Google IPO Swami 255
The Google IPO Swami writes: "I'm running an experiment and Slashdot readers would be good contributors. As you may know, Google recently announced that they will be using a unique dutch auction structure to price shares of their IPO. Instead of having the underwriters determine the opening price, the price will be set by the demand of investors that register to participate. I'm interested in how well the public can estimate this demand and the price of the shares to be offered. I'm giving away free shares in Google to find out. The person that comes closest to estimating the opening and closing price of the stock on the IPO date will win shares in the company."
Who knows? (Score:5, Insightful)
Macro-economic factors such as interest rates, price of oil, unemployment, and who the US President will be on the date of the IPO are still unknown. Hey, even the date of the IPO is still an unknown!
Bookmark the site and revisit it as Google gets further along the road to IPO. That's the only way to win at this game unless you're an extremely good guesser.
Re:Who knows? (Score:2)
"Ties will be settled by a random drawing."
On the other hand, guess now and then guess again later if you think you were wrong.
"You can enter multiple times, but only your last estimate will be considered. Previous entries will be discarded if you re-submit your picks."
Re:Who knows? (Score:5, Interesting)
Two 0-999 ranges
i.e. 1000*1000 possible combinations Need 1,000,000 submissions to 'win'
Spamgourmet.com allows dynamic forwarding
g000000.2.name@spamgourmet.com
To
g999999.2.name@spamgourmet.com
Here I come!
Re:Who knows? (Score:5, Funny)
Well, that depends how much you think the shares will be worth...
The un-PC point of view in re: Google IPO (Score:5, Funny)
I submitted this a while back, and it was predictably rejected, but if you really care about the Google IPO, take a gander at this article:
Re:The un-PC point of view in re: Google IPO (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.webcpa.com/AccountingToday/index.cfm/t x tFuse/dspShellContent/fuseAction/DISPLAY/numConten tID/52221/numSiteID/7/numTaxonomyTypeID/10/numTaxo nomyID/200.htm [webcpa.com]
Re:The un-PC point of view in re: Google IPO (Score:2)
Far from becoming easier and quicker to use, it is becoming slower and more difficult as the tsunami of viruses, spam and pop-ups infest all interactions with it
[...]
"Broadband" too, touted by President George W. Bush as an essential tool of technological advance for U.S. society as a whole, is becoming exponentially more sluggish, as the detritus clogs its arteries. Thus a consumer broadband Int
Re:The un-PC point of view in re: Google IPO (Score:4, Insightful)
Like most things in this world, I'm sure that this approach is not completely equalitarian but it is sure a damn sight better than the current scum-bags-r-us method endorsed by all the big players (aka thieves).
You're right: (May 5, 2005) = (May 5, 2004); (Score:2)
Sorry about that.
Re:Who knows? (Score:2)
Re:Who knows? (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.blogmaverick.com/
for a real-world view of the market. He says it better than I could. Scroll down to the "Why do people fall in love with stocks" entry. Here's the direct link:
http://www.blogmaverick.com/entry/9817136470302
Enjoy and learn!
Re:Who knows? (Score:2)
Ties will be settled by a random drawing
Re:Who knows? (Score:5, Insightful)
Because Google's stock has to compete in the universe of all investments. In short, the value of a share of Google will be in part influced by the value of all other potential investments available.
Each macro force has very little direct impact on the Google price, but there's a whole lot of them out there, and they all add up...
Re:Who knows? (Score:5, Interesting)
You are looking at the stock market as a pure numbers game when a large factor in the rise and/or fall of googles stock on IPO day will be how people 'feel'.
That is what caused the tulip trouble and the dot com trouble.
Re:Who knows? (Score:3, Informative)
I'm sure to win this (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'm sure to win this (Score:2)
However, the drug wasn't dead. And in fact, it overcame that bad study to eventually be approved. Martha's decision to sell the stock in the long run turned out to be a mistake. She would have made money if she kept the shares between then and now...
Re:I'm sure to win this (Score:2)
Re:I'm sure to win this (Score:2)
That would presume Martha had more info than she actually had. She just knew the stock was headed down... she didn't quite know why.
HOW MANY shares? (Score:2)
Re:HOW MANY shares? (Score:5, Informative)
It's right there in the FAQ. 10 shares.
