Google IPO Problems Surface 235
manavendra writes "The BBC is reporting that Google has admitted it may have breached stock market laws in the US, while CNET says Google may have run afoul of securities laws when it doled out millions of shares to employees and consultants over the past three years, according to a document filed Wednesday with the Securities and Exchange Commission."
Wow! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Wow! (Score:2, Funny)
It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:5, Informative)
25 million out of their on-hand cash reserves isn't that much.
Mod Parent up... (Score:2)
Also, note the extremely low uid...pretty nice to see it
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2)
It's just not too often that i see them
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2)
Too bad I didn't register when I first read
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2)
and some of us go on short tears of posting.
I took a few years off from posting here with any regularity. but there are plenty of us still around. perhaps we should have a poll to see how many of the low user IDs are still active.
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2)
Yow.
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2, Funny)
mitch
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2)
Okay, seriously though....glad to see you are still around (and reading).
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2, Offtopic)
-davidu
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:3, Funny)
9999? Someplace in that reigon? Just a wild guess.
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2)
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2)
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:3, Insightful)
(posting with 'No Karma Bonus' either, I am so humble it hurts)
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:4, Informative)
Now, if only the comments system was easier to read and have discussions on, I'd probably post more, but then, no one cares what I say anyway.
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:2, Funny)
If they do, I'm sure their postings get banned.
Re:Mod Parent up... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:2)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:2)
Only if they accept the rescission offer (Score:5, Informative)
The risk is that there are not the same corporate disclosure requirements for unregistered offerings as there are for registered offerings.
In the event that the company wants to go public at a later date, they usually provide rescission offers to these investors, which allow them to cash before the risky public offering.
Most rescission offers are optional, and in the event that the investor declines they will sign an additional waiver that says they are going along for the ride.
Re:Only if they accept the rescission offer (Score:4, Informative)
Most rescission offers are optional, and in the event that the investor declines they will sign an additional waiver that says they are going along for the ride."
So, basically they have to offer to buy back the shares at cost since they were unregistered, okay then not much to this then. Nobody is being forced to sell shares back and the accounting mistake is being corrected.
People make mistakes in companies like this all the time and they sometimes cost a lot more money than this one might.
As long as nobody is forcing the employees to sell back the shares, then I don't see the big problem here. Just register the shares and move on... of course does this effect the per share ipo price, where those shares not considered in the valuation?
Re:Only if they accept the rescission offer (Score:3, Informative)
Interestingly, the article does not make the distinction, so they may be unregistered with the state (a "no-no") - and therefore they may not have been a part of the outstanding shares that were used in the valuation, as you mentioned. The number of the shares referred to is in
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:4, Insightful)
Lets think about this. Google gave me shares and I am going to sell them _before_ the IPO. Not likely.
This is the situation that may cause them some problems.
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:2, Informative)
As Gordon Gekko said... (Score:2)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:2)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:4, Informative)
This CNN article [cnn.com] values the shares at the IPO price, up to 3.1 BILLION dollars, a bit more than 25 million.
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:2)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:4, Insightful)
M
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm a big fan of Google's, but I can think of a better ways to instill investor confidence than this approach.
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:2)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:3, Insightful)
Those shares are all fully-tradeable after September, so I truly beleive only a fool would sell back. I can see some lawsuits flying on this one.
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing is, deals like this are a slippery slope. Google needs to deal with the issue in order to go public, and cannot afford to pay out $3B to their current set of investors. If they manage to buy back the large majority of the stock, they will need to provide some incentive to get people to give away what is essentially a lot of money. Strange organizational changes, insane company expenses, ruffled feathers and internal battles could be the outcome of all this.
All of the items mentioned above would be distractions from the core mission, and are not the sorts of things anyone wants to see from a company preparing to go public.
M
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:2)
Mr. Brin, Mr. Page, Meet Mr. Gates. I'm sure you three will have a lot to talk about!
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:2)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:2)
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:3, Insightful)
25m shares sold on open market at say 100 bucks per share is $2.5b.
In other words to buy this stuff back Goog will have to write a biiiig check in order to get those shares to the people they were promised to.
Then if they manage to pull that off, the existing (other) shareholders can class-sue someone in the management for gross negligence.
Re:It's not going to cost them that much... (Score:2, Insightful)
For example, Joe Worker is thinking about moving to another job 2 years ago because he can get a higher salary. Google offers him 1000 shares. Joe sees alot of cash at the end of that rainbow, so sticks with working at Google.
Jump to today, Google says "we made a mistake, we'll buy your shares back for $25 (my guess)"
Two days later Google IPOs and hits $250, Joe is o
Offtpoic (Score:5, Insightful)
--trb
Re:Offtpoic (Score:2, Funny)
Too Bad (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Too Bad (Score:2)
now to clean up the coffee....
Why sell them back? (Score:5, Insightful)
They don't have a choice. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:They don't have a choice. (Score:2)
OR
They'd have to not offer as many shares to start, thus cutting the amount of money they can make from an IPO.
Looks like a lose-lose situation.
