• The TUGBBS forums are completely free and open to the public and exist as the absolute best place for owners to get help and advice about their timeshares for more than 30 years!

    Join Tens of Thousands of other Owners just like you here to get any and all Timeshare questions answered 24 hours a day!
  • TUG started 31 years ago in October 1993 as a group of regular Timeshare owners just like you!

    Read about our 31st anniversary: Happy 31st Birthday TUG!
  • TUG has a YouTube Channel to produce weekly short informative videos on popular Timeshare topics!

    Free memberships for every 50 subscribers!

    Visit TUG on Youtube!
  • TUG has now saved timeshare owners more than $24,000,000 dollars just by finding us in time to rescind a new Timeshare purchase! A truly incredible milestone!

    Read more here: TUG saves owners more than $24 Million dollars
  • Sign up to get the TUG Newsletter for free!

    Tens of thousands of subscribing owners! A weekly recap of the best Timeshare resort reviews and the most popular topics discussed by owners!
  • Our official "end my sales presentation early" T-shirts are available again! Also come with the option for a free membership extension with purchase to offset the cost!

    All T-shirt options here!
  • A few of the most common links here on the forums for newbies and guests!

Who is buying Facebook stock??

Not interested either. BTW, there are publicly traded entities that hold a percentage of Facebook, so you don't have to buy the stock directly if you want to place a wager on Facebook stock going up.
 
unless you are a favored client of one of the underwriters you wint buy on the IPO..once it stars trading; thats when the rest of us can buy in
 
Buying on hype and facing the cold hard reality down the road is a recipe for a poor result.
 
Think I will take the plunge just not sure I will be able to get in on the IPO.

Hey:

If you have an insider's track and can get go for it. It too much too handle I will take 2,000 shares and dump after inital pop! My broker claims he did not get allocated any!:hi:

Check CNBC( Comcast channel 46 in Denver) for experts views. No concensus. Hitting Denver next week wth dog and pony show!:cheer:

Waiting to get Jim Cramer's take . He was right on with LULU.:ponder:

The jury is still out on Groupon!:shrug:

Then there was Google which was supposed to be a bust and shorts got blown away!:crash:

Personally I have no use for face book and if they are relying on my account will go bankrupt. OK, let's not turn into us olde farts that have other ways to spend our time should be tarred and feathered. Over 90% of drinking buddies, family, friends, etc., swear it is the greatest! Just not my bag or sack!:eek:

But like any stock, if I can make money buying/selling got for it!:whoopie:
 
I was thinking it might be fun to buy some, just because. :D
 
I asked my broker to buy me some. When is the IPO? shaggy

End of next week!

Read below from WSJ and MarketWatch for all the gory details!:ponder:

Facebook IPO: Investors should wait

Commentary: Some red flags merit attention and scrutiny Stories You Might Like

•How to get a piece of Facebook

Want to see how this story relates to your portfolio?

Just add items to create a portfolio now:
XAddFacebook Inc. (FB)XAddGoogle Inc. Cl A (GOOG)Add Create Portfolio or Cancel Already have a portfolio? Log In

By Therese Poletti, MarketWatch
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — Most investors realize that unless they work for a big mutual fund or institution, they won’t likely be able to buy shares of Facebook when it makes its debut late next week.

Facebook’s /quotes/zigman/8607696/quotes/nls/fb FB 0.00% upcoming IPO, which is expected to value the company at around $95 billion, is the biggest Internet IPO since Google Inc. /quotes/zigman/93888/quotes/nls/goog GOOG +0.74% went public in 2004. There even will be shares allotted to retail investors, with perhaps 20% to 25% of the offering going to retail or online brokerage firms catering to average investors and day traders. Read "How to get a piece of Facebook."

Still, the question for most investors will be whether they should buy Facebook shares after the first-day pop. The big money will have been made by top executives, such as founder and Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, its venture capitalists and other bigwig investors. Joe Day Trader and his brethren will have to look at the stock — after it prices and begins actual trading — and decide for themselves.


Facebook’s stunning user growth is an attention-getter
The anticipated frenzy over one of the largest tech IPOs ever is probably going to be contagious. Already, the company’s road show has been covered ad infinitum by the media — a road show that didn’t appear to offer much new information beyond the prospectus.

Leading up to the road show, which started Monday, some of the biggest speculation was about whether Zuckerberg would show up, and if he would wear a suit instead of his much remarked-upon hoodie. (He did show up, at least in New York, but he did not wear a suit.)

Facebook appeared to listen to the gripes of investors in New York, who were irked that the company wasted precious road-show time showing its slick 30-minute video — which had already been seen by many online. The company reportedly did not show the video in Boston. Read about Facebook's road show in the Wall Street Journal.