Re:HOW MANY shares? (Score:2)
You sir, are looking a gift horse in the mouth. Not considered good form.
First and Last (Score:2, Interesting)
You mean the person that guess the first buying bid of the day and the price of the last buying bid of the day... I bet the first one will be higher than the last one. I like the 20 - 80 from the first poster but has it backwards. I bet its 80 and 20.
Re:First and Last (Score:2, Funny)
more like $80 opening, $40 closing by the end of the first week of Google trading, mid $20s, where it will stablize.. Or, if we geeks have anything to say about it... $60.22 (think about it...) or $31.415 (decimals shifted to adjust to a possible real world value of G00G stock.) This is like a dotcom, but they have been "developing" for a bit longer, so they might not crash 'n burn maybe.
The real object of the game... (Score:5, Informative)
3. Do you intend to place a bid for shares in the Google IPO? (Yes/No)
4. What price will you bid for Google shares? Enter 0 if you do not intend to bid. The value must be between 0 and 999, inclusive.
5. How many shares do you intend to bid for at this price?
Enter 0 if you do not intend to bid
There's the true motivation for this exercise. The person running this contest clearly states on his site that he's going to try to sell the results of the survey to people who want to have some way of peering into a crystal ball and determining what people would be willing to pay for Google before the dutch auction price is determined.
The day-trader investors who ususually love IPOs hate this Dutch Auction system because it gives them less room to try to buy up the early shares and then sell them the same day to people who wished they had gotten in on the IPO and are now willing to pay more to get their shares at market prices. (Smarter investors would place a limit order rather than a market order and just wait for the day-one spike to wear off and the price to be more in line with reality.)
11. Would you like to be contacted by someone to help you bid for shares in the Google IPO? You will receive one email if you say Yes. (Yes/No)
Talk about "highly targetted e-mail marketing list." That's sure to go to the highest bidder too...
This guy most certainly has a right to make a buck... we just should be smart enough consumers to realize that he's doing so by running this, and possibly withhold our information if we deem it too valuable to hand over.
Re:The real object of the game... (Score:4, Interesting)
Whatever you feel, slashdot is playing a significant role in giving this effort publicity - and, to be honest, I am forced to ask whether this is stretching the "News for nerds" thing a bit far; Sure, Google may use Linux, and they may have a clever search algorithm, but does that justify blow by blow coverage of their efforts to raise more capital?
Re:The real object of the game... (Score:3, Informative)
Joe Daytrader can't get in on the IPO itself, but he can sit and be the buyer shortly after the bell when first one of the "lucky few" decides to sell their shares, antispating that there will be a lot of Jane Investors calling their brokers later in the day wanting that "hot stock" and willing to pay more.
It's not a cer
Abuse? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Abuse? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Abuse? (Score:2)
The problem is that anyone could come up with thousands of figures instead of only one number they believe it is going to be the price. This would not help in getting some good statistic numbers.
Mike Hawk's guess (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Mike Hawk's guess (Score:4, Interesting)
type in scox and hit compare
Dutch (Score:2)
how often does that happen.
Re:Dutch (Score:3, Funny)
Dear Slashdot (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Dear Slashdot (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
My Guess (Score:2)
Re:My Guess (Score:2)
You forget the all important "a little over $1 a share after 6 months, about to be delisted."
Re:My Guess (Score:2)
Re:My Guess (Score:2)
Not necessarily. There is also an incentive to try to get the stock as cheaply as possible, meaning that people will bid the price they *hope* to pay for the stock. Once the auction is completed, I am sure that there will be many out there who bid too low in the hopes that their orders would be covered, but who are willing to buy a lesser number of shares for a higher price in order not to be locked out of this "gol
Mind your timestamps children.... (Score:2)
Google = genius (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Google = genius (Score:2)
Um, long term, isn't that what "the market" is? What's wrong with allowing market forces to come into play earlier than usual? Other than preventing early bidders from reaping unsustainable and unjustified rewards...
Re:Google = genius (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Google = genius (Score:3, Informative)
Google's idea is to arrange for the stock to start at the market valuation, such that it will probably stay flat after the IPO. Since the system is engineered to prevent a bubble, it dis
Guaranteed skew up (Score:5, Insightful)
If you made the choice of betting on $1, you would get $10 worth of stock. If you made the choice of betting on $200, you'd get $2000 worth of stock.
