Facebook IPO and social media

All of the financial journalism out there is directed toward Facebook’s IPO and the fact that the price dropped after offering. Here’s a cool chart after the $38 IPO:

There is no requirement for IPOs to rise in price after they go public. In fact, the huge price spikes seen in IPOs (especially during the internet stock era) simply represents a mispricing in the IPO price – in the usual case where a hot IPO spikes up on the first day of trading, the difference between the market price and the IPO price is cash that went into IPO purchasers’ wallets instead of the underlying company.

In Facebook’s case, however, the offering was for new equity and also selling stockholders – Facebook itself sold 180 million shares of stock (raising $6.76 billion net), and insiders sold 241 million shares (liquidating $9.07 billion net for themselves).

Notably, a week ago, the insiders were slated to sell 157 million shares. This was bloated up by another 84 million shares and raised a cool $3.157 billion net for those insiders. They had a vested interest in the IPO price being high and not low, so in classic form, Wall Street of course fleeced investors once again. I don’t sympathize whatsoever with the investors of the IPO simply because they were trying to make exactly the same dollar that the selling shareholders made off of them.

I’m not going to offer any critique on valuation, but an investor in Facebook shares is investing mostly for the ride and not for control – insiders control most of the Class B shares, which has 10 votes, while the offering is for Class A shares, which has 1 vote per share. Thus, CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg will have 58% voting rights and 44% economic rights after the offering. This will shift over time as insiders cash out their Class B shares (they will convert into Class A and then be liquidated into the market).

The top of the tech IPO market in the last decade was the IPO of Palm, which went for nearly a hundred dollars per share when it went public in March 2000 before crashing to earth during the tech wreck. Is this broken IPO a sign of what’s about to happen in the social media space? Companies like LinkedIn (Nasdaq: LNKD) and Yelp (Nasdaq: YELP) and Groupon (Nasdaq: GRPN) come to mind. I will make a concession that Groupon is not exactly a “social media” company but I will lump them in that space.

Fundamentally, Facebook reminds me of what AOL or Compuserve was back in the 90’s. After acquiring Compuserve, AOL managed to sport a huge market capitalization before crumbling into obsolescence and I suspect that Facebook will follow the same trajectory. The question is whether there is still any growth left in Facebook, or whether the business at this point is strictly about monetization and nothing else – before it manages to get rid of all of its customers with relentless spamming and other useless features which will degrade the product.

Perhaps I am biased since I do not have a Facebook account.

Timing of the market downturn

Likely due to the Greece situation in Europe and anticipation of financial disruption, the markets are raising cash like no tomorrow by liquidating everything that can be liquified.

Naturally, this has gotten me somewhat interested in the markets again from a broad perspective.

Something fascinating is that anything relating to crude has been hammered for the past month. For example, Canadian Oil Sands (TSX: COS) has a relatively boring business that has been disproportionately traded down in relation to crude prices. An example is that a year ago you could have bought a share of COS for about 0.29 barrels of spot crude and today that ratio is 0.22.

This is generally the same effect that is seen with investors in gold – the underlying commodity is the volatile component while the stocks that produce the commodity are underperforming (Barrick, Kinross, etc.).

I don’t have much comment on COS other than that while it does seem like it is trading relatively cheap, my gut feel suggests that it can get even cheaper – especially if the unthinkable occurs. The unthinkable event in everybody’s mindset today is that the price of crude oil will make a significant fall. It’s similar to how nobody anticipated how low natural gas prices could go (and indeed, even lower than the economic crisis point), and how Canadian 10-year bond yields could not get lower than a very low 3% (they are now at 1.93%).

The other comment is that a good investor makes money by deploying it at the relative trough of a period of panic and crisis, and holding on for dear life until things feel rosy again, and then selling and going away until they see the panic and crisis again.

The problem is that it is very difficult to identify moments of panic and crisis, and even when you know you are in the middle of it, you still don’t know whether it can get worse than what you are seeing. It is expensive to be early to the party. One particular barometer that I use as a guideline (and many others do as well, so the information content of this proxy is somewhat diluted) is the VIX:

This would suggest we’ve got some way to go before deploying capital would be wise. I also still don’t see hints of any panic simply by looking at corporate bond yields – nothing is breaking in that department yet.

But assembling that watchlist would be a good idea. And this time, my instinct would be to go for non-commodity, non-yielding securities. And certainly not Facebook equity.