Re:They don't have a choice. (Score:2)
Who's counting? (Score:4, Interesting)
It's sure as hell not a good way to build investor trust - and it makes it harder to justify the overvalued IPO price.
Re:Who's counting? (Score:5, Insightful)
Since, in theory, the IPO price was set at auction by people who looked at, among other things, the number of outstanding shares and the overall valuation of the company, this would seem to indicate that the price decided upon is invalid, as the data it's based on is invalid.
If the stock was overvalued before, it's much more overvalued now that it's revealed that Google has significantly more potential liabilities outstanding than were previously reported. This is a big black eye for Google in the markets, and it's highly likely anyone buying Google at the IPO price will lose their shirt on the deal.
I'd be pissed (Score:3, Funny)
"Hey, remember that $2,000,000 you were counting on?"
"Yeah, of course."
"Well, too bad, here's $20,000, thanks for playing the IPO game."
Dear Google: (Score:5, Funny)
SEC [google.com]
U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission Laws [google.com]
So we know they could find the laws at least... So what happened?
Re:Dear Google: (Score:2)
Maybe you should jump into that discussion on whether or not lawyers should write laws [slashdot.org]
The real story is the media interest (Score:5, Insightful)
Now they have, and the media plays it like it's some sort of scoop.
The real story here is not that Google screwed up (that happens regularly), but that the Google teflon is wearing thin in the media.
You can only play reporters as puppets for a few years, and then they get tired of your spin and start biting back. There will be a lot more negative press in the coming months.
Re:The real story is the media interest (Score:2, Redundant)
Media, schmedia. We like Google here at Slashdot. Therefore, this is no big deal.
Had the culprit been some one else (such as Microsoft, Real, SCO, any RIAA label, or George Lucas, whom we don't like), then this would have been a crime of epic proportions.
Google's SEC fililng (Score:5, Informative)
Form S-1 Registration Statement [sec.gov]
This section [sec.gov] in particular is a good summary of what they did.
Further historical reference (Score:3, Interesting)
Not the Only Problem Google's Having (Score:5, Informative)
A warning (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:A warning (Score:2)
Re:A warning (Score:2, Funny)
This sounds like the sentiment of someone who was burned in the dot-com IPO heydey in the 90s. It is typically years after an IPO before investors cash out. Good advice to wait a few years on this one though.
The current scuttlebutt (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, this is beginning to sound eerily like AltaVista. All they need now is a competitor with better technology and that's pretty much it for them.
competitor with better technology (Score:2)
Say, these guys [teoma.com]?
Go on. Try a search. Watch actual results come up, instead of thousands of affiliate sites.
It's Just a 'Goofle' (Score:3, Interesting)
Sounds like 'Pennies' stock to me.
Re:It's Just a 'Goofle' (Score:2)
The buyback is at the strike price, not at market prices.
Which means that the holders will get *something* for their options. Remember, until you're able to exercise & then sell them, they're just promises. And promises sometimes get broken [fuckedcompany.com]
Chip H.
Isn't an overvalued IPO "evil"? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think I can predict the flames -- the market decides what the value is, I don't know that the stock will go down any better than the investors know the stock will go up, the google people deserve to get rich, and all of that.
But I remember the dot com days (as do most people here, I'm sure). I think that we're going to see a massive transfer of wealth between unsophisticated small investors who are doing more speculating than investing, and the sharpies running this IPO.
It seems to me that the geek community has never come to terms with exactly what happened in the dot com days, and how dishonest and damaging a lot of the financial shenanigans were. A lot of guys who were ring leaders -- guys like Jeff "profits don't matter" Bezos -- are still respected and admired.
You can say a lot of bad things about MS, and I'd probably agree with most of them. But they never screwed their investors the way that almost every open source IPO did. That's always something that's left out when people talk about the software morality play here.
I don't see why people see this as a good thing for the tech industry. The only way IPOs will be good, over the long run, is if the investors make good returns. With this valuation that's impossible. People are going to get screwed, just like the old days, and it will just revive the bitter taste in everyone's mouth, and make the next IPO that much harder.
Re:Isn't an overvalued IPO "evil"? (Score:2)
If memory serves correctly, very few of the not-coms were "open source" companies. Most of the spectacular flame-outs were "eyeball" companies, as in "we'll throw up a gawd-awful website with crappy free content, and we'll make BILLIONS off advertisers paying for eyeballs."
Don't lay the dot-bomb crisis at the feet of ope
Re:Isn't an overvalued IPO "evil"? (Score:2)
I've always loved google, but this sort of bugs me.
Google management lost its credibilty with me when they came out and said "We won't be evil", then issued two classes of stock. One for the public, another for a superclass of shareholders that have superior voting rights. Evidently Google mgmt is All Knowing and Supreme compared to the investing public, and certainly should not be accountable to the "little people." If that isn't "evil", I don't know what is.
This business about buying back inappropriatel
Re:Isn't an overvalued IPO "evil"? (Score:4, Insightful)
The real "little people" here are not stockholders --- those stockholders with voting power in a normal corporation are generally rich institutional investors anyway. The "little people" are Google's everyday users. And if Google loses control to external stockholders, we can expect lots of evil things to happen as Google begins using sleazy tactics to squeeze every penny out of its users. Google wants to keep offering its current level of not-evil management and this is the only way to do it.