Now obviously you don't want to bet too high because if you do then you won't be right at all. But you will tend to bet on the high end, rather than the low end.
P.S. Everything I know about Economics I learned from The Price Is Right.
Re:Guaranteed skew up (Score:2, Insightful)
Like I learned from Echelon, the map is not the territory.
Higher price (Score:5, Insightful)
From my understanding, people bid on it at any price point. When they decide to create X shares, the top bidders will receive those shares, but will pay the price point of the lowest bidder. If this is true, what's to stop me from bidding $500/share to guarantee I get to take part in the IPO? Since I won't have to pay this price, and I probably won't increase the per-share price significantly, an individual doing this could easily be guaranteed as many shares as they like. What happens when a large number of people realize this and it artificially increases the price?
Is there something to prevent this? Is this a desired action (maybe from Google's perspective)? Or am I just completely missing something here....?
Re:Higher price (Score:5, Informative)
If too many people bid $500/share... then the cutoff price will turn out being something like $400/share, which will likely be artificially high considering the true value of Google.
You'll pay $400/share to get a ton of shares, but then only be able to sell them at their true value which the market will quickly realize is in the sub-$100s. What a way to lose 3/4 of your money!
That's the key of this Dutch Auction system. Instead of the lucky few with the right connections getting a pre-market chance to buy at a lower-than-fair-value price, this takes a stab at determining the fair value before the first shares are distributed. If too many people try to drive the IPO price upwards, everyone will find themselves holding shares that they'll only be able to sell at a loss.
The "I'm smarter-than-you, so I can make a quick buck off this..." gang is really better off sitting this one out.
Re:Higher price (Score:5, Informative)
Imagine that you did bid $60.00. Maybe other people will get stock and you won't, but if you believe that they are overpaying then from your point of view they are suckers, not winners. Remember that the goal of the game is not to get Google stock. It is to PROFIT from owning Google stock. If you bid high and get the stock and then watch it slide downward for years after you have lost, not won.
"you are out $40.00 bucks" (Score:2)
Rational - but is this rational? (Score:2)
Here you are thinking of investors... but have you considred how many people that would want shares not as an investment but just to have?
I thought it was funny the survey was limited at 99 (though I guessed kind of low I think).
Re:Higher price (Score:2)
As if `investors' will be involved with the stock at the IPO. The only folks who will be buying/selling these things are gamblers (day-traders). Most investors will wait for a while (like maybe a year, or a few) for the price to settle down a bit...
To paraphrase Dogbert: `Fools shouldn't have money.' So let them all buy Google at $100 and get burned...
Re:Higher price (Score:2)
Your fear that everyone else will bid $501, that the auction will settle at $500, and that you will end up payng $500 per share. Although it is true that a single person can submit a high bid to "ensure" getting some shares, the extending this strategy to n-players changes the game. In the end, people reallize that the most sensible strategy is to bid what they really think the shares are worth. Bidding any higher tha
Re:Higher price (Score:2)
If that's what you truely expect to happen, then you should bid what you think a Google share is really worth, and if you "lose" the dutch auction, place a limit order to buy the shares when they fall to the price you wanted. If you're right, the Dutch Auction will end up settling at an overvalued price, but then when the "winners" start pl
Re:Higher price (Score:2)
Nothing, other than if enough other people think the same way you really will end up paying that amount - this may go on to answer your other question "What happens when a large number of people realize this and it artificially increases the price?" And the price (last, mid, bid/ask weighted thickness) will collapse as there are no others to maintain the bid side.
Re:Higher price (Score:4, Interesting)
The IPO clearly states that Google has the right to reject any bid. They specifically say that if they determine that someone is not bidding in good faith--such as submitting a ridiculously high bid--that they won't accept that bid.
The other problem with your $500 bid is that if a significant number of other bidder think the same as you, you've just bought yourself a $500 stock. Are you willing to take that risk?
Re:Higher price (Score:2)
Psychological factors aside, a Dutch auction is giving exactly the same results as a regular auctio
Re:Higher price (Score:2)
i'm not familiar with the dutch system mentioned but i'd figure it be something used on tulip sales and so on maybe ?-) that would make some sense at least anyways and they probably have pretty well smoothed the system at the thousands and thousands of 'em held...
