 5 – April 7 Insights
- 04/07/11 Trefis Morning Coffee – Google, Facebook, Comcast, and American Eagle
- 04/07/11 Search Ads Drive 70% of Google’s Stock Value
- 04/06/11 Local Marketing: Growth Trend to Watch Out for Yahoo!
- 04/04/11 10 Tech Stocks with Highest Cash Contributions vs. Stock Value
- Week of 2011-03-27
- Week of 2011-03-20
- Week of 2011-03-06
- Week of 2011-02-27
- 03/04/11 AOL Righting its Ad Business Supporting $24 Value
- 03/03/11 PlayBook Compatibility with Android Apps Could Be Win-Win for RIM and Google
- Week of 2011-02-20
- 02/24/11 Yahoo’s Search Profit Margin to Expand Offering Additional Upside to Stock
- 02/22/11 Google’s Efforts in Social Search Could Enhance Market Share
- Week of 2011-02-13
- Week of 2011-02-06
- 02/09/11 AOL’s Huffington Post Acquisition Targets Greater Social Media Impact
- 02/07/11 Google Brings Honeycomb to the Frontlines of OS Wars
- Week of 2011-01-30
- 02/04/11 Motorola Draws up New Playbook with Xoom
- 02/01/11 Yahoo Focus on Cost Cutting, Needs Top Line Growth to Move Stock
- 01/31/11 Number of Salesforce.com Chatter Users on the Rise
- Week of 2011-01-23
- 01/29/11 Facebook’s Revenue Per Search to Decline in Coming Years
- 01/28/11 Does Atrix 4G Signify Turnaround for Motorola Mobility Fortunes?
- 01/27/11 Can Google Better Target Ads to Sustain RPS?
- 01/27/11 Can RIM Hit a Home Run with New BlackBerry Lineup?
- 01/26/11 Google’s Capex Spending and the Impact on Stock Value
- 01/25/11 Android’s a Growth Engine for Adobe’s Stock
- 01/25/11 Executing on iPhone and iPad Strategy in 2011 Would Carry Apple Past $500
- 01/24/11 How Facebook Can Be a $100+ Billion Business
- 01/24/11 4 Key Businesses That Determine Facebook’s Valuation
- Week of 2011-01-16
- 01/21/11 Crossing 10 Billion App Downloads Adds Little to Apple Upside
- 01/21/11 Yahoo’s Alibaba Stake Offers Upside on Chinese Internet Growth
- Week of 2011-01-09
- 01/14/11 Kinect Expands Home Entertainment Beyond Gaming, Reinforces Stock Upside
- 01/14/11 Chatter Network Can Help Salesforce.com Up-Sell Other Cloud-Based Products
- 01/11/11 Can International Markets Compensate for RIM’s North American Market Share Losses?
- 01/11/11 Success of Project Devil Could Create 13% Upside to AOL Stock
- 01/10/11 Potential Rise in Web Service Margins Provides Little Upside to Amazon
- 01/10/11 IBM’s Smarter Planet Initiatives Lay Groundwork for Growth
- 01/10/11 There’s Hope for Nokia – Encouraging N8 Sales Could Signal Optimistic Outlook
- Week of 2011-01-02
- 01/07/11 Yahoo’s Ability to Withstand Profit Margin Pressure from Google and Facebook Can Lift Stock Value
- 01/06/11 High iPhone User Loyalty Can Push Apple Stock Beyond $470
- 01/05/11 Yahoo Mail Competition to Weigh on Stock
- 01/04/11 Huffington Post Worth More Than NY Times Online as a Standalone Business
- 01/03/11 Google Market Share in Search to Grow From Android
- Week of 2010-12-26
- 12/29/10 Google Product Delays Could Pressure Operating Margins
- 12/27/10 Yahoo’s Cost Cutting Initiatives Can Lift Profit Margins, Stock Value
- Week of 2010-12-19
- Week of 2010-12-12
- 12/16/10 Apple’s Gross Profit on Mobile Phones is Double RIM and Motorola’s Combined
- 12/16/10 Google Could Approach Record High on Online Shopping Growth
- 12/16/10 Should Nokia Adopt Android?