Still, it’s going to be easy for investors to get swept up in the hype. After all, nearly 1 billion people are registered monthly users of the social network. Most people know what Facebook is or they use it.


Facebook
Mark Zuckerberg: no suit for you!
I’m certainly not a financial adviser, but average investors might do well to avoid the first-day madness and instead wait and watch how the stock trades and whether it looks like it is going to be able to maintain its hefty valuation. Even the Oracle of Omaha, Warren Buffett, said he won’t be investing in Facebook. But it’s worth noting that he is also incredibly averse to investing in IPOs.

On the bullish side, though, one Wall Street analyst, Arvind Bhatia at Sterne Agee, one of the early birds to initiate coverage, started covering Facebook on Monday with a buy rating, and a price target of $45.

“Just like Google did less than a decade ago, we believe Facebook is disrupting the worldwide advertising market,” Bhatia wrote in his report.

Here are some red flags investors should pay attention to before making the big leap:

1) Zuckerberg, as we have noted before, will continue to rule Facebook with an iron grip. After the IPO, he will control approximately 57.3% of the voting power of Facebook’s outstanding capital stock. It’s a Zuckerberg dictatorship, and any bets are bets on the 27-year-old CEO.

2) Facebook’s revenue growth rate started to slow in the first quarter. While the company’s revenue of $1 billion in the first quarter is still growing, its growth rate slightly decelerated to 45%, down from growth of 55% in the previous quarter.

3) Inconsistent revenue patterns, or lumpiness, as the Street likes to say. Morningstar Inc. analyst Rick Summer predicted in a February report that
“despite our bullishness, we expect a lot of volatility in Facebook’s revenue growth rates, which may translate into stock price volatility,” Summer wrote. “Even looking at historical quarterly revenue growth, the lack of consistency is notable.” Read John Shinal on Facebook's "lumpiness"

Click to Play Is the Facebook IPO Doomed?MarketWatch's Dave Callaway pulls up a chair on Mean Street and points out that global economic instability could pose a substantive challenge to this month's scheduled Facebook IPO. Photo: Reuters.

4) Facebook is not as pervasive yet on mobile devices, especially smart phones, as it is on PCs. The company’s $1 billion acquisition of the photo-sharing app company, Instagram, was an indication that mobile is a bit of an Achilles heel. In March, the company had 488 million monthly users of its mobile products, according to its most recent regulatory filing.

Bhatia at Sterne Agee believes that mobile will be a “significant long-term growth opportunity for Facebook, but with some initial challenges,” he wrote. “For example, it is not yet clear if most of the mobile advertising growth will be incremental or will cannibalize online advertising.”

5) As younger startup companies develop competitive threats to Facebook’s dominance in social networking, the company may use its cash and stock to acquire them. Analysts have speculated that based on its recent deal with Instagram, it is not inconceivable that Facebook, which doesn’t yet have a long track record doing acquisitions, could also acquire other fast-growing startups, such as Pinterest or Tumblr. Read about Facebook's potential for more deal-making.

Those are just a few things to be watching for as Facebook goes public. Perhaps a theme song for the more bearish minded investor during this closely watched IPO could be Public Enemy’s hit, “Don’t Believe the Hype.”
/quotes/zigman/8607696/quotes/nls/fb Add to portfolio FB Facebook Inc. US : Pre-IPO $ 0.00 0.00 0.00% Volume: P/E RatioN/ADividend YieldN/AMarket Cap$5.00 billionRev. per EmployeeN/A
/quotes/zigman/93888/quotes/nls/goog Add to portfolio GOOG Google Inc. Cl A US : U.S.: Nasdaq $ 613.66 +4.51 +0.74% Volume: 28,313May 10, 2012 4:00pP/E Ratio19.47Dividend YieldN/AMarket Cap$199.29 billionRev. per Employee$1.23M
Therese Poletti is a senior columnist for MarketWatch in San Francisco.
 
I was thinking it might be fun to buy some, just because. :D
Just Because isn't a bad reason.

I understand the appeal of Facebook as an activity and therefore as an investment and I think it may be a fun stock for people to own. Being interested in the company will hopefully lead to learning more about the stock market. I support investor education in whatever form it shows up.

It's also not hard to imagine a place for it in many seasoned investors' portfolios. It will be an interesting issue to watch, for the Just Because reason.

I just can't let myself invest on Just Because or my portfolio would be gonzo. I'd rather shop for stocks than anything else!

So many sectors, so few dollars to invest...


I think it would be awesome if all the stockholders actually went to the meeting. All those people you see/avoid/seek/block on Facebook, in person! ha!
 
Top