Re:Higher price (Score:2)
Read more here:
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/29/business / 29GOOGL EAUTCION.html?p
Obviously... (Score:4, Funny)
I think the real question is... (Score:5, Insightful)
Prediction (Score:5, Funny)
MiddayHigh: 150 dollars.
Closing Price: 25 cents.
For my 2 shares I guess... (Score:2)
Google (Score:2, Funny)
Closing: $Texas
Who? (Score:2)
He speaks as though 'the public' is a different kind of public from the one that will be bidding on the shares. Gee, I wonder what use he could possibly have for getting a sampling ahead of time...
-Colin [colingregorypalmer.net]
dutch auction effect (Score:5, Interesting)
And another thing: read the prospectus: the wall st guys are still getting a pretty good cut!
WAG's (Score:2)
With SCOX stock (SCO groups ticker symbol) it has become a kind of sport
futures market (Score:2, Informative)
tradesports.com [tradesports.com] has a futures market on the relative price of the IPO. There is another futures market for the time of the IPO [technologyreview.com]
ipofinancial.com has a report for sale (Score:2)
IPOFinancial.com [ipofinancial.com] is offering a Google IPO report for sale. It's a reasonable price if anyone is considering actually investing in Google's IPO. As many others have said already, the dutch auction system will put a spin on this which not many high profile IPOs have had (at least recently).
what the heck (Score:2)
Re:what the heck (Score:2)
If there are that many people willing to pay 73.95 for a share of Google such that at the end of the day that's the lowest price at which a share can be had, then just how in your universe did the Dutch Auction settle at 25?
Try filping the closing an opening signs and you might be on to something. Google's more likely to crash downward than rocket upward on day one thanks to the Dutch Auction.
The range will be small, and downwards (Score:4, Interesting)
In a normal IPO, the investment bank (or brokerage) sets the price, say, $20, then buys the shares off of the issuing company for $20. Any spread off of that goes directly to the brokerage (or investment bank).
This is a Bad Deal for the issuing company, because the spread should have gone to the company, not to the brokerage. Think about it: if MSDW priced a stock at $20, but were able to sell at $200, then the issuing company just lost $180! The brokerage, of course, made $180.
With the dutch auction, there will (or should be) little or no upside to google's stock because the price will be determined by how much people are willing to pay up front. In fact, it will probably drop on the first day, since people confused by this concept will try and flip, leading to a sell imbalance.
Depending on the shares that are to be issued, I'd say that conservatively google's stock should open at anywhere from $175 +- 8%, and drop about 15%. Why $175? Because -everyone- knows google, and companies that are well-known to the public trade at a premium.
The other interesting thing about google is that a savvy investor/hacker could manipulate the earnings by writing a virus that sneakily clicked on all those google ads that appear when you do a google search. Voila, instant earnings! With enough spread, you could do millions of hits a day, which translates to millions of dollars a day (thank you, adwords!)
We'll see.
You know, he's doing a bayesian survey (Score:5, Insightful)
http://www.research.att.com/~volinsky/bma.html
There was a possibly apochryphal story about this. A plane went down in a large area, and they needed to find it. Nobody really knew what happened to it. The leader of the search team went and asked a bunch of pilots where they thought the plane was, after giving them the course, heading, speed, and whatever data was available.
Well, they took the answers, narrowed the search area, then found the plane pretty much where the consensus said it would be.
A bit of thought will give you the reason this might have worked...
Re:You know, he's doing a bayesian survey (Score:5, Interesting)
First of all, most people who enter the contest won't be experts like the pilots of your example.
And next to that, even if they were there still could be situations where this approach would not work. Let's consider the plane example: If there were to probable routes A and B, some experts will choose a crash site along route A and others will choose a crash site along route B. The average of these guesses will be somewhere between routes A and B, on a highly improbable route.
I'm not saying this guy won't get useful data out of this game. Au contraire, I think it's a smart idea. But I'm not sure whether using the data in the way you suggested to calculate the stock value will yield a reliable estimate.
Re:You know, he's doing a bayesian survey (Score:2, Insightful)
experts don't determine prices in the stock market. The irrational public does.
Re:You know, he's doing a bayesian survey (Score:2)
The original pilot went down where other pilots would have gone down.
People on slashdot will end up bidding the price the average person on slashdot would end up paying.