- 12/13/10 Can Nexus S Boost Google?
- Week of 2010-12-05
- 12/10/10 Yahoo Enters the Local Marketing Arena
- 12/10/10 Can Motorola’s Mobile Business Keep Pace in 2011?
- 12/10/10 Akamai’s Opportunity with Real-Time Ad Targeting
- 12/10/10 Will US Government’s Directive on IPv6 Help Cisco?
- 12/09/10 Can Apple’s Mac App Store Mirror the Success of the iPhone App Store?
- 12/08/10 Can Nokia’s N8 Smartphone Boost Market Share?
- 12/06/10 3 Downside Scenarios for Microsoft’s Windows OS
- Week of 2010-11-28
- 12/03/10 Google’s Stock Worth $680 on Mobile Search Growth
- 12/02/10 Cisco Could Gain on Small Businesses Spending
- 12/01/10 eBay’s Stock to Gain From Facebook Using Paypal
- Week of 2010-11-21
- 11/25/10 Google Gains on Boom in YouTube Users
- 11/23/10 Cisco is Still a $24 Stock
- 11/23/10 Motorola’s Market Share Outlook
- Week of 2010-11-14
- 11/19/10 An Upside and Downside Scenario for Google
- 11/18/10 Google’s Foray Into Fashion – Boutiques.com
- 11/18/10 iPod’s Value to Apple
- 11/17/10 iPhone’s Standalone Business Worth More Than All But 8 Companies in the World
- 11/16/10 New York Times Online Can Add +25% to NYT Value
- 11/16/10 What is the Impact on Nokia’s Margins From Smartphones?
- Week of 2010-11-07
- 11/12/10 Motorola R&D Reaching More Comfortable Levels
- 11/11/10 Which Tech Companies Have Cash to Pay Dividends?
- 11/10/10 How Nokia’s Stock Price Could Double
- 11/09/10 How Sprint Can Improve its Wireless Margins
- 11/09/10 BlackBerry Benefits from Growing Smartphone Market
- 11/08/10 Nokia’s Plan to Regain Market Share
- Week of 2010-10-31
- 11/05/10 What Could Justify a $500 Apple Stock Price?
- 11/05/10 What Could a $100 Smartphone Mean for Motorola?
- 11/04/10 30% Netflix Upside From Falling Subscriber Acquisition Costs
- 11/02/10 Nokia Aims for Higher Profitability
- Week of 2010-10-10
- 10/14/10 Social Search with Bing-Facebook Combo a Threat to Google’s Stock
- 10/13/10 Online Ad Market Growth Can Bump Yahoo, Google and AOL Stocks
- 10/13/10 11% Upside to Apple from Higher iPhone Share
- 10/12/10 YouTube Grows, but Value is Minimal for Google
- Week of 2010-10-03
- 10/08/10 RIM’s BlackBerry Expected to Gain Share Despite Competitive Pressure
- 10/07/10 Declining Trend for Nokia Mobile Phone Pricing in Emerging Markets
- 10/07/10 4% Upside to Microsoft from Slower Windows Margin Decline
- 10/06/10 Google Apps Offered Up to Schools to Undermine Microsoft Office
- 10/05/10 Yahoo’s Revenue per Search Expected to Pick-up
- Week of 2010-09-26
- 09/29/10 Surging Android Could Knock 10% Off RIM’s Stock
- 09/29/10 Apple Grabs Mobile Ad Share from Google, Yahoo, Microsoft
- 09/27/10 Slower Market Share Declines Could Benefit Motorola’s Stock
- Week of 2010-09-19
- 09/24/10 Higher Payments Through PayPal to Benefit eBay
- 09/23/10 Will New Display Ads Drive Value for AOL’s Stock?
