Coventry League
 
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SecondMarket provides a timeline of trades in Facebook (FB)'s common stock since April 2008.  If one applies a discount (let’s use 30% for example purposes) to account for a limited supply of shares available via SecondMarket versus a larger supply of shares otherwise available in a publicly traded market, then one could derive a "fair" value of FB in a public market (note 1).

Further, SecondMarket data from 2012 along with a January 2012 tiny venture capital round (only $9.6 million at about $31 per share) seem to have been used and publicized to anchor in a price and valuation to justify the targeted IPO price range.  Accordingly, it would be reasonable to consider this data as less reliable and an outlier. 

So, using data from the last half or last quarter of 2011 would provide a reasonable benchmark share price in which to apply a discount (or a discount range).  A back-of-the-envelope calculation indicates a share price on SecondMarket that averaged about $32.  Applying a conservative 30% discount indicates a “fair” share price of roughly $22 if supply were not as constrained as it was on SecondMarket.  Given this assessment, the investment bankers apparently earned their commission since they priced the IPO at a 72% premium to the adjusted share price calculated using SecondMarket data.

Our opinion is even at $22 per share, which implies a market capitalization of $60 billion (note 2), FB is considerably “overvalued," especially in light of the most highly valued companies depicted in the chart below and highlighted on InvestmentNews by Mark Bruno.
Regardless, to incorporate a downside valuation range, one might want to further consider the picture highlighted in the upper left above from a ZeroHedge blog title "PeakBook?" that compares search volume between Facebook and Myspace.  Or, read a post at Forbes by Mark Evans titled "Warning: Stay Away From The Facebook IPO."

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(1) Securities and Exchange Commission. 424(b)(4) Prospectus filing dated 17 May 2012. . Total Class A and Class B shares being offered in the IPO is 421,233,615 or about 20% of actual common shares outstanding as of 31 March 2012 of 2,138,085,037 and 15% of adjusted common shares outstanding after the IPO of 2,741,527,754.

(2) Total Class A and Class B common stock to be outstanding after initial public offering: 2,741,527,754 multiplied by the calculated common stock price per share of $22.

 
 
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Map of U.S. with Ohio highlighted
This April, Manta Media, based in Columbus, Ohio, raised $44 million from Norwest Venture Partners, which is headquartered in Palo Alto, California (aka Silicon Valley).

Manta provides a free online database and social media platform for businesses to share their marketing and contact data.  As of early 2012, Manta had 89 million businesses listed in its database; it also reports 25 million unique visitors monthly and 3,000 new small businesses joining daily.

As for Ohio, it was ranked 19 among states based on total venture capital dollars invested in 2011, as highlighted March 2012 by Laura Tomaka at The Council of State Governments (see chart below).  Downloadable data is available from the State Science & Technology Institute (SSTi) based in Westerville, Ohio.  Also, a user friendly dynamic map showing state-by-state per capita venture capital investments is available at St. Louis Post-Dispatch's website.


 
 
Theatrical Release Poster; 1968
BizarroComic.blogspot.com
When comic relief is needed, the likes of Goolsbee, Bernanke and Fama is fine. However, if seriousness about a task or topic is warranted, then a genetic algorithm-based bot might be more useful, thankyouverymuch.

The cover story of Wired Magazine’s January 2011 issue is about artificial intelligence (AI).  I know, this topic might conjure up HAL 9000 from the 1968 science fiction film 2001: A Space Odyssey.  I suppose that’s not unjustified to do so.

Nevertheless, the initial story relates to how Kiva Systems set up a warehouse for diapers.com.  To a typical person, the inventory layout might have appeared haphazardly arranged, perhaps even to rational and efficiency oriented professionals such as finance and economics professors.  Yet, the organization of the warehouse was not based on human logic, but rather machine logic.  And, what is becoming exceedingly apparent, machine logic is excelling in many situations.

Furthermore, the cover story continues by including brief sections about Internet companies, financial markets, music, medicine, logistics, and fraud detection – essentially, a little bit of something to appeal to just about anyone.
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Sources and further resources:

●  Asimov, Isaac. I, Robot. Hardcover ed. New York, NY: Gnome Press, 1950. Print. The book is a collection of nine science fiction short stories. Find an edition at Powell's Books.

●  Gregory, John. "Robot Law." Slaw. 24 June 2010. Web. 01 Jan. 2011. <http://www.slaw.ca/2010/06/24/robot-law/>. Note: the blog article is a partial survey of interesting questions that have been asked about robots and the law, including several offlinks.

●  Levy, Steven, Felix Salmon, and John Stokes. "The AI Revolution Is On | Magazine." Wired, Jan. 2011. Web. 27 Dec. 2010. <http://www.wired.com/magazine/2010/12/ff_ai_essay_airevolution/>.

●  Singer, PW. "PW Singer on Military Robots and the Future of War | Video on TED.com." TED: Ideas worth Spreading. Apr. 2009. Web. 01 Jan. 2011. <http://www.ted.com/talks/pw_singer_on_robots_of_war.html>. Author shows how the widespread use of robots in war is changing the realities of combat. He shows us scenarios straight out of science fiction -- that now may not be so fictitious.

●  Vaughanbell. "Seeing the Mind amidst the Numbers." Mind Hacks. 22 Sept. 2009. Web. 01 Jan. 2011. <http://mindhacks.com/2009/09/22/seeing-the-mind-amidst-the-numbers/>. Blog article is about the Netflix Challenge that awarded a prize for the best algorithm that selects video suggestions for users. It also highlights the particular technique, called singular value decomposition (SVD).