If the person's assumptions are good; that the average bidder on the shares will in the end be statistically comparable to the average slashdotter, then he's got it right.
sounds like a scam.... (Score:2, Funny)
wow, a new contest,, and all i do is give my email (Score:2)
Actual excerpt from the rules: (Note that I'll never share your personal information with anyone, without exeption). I'll give the aggregated information away for educational use and other worthy causes. Email me.
Next stor ies (Score:4, Funny)
1. An unprecendented number of Slashdot geeks have started receiving massive amounts of spam after signing up for free Google shares. The email-harvesting www.googleiposwami.co [googleiposwami.co] seemed to be endorsed by /. editors by way of posting the article.
2. And in other /. news ... /. editors use spam techniques to make money from their subscriber base. CowboyNeal could not be reached at his new off-shore resort for comment.
Perhaps Google ought to consider this... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Perhaps Google ought to consider this... (Score:2)
Google would not be Google if it had to be a short-term thinking company like the street expects. On the street, a philosophy like Google's is seen as a liability, but it's the primary reason for me to want to buy a chunk and hold onto it long-term. The market can interpret that however it likes, however I intend to put my money where my mouth is; my investmen
Re:Perhaps Google ought to consider this... (Score:2)
Again, it's a nod to that the google guys are right on top of the game... Remember, Google doesn't NEED the money...they'd be perfectly h
percentage of google being sold (Score:2)
The filing says that the maximum aggregate offering is 2.7 billion dollars which presumably caps the launch price, though we don't know what it is capped to until the number of shares being sold is announced.
The Stuff DREAMS are made of... (Score:5, Funny)
Lagos, Nigeria.
Attention: The President/CEO
Confidential Business Proposal
Dear Sir,
Having consulted with my colleagues and based on the information gathered from the Nigerian Chambers Of Commerce And Industry, I have the privilege to request your assistance to transfer the sum of $2,700,000,000 (two billion, seven hundred million United States dollars) into your accounts. The above sum resulted from an over-invoiced contract, executed, commissioned and paid for about five years (5) ago by a foreign contractor. This action was however intentional and since then the fund has been in a suspense account at The Central Bank Of Nigeria Apex Bank.
We are now ready to transfer the fund overseas and that is where you come in. It is important to inform you that as civil servants, we are forbidden to operate a foreign account; that is why we require your assistance. The total sum will be shared as follows: 70% for us, 25% for you and 5% for local and international expenses incidental to the transfer.
The transfer is risk free on both sides via a process known as 'Dutch Auction' I am an accountant with the Nigerian National Search Engine Corp. If you find this proposal acceptable, we shall require the following documents:
(a) your banker's name, telephone, account and fax numbers.
(b) your private telephone and fax numbers ? for confidentiality and easy communication.
(c) your letter-headed paper stamped and signed.
Alternatively we will furnish you with the text of what to type into your letter-headed paper, along with a breakdown explaining, comprehensively what we require of you. The business will take us thirty (30) working days to accomplish.
Please reply urgently.
Best regards,
Larry Howgul Abul Arhu Page
WHO IS of googleiposwami.com (Score:3, Informative)
WHO IS of googleiposwami.com
Registrant:
Tim Ogilvie
463 Mass Ave
Apt 4
Boston, Massachusetts 02118
United States
Registered through: GoDaddy.com
Domain Name: GOOGLEIPOSWAMI.COM
Created on: 29-Apr-04
Expires on: 29-Apr-06
Last Updated on: 29-Apr-04
Administrative Contact:
Ogilvie, Tim info@googleiposwami.com
463 Mass Ave
Apt 4
Boston, Massachusetts 02118
United States
9176866816 Fax --
Technical Contact:
Ogilvie, Tim info@googleiposwami.com
463 Mass Ave
Apt 4
Boston, Massachusetts 02118
United States
9176866816 Fax --
Domain servers in listed order:
WSC1.JOMAX.NET
WSC2.JOMAX.NET
Bluff (Score:3, Insightful)
He is so sure he will be able to afford to buy them !!