Converting crap to cash

I think everybody has a lot of spare junk that they wish they could click a button and just sell. It is also cumbersome to list items on Craigslist since there is a lot of filtration required. Likewise, Ebay is no longer a good place to get rid of unnecessary garbage since competitive forces have rendered markets full of supplies of garbage that nobody needs.

Scale this problem up by a factor of a thousand and you have companies with warehouses full of garbage they don’t need. So insert in a company like Liquidity Services (NYSE: LQDT) and take a look at what they’ve done since the economic crisis:

Suffice to say, the horse is completely out of the barn now and the company will be facing the law of large numbers soon (i.e. growth percentages are going to slow down), but I just found this interesting. Companies finding profitable ways of getting rid of junk assets (either through re-selling them or otherwise trashing or recycling them) should continue to do well.

JP Morgan and large financial companies

One reason why I don’t own companies like JP Morgan (NYSE: JPM) is because you truly don’t have a clue what’s going on inside these companies. Even top management (such as Jamie Dimon) has to find out through a relatively roundabout way that some of his employees have blown away $2 billion in equity making trades they presumably thought were hedging some other risk but turned out not to be.

Can anybody with a straight face look at their 10-K and make heads or tails of it?

In essence, when you invest in these types of companies you are really taking a leap of faith that the assets they claim to have are real and collectible, and that the liabilities aren’t misstated in such a way that causes them to pay out more than what you see on the books. You are also taking a leap of faith that their loan portfolio takes in more income than they pay out to depositors.

On paper, you are paying $37/share for a company that analysts (before this 50 cent per share trading loss) believe will make $4.97/share this year and $5.60/share next year. Let’s pretend this is true. Sound cheap? Sounds like it, but ultimately do you really know what you are purchasing?

You are buying an implicit guarantee that JPM will crank up its dividend yield over a period of time and hopefully rack up some capital appreciation since its earnings are significantly higher than its dividend payout. The question is – will the company blow up? JP Morgan blowing up doesn’t seem all that likely right now, but just ask people that invested in Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, Wachovia, or Washington Mutual five years ago, where an implosion equally seemed unlikely. Who knows? I don’t, and that’s why I’m staying away from these true leap of faiths like JP Morgan equity.

This type of thinking applies to most large cap financial companies, including the large Canadian Banks (specifically, TD, RY, CM, BMO, BNS and to a lesser degree NA and CWB).

That said, you can also invest in these large capital financial firms as a variety of a Pascal Wager where if companies like JPM collapse (or one of the big five Canadian banks) that there is going to be so much collateral damage that subsequently earning a return on investment is not going to make much difference since you’ll be hiding in your underground bunker while civilization collapses around you.

Chesapeake Energy – Fishy

The saga with Chesapeake Energy (NYSE: CHK) continues – today they released their 10-Q filing where the new pronouncement was that their asset divestiture program was taking a bit longer than expected. The market subsequently took them down 14%, which took them down into lows not seen since the 2008 financial crisis (and the CEO’s infamous margin call which I wrote about earlier).

The company subsequently announced later that day they inked an agreement with Goldman Sachs for a $3 billion credit facility that is on par with the senior bondholders – at an initial rate of LIBOR plus 7%, which is currently 8.5%; this rate will go on for the calendar year and presumably will dramatically increase thereafter.

When glossing over the 10-Q, the imminent need for liquidity appears to be the voracious cash-guzzling appetite of its capital expenditures – $3.7 billion in the quarter alone, offset by about $274 million in cash flows through operations. Ouch.

Also, looking at the balance sheet makes me wonder why they have more in payables than receivables, usually not a good sign.

Goldman Sachs is giving them liquidity at a high cost and presumably they’ve been smart enough to look at their books and loan them money at an appropriate level of capitalization. This does not, however, bode well for the equity holders. My intuitive would suggest there is a lot more garbage going on within the company that shareholders aren’t going to be exactly receptive to. This might look like a deep value play given the purported value of its assets, but if you’re taking money short term money from Goldman Sachs at 8.5%, the other side of the negotiating table is going to see this and realize you might be more desperate than it seems to get rid of your assets.

The company also gives out a 9 cent quarterly dividend, which amounts to $240 million a year, which will now be financed by this Goldman Sachs bridge loan.

No positions in CHK, although I’ve done a little digging and don’t really like what I see.