- 09/20/10 iAd Platform Could Drive 5% Upside for Apple Stock
- Week of 2010-09-12
- 09/17/10 Expectations for Nokia’s Developed Market Share Remain Low
- 09/16/10 YouTube’s Pay-Per-View Service Won’t Move Google’s Stock
- 09/15/10 New Gmail Phone Service Could Boost Google Stock by 3%
- 09/15/10 Google Search Deal Could Yield Small Upside for AOL’s Stock
- 09/14/10 Slower Windows Pricing Decline to Benefit Microsoft
- 09/14/10 Could a Hot New Smartphone Lift Nokia’s Stock?
- 09/13/10 Can Google Challenge iTunes?
- Week of 2010-09-05
- 09/10/10 Google Instant Could Lift Stock by 5%
- 09/08/10 Google Should Benefit Most From Search Market Growth
- 09/08/10 Android Market May Decide Fate of Nvidia’s Tegra 2 Chip
- 09/07/10 Nokia’s Profit Margins Expected to Head South
- 09/07/10 How Can Google Monetize Apps?
- Week of 2010-08-29
- 09/03/10 Online Sales Probably Won’t Lift Best Buy’s Revenue Per Square Foot
- 09/01/10 More Internet Users Can Provide a Modest Boost to Google’s Stock
- 08/30/10 Apple’s R&D Costs Expected to Rise
- Week of 2010-08-22
- 08/26/10 Nexus One Smartphone Less Than 1% of Google’s Stock
- 08/25/10 Vanishing Subscribers Hurt AOL’s Search Business
- 08/24/10 Potential 5% Downside to Motorola from Slightly Higher R&D Costs
- 08/23/10 Slight Upside to Microsoft from Higher Windows & SQL Servers Margins
- Week of 2010-08-15
- 08/18/10 Higher Windows and Office Margins Could Boost Microsoft’s Stock by 15%
- 08/17/10 Up to 4% Downside for Google if Oracle Prevails in Android Suit
- 08/17/10 Higher Search Market Share Expected for Google
- 08/16/10 Growing Yahoo Internet Users Projected
- Week of 2010-08-08
- 08/12/10 Cloud Services Growth Unlikely to Boost Amazon’s Stock
- 08/12/10 Google Apps Biz Forms a Small Portion of Google’s Stock
- 08/09/10 20%+ Upside to NYT from Higher Revenue per Page & Unique Visitors for NYTimes.com
- Week of 2010-08-01
- 08/06/10 Trefis Members Expect Better Windows Margins, But Decline in Windows Share
- 08/06/10 Improving YouTube Margins Won’t Move Needle for Google
- 08/06/10 iPhone, iPad Apps Boost NYT’s Mobile Traffic
- 08/05/10 Higher Expectations for Yahoo’s Search Market Share and Search Revenues
- 08/03/10 Mobile Initiatives Could Boost Yahoo by 10%
- 08/02/10 Decline in Search Margins and Slower Internet Growth Could Pull Google’s Stock Down by 13%
- Week of 2010-07-25
- 07/30/10 Little Further Upside to Apple’s Stock from iAd
- 07/29/10 Trefis Members Expect Slow Growth in Google Search Market Share
- 07/28/10 Yahoo Could See 5% Upside From Social Networking
- 07/26/10 Gmail and Orkut Hardly Matter to Google’s Stock
- Week of 2010-07-18
- 07/20/10 Rising Search Revenues and Market Share Could Lift Yahoo’s Stock
- 07/20/10 Modest Google Upside from Higher Adoption of Google Apps
- 07/19/10 Google’s Margin Squeeze Won’t Hurt Long
- Week of 2010-07-11
- 07/15/10 Associated Content Deal Could Lift Yahoo by 4%
- 07/13/10 iPhone 4 Glitches Could Knock 5% off Apple’s Stock
- 07/12/10 Facebook Search Could Mean 5% Downside for Google
- Week of 2010-07-04
- 07/08/10 Smartphone Market is the Future for Microsoft Office
- 07/05/10 Apple’s Delay in Streaming iTunes Could Hurt its Stock
- 07/05/10 ITA Acquisition Helps Google in Online Travel Search
- Week of 2010-06-27
- Week of 2010-06-20
- Week of 2010-06-13
- 06/18/10 Can Dell Build a Mobile Phone Business Worth $1 Billion?