Not worth the hassle (Score:3, Insightful)
Book building (Score:4, Interesting)
Google has short circuited this entire process by offering a dutch (sinlge price) auction which will (hopefully) use a maximal clearing volume algorithm to determine the price at which the maximum volume of stock will clear. The other constratints of this algorithm will determine that at the end of the auction there will be no unsatisfied demand at a price that is better than the one at which the stock traded and as such there will be no immediate price pressure on initial secondary trading. So it should stay around the price at which it opens.
What will that price be? Well thats a good question, but it Google publishes the state of the book over the weeks before the IPO then we can run the MCV algorithm and determine the "if it opened today" price which is usually a very good indicator of the final price as the IPO time approaches (well obviously really
It is really a very interesting approach and on that the intitutional brokers will not really like very much at all. I wish them good luck.
Re:euhm ... (Score:5, Funny)
NO GMAIL FOR YOU!
Re:euhm ... (Score:2)
I'd be completely amazed if this stock was more than $15. It's a friggin search engine company. IBM might be worth $80/share, but Google is not.
Re:euhm ... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:euhm ... (Score:5, Informative)
See, if Google released but a single share, that represented 50% of the company, I bet that single share would be measured in billions of dollars.
If they release 100 Trillion shares, my guess is, fractions of a penny will be the value.
Now it is a good idea to keep your stock price in the $5-$25 price point as it's then a pretty liquid stock, because most investors can afford lots of 100 (generally the smallest unit stocks are sold in by brokers, breaking a lot costs you extra). Institutional investors like pretty liquid stock prices, as they can get in and out of them pretty easily. I know that AT&T was considering doing stock splits to get their price back to about $10 not too long ago specifically to make it attractive to institutional investors.
If you are interested in long term investors only, you avoid stock splits, and keep the price going up. Look at Berkshire Hathaway for an example of this. There shares are worth about $90,000 for the "good ones", and about $6,000 for the "Baby Berks". They specifically never split, and never offer a dividend. It's an interesting model.
If you want to use a single metric to define if a company is worth something, at least use P/E. That's at least something kinda, sorta rational. It takes into account the number of shares, and generally there is an acceptable P/E for any given industry. The P/E of IBM and google could exactly the same, and have IBM's stock at $15, and Google's at $80. You deride that, but any serious investor would realize that the stock price has nothing to do with the value of the company. It's the stock price, and the number of shares that starts to tell you something intelligent. (I believe that number of shares, times the share price is the market capitalization).
Kirby
Re:well, that totally depends (Score:2)
Re:WINNER! (Score:5, Insightful)
That's highly unlikely. There shouldn't be very many people wishing they had gotten in on the IPO and willing to pay more the same day just by the nature of this Dutch auction scheme. The whole point of choosing this method is to lock out the rich people who want to quickly double their money on same day turn arounds...
Re:WINNER! (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd expect a close pretty close (+/-) to the open.
google is really smart! (Score:5, Informative)
That's bad for the company in many ways. The problem with that for the company is that there is now unrealistic valuations for their stock...what I've been calling the "beanie baby" effect. Much like the toy fads that sweep the nation with obscene prices for stupid $5 toys, IPO's have the same trouble. The initial price that the shares sell at is all that the company gets ....Right now there are no "stockholders" to please....it's all about what the company needs/wants to be successful! This doesn't affect those VCs and angel investors wanting to leave...they already got their X% of company shares immediately available to sell off...This doesn't really hurt them.
What typically happens is that the "old boys" on wall street undervalue your company shares when they post them, then of course overvalue your shares to all the clients! It's actually the ultimate in "legal" inside trading. What they're trying to do is sell their shares for as close to "market value" as possible. That means the company gets the most money for selling itself and also gets a stable investor base instead of being victim to an immediate "downturn" from a larger company [say MS] that might use it's buying power to ruin them. They are also trying to get investors that want to be part of google, not just those looking for a quick buck.
In all it's a smart strategy because they are using the stock market like it was originally intended...for a company to gain capital!
Re:WINNER! (Score:2)
I happen to agree with you that there should be penalty for less than a day sales, but it's not in the law.
I'm betting the reverse. (Score:3, Interesting)
What I can't decide is if I should bid for a LOT of shares at, say, $1 each, just in case for some reason not enough people bid to take up all the shares, or if I should bid $500 per share, just to make SURE I get some shares, no matter what the price is.
Which is why I think the price will actually decline on the first day of trading - enough people will probably bid a little higher than they think the stock is actually worth just to cover