What most Google-bashers don't understand is that when Google talks about not being evil, it's always thinking of the general public that uses their search engine, not special interest groups. In the past, they've been extremely tough and uncompromising with advertisers and webmasters to protect the interests of their users. And now, similarly, they're being tough and uncompromising with shareholders.
Ok, let's start counting search nodes... (Score:2, Redundant)
Ok, let's start counting search nodes to see whether Google is loved today:
Slashdot loves Google
Slashdot loves Google not
Slashdot loves Google
Slashdot loves Google not
Results 1 - 10 of about 8,610 for slashdot loves google. (0.23 seconds)
Hrm. Even number of results. Therefore, today, Slashdot loves Google not.
Maybe tomorrow will be better, but I guess it depends on when they next update the index.
-Adam
Recission Offers; Wall Street's Hatred of Google (Score:5, Interesting)
Google, because it is one of the few big post dot-bomb tech IPOs, was able to compel Wall Street into accepting an auction process that will net the underwriters about 2% of the offering proceeds, versus the almost universal 6 to 7%. Because of this, Wall Street hates Google and investment banks have been feeding the media a constant stream of FUD against the Google offering (which the media, getting advertizing dollars from investment banks, is eager to accept).
Bottom line: (i) Recission offer no threat to Google. (ii) Don't look for the business media to say anything good about the Google offering.
Re:Recission Offers; Wall Street's Hatred of Googl (Score:2, Insightful)
ooooold news (Score:5, Informative)
I think that most financial people who are thinking of buying shares have probably seen this, if they've been following the filings. Remember that there have already been 3 amendments to the registration statement, plus the S-1 to the rescission offer, totaling 5 different documents that disclose it. Also, the financial statements disclose it, so add the Form 10 that Google has filed and the 3 amendments to it, for a grand total of 9 different filings over the past 3 months that all mention it.
These people probably don't think it's a big deal, because of the relatively small liability (see Section 12 of the Securities Act of 1933), and probably no one will exercise the rescission right anyway (they'd be crazy to do that before the IPO). More importantly, this kind of stuff happens more often than you might think; some companies will just take the risk of this liability and not do a rescission.
Also, don't confuse section 12 liability (which is essentially about selling shares in unregistered/non-exempt transactions) with rule 10b-5 liability, which is what you hear about all the time (all those class actions are usually rule 10b-5 actions). 10b-5 is about fraud.
Just petty jealousy (Score:4, Insightful)
Its always been popular to bash Microsoft and its easy to see why from a geek, easiest term to use, point of view. Their business tactics and overall strategy. Then comes along Google which is also a technology company but the complete opposite, IMO, of how Microsoft operates but people are already starting to throw tacks and spikes in their road to success.
Its easy to say we are bashing them because we dont like their tactics, but it seems more what people are saying is that I am not part of it, I wont benefit from it, so hey it easier to get on some bandwagon and say they are doing things wrong and try to stifle their next step to success.
People always tell you this growing up but its interesting to see on a corporate societal scale, and instead of "its not fair...", now its "hmm...it seems you may not have followed guidelines according to blah blah blah blah..."
At least they're honest about it (Score:2)
It would be nice to see those dot-com kids... (Score:2)
Doing a little math (Score:4, Informative)
It is now offering to buy them back - albeit at prices way below the $108-$135 at which its flotation is set.
Based on the information from Yahoo! News [yahoo.com], I calculated that given a total value of $36 billion, and a share price of $108-$135, there must be between 266 million and 333 million shares.
Given that Google can raise a maximum of $3.3 Billion, it must be offering at least 24 million shares.
If it is offering 24 million shares out of a total of 266 million, then it is only offering 9.1 % of the company to the public.
So, google has neglected to properly account for slightly more shares than they plan to offer to the public. And they are offering at a very high starting price.
Re:Wait... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Out of my price range anyhow... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Out of my price range anyhow... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Out of my price range anyhow... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Bzzzttt... Game over! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:sheesh (Score:2)
Re:zoink! (Score:2)
or alternately: I sell them back 999 and refuse to part with 1 share. again, what's to do?
Re:zoink! (Score:2)
What's do do? Stick with
Re:Google IPO (Score:2)
Err..you do realize the shares that they are selling are non-voting shares right? Basically the owners of these shares have no voting
Re:Google IPO (Score:2)
They make the money on the initial sale of the stock right? I don't understand how what happens to the price after that affects their profits at all. It's true it affects their ability to issue more stock or bonds, but with the cash reserves they'll get from the IPO, I don't think they'll have to worry about that for a while.
Re:Google IPO (Score:2)
Re:Google IPO (Score:4, Informative)
Well, no. If you're a public company, mgmt is obliged to act in accordance with the interests of the entire investor base, including minority investors. So, for example, a company couldn't decide to sell key assets to the Chairman for $1, even if he owned 70% of the stock, since such an action would be detrimental to the interests of the other 30% of the shareholders.