- 06/17/10 Nokia Tries to Revive its Fortunes with New MeeGo OS
- 06/16/10 A RIM Tablet Risks Additional Downside to Stock
- Week of 2010-06-06
- 06/09/10 AT&T’s New Data Pricing Could Undermine Apple’s App and iAd Businesses
- 06/07/10 Google’s Android Leading to Greater Competition between Intel and Qualcomm
- Week of 2010-05-23
- 05/28/10 Android-iPhone Battle Has Parallels to Windows-Apple Struggle of the ’90s
- 05/26/10 Potential 5% Upside to Intel’s Stock from Google TV
- Week of 2010-05-16
- 05/21/10 Omniture Accounts for 8% of Adobe’s Stock
- 05/19/10 StudioNow Acquisition Can Boost AOL’s Ad Revenue
- 05/18/10 Rebound in Internet Display Ad Market Will Boost VeriSign’s Domain Names Business
- 05/18/10 RIM Plays Catch-Up With New BlackBerry OS
- 05/17/10 Intrinsity Acquisition Could Benefit Apple’s Stock at the Expense of Qualcomm
- Week of 2010-05-02
- Week of 2010-04-18
- 04/22/10 Videos Will Help Yahoo’s Display Ad Business and its Stock
- 04/20/10 Can the Next Gen iPhone Boost Apple’s Stock?
- 04/19/10 Three Factors That Can Improve Search Revenue and Help Google’s Stock
- Week of 2010-04-11
- 04/13/10 Potential 5% Upside to Apple’s Stock from New iPhone OS Share Gains
- 04/11/10 Exit from China Has Little Impact on Google’s Stock
- Week of 2010-04-04
- 04/08/10 Nexus One + Google Apps Combo a Potential Threat to RIM’s Stock
- 04/07/10 Compared to Google’s Stock, Yahoo and AOL Stocks Highly Dependent on Display Ads
- 04/06/10 Microsoft, Apple and Google the Three Most Valuable Stocks on Trefis
- Week of 2010-03-28
- 04/03/10 YouTube 10x More Important Than Gmail for Google’s Stock
- 04/02/10 Higher Margins on BlackBerry Bold and Curve Phones Could Help RIM’s Stock
- 03/30/10 Sustaining Search Market Share Important for AOL’s Stock
- Week of 2010-03-14
- 03/19/10 700 Million Monthly YouTube Visitors by 2016?
- 03/16/10 Microsoft’s Stock Could Lose $2 if Office Margins Decline to Google App Levels
- Week of 2010-03-07
- 03/12/10 Growth in Searches per Internet User Crucial for GOOG and YHOO
- 03/11/10 Nexus One and Windows Phone 7 Can Boost Qualcomm’s Stock
- 03/09/10 What percent of Google’s stock is AdSense?
- 03/08/10 Google Apps Can Win Microsoft Office Customers with DocVerse
- Week of 2010-02-28
- 03/05/10 Microsoft’s Deal with Yahoo Could Hurt Google’s Stock
- 03/04/10 Verizon and Vodafone Can Help Google Sell 5 Million Smartphones in 2010
- Week of 2010-02-21
- 02/23/10 Trefis Forecast: What % of Google’s stock is Orkut?
- 02/23/10 Microsoft Deal to Boost Yahoo’s Search Advertising Margins
- Week of 2010-02-14
- Week of 2010-02-07
- 02/09/10 Google Apps is 3% of Google’s Stock
- Week of 2010-01-24
- 01/27/10 Google’s lower capital expenditure and higher revenues
- 01/25/10 Google’s YouTube Rental Service Will Improve Monetization
- Week of 2010-01-10
- Week of 2010-01-03
- Week of 2009-12-06
- Week of 2009-11-15
- Week of 2009-10-25
- Week of 2009-10-04
- Week of 2009-09-06
- Week of 2009-08-23
- Week of 2009-08-16
- 08/17/09 Can Microsoft help Nokia?
- Week of 2009-08-09





