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Section 11 | Lesson 64 - how an IPO works

notes

Mary Meeker Internet Trends Report

Mary Meeker, formerly a partner at Kleiner Perkins, is known for publishing the Internet Trends Report, one of the most influential annual reports on internet usage, the digital economy, and technology adoption.

Key Facts

  • Report Name: Internet Trends Report (also known as Meeker Report)
  • Published: Annually, starting in the mid-1990s
  • Content includes:

    • Global internet usage
    • Mobile trends
    • Digital advertising
    • E-commerce
    • Social media growth
    • Emerging technologies such as AI, cloud computing, and voice interfaces
  • Originally released by: Kleiner Perkins
  • Later reports released by: Bond Capital (Meeker's own VC firm, after leaving Kleiner Perkins in 2018)

how to value companies without revenue

  • valuation for high tech companies without revenue is based on subscribers

facebook vs instagram

facebooks value for subscribers
\begin{equation} \text{value per Subscriber} = \frac{\text{Facebook Market Cap}}{\text{Facebook Users (Subscribers)}} \end{equation} \begin{equation} \text{value per Subscriber} = \frac{\text{\$231,000,000,000}}{\text{1.4 billion subs}} \end{equation} \begin{equation} \text{value per Subscriber} = \text{\$165 per subscriber} \end{equation}
instagram value for subscribers
\begin{equation} \text{value per subscriber} = \frac{\text{instagram acquisition price}}{\text{instagram subs}} \end{equation} \begin{equation} \text{value per Subscriber} = \frac{\text{\$1,000,000,000}}{\text{100,000,000 subs}} \end{equation} \begin{equation} \text{value per Subscriber} = \text{\$10 per subscriber} \end{equation}

whatsapp

  • facebook is mostly first world companies
  • whatsapp has penetration in third world
  • facebook messenger sucks ass
change in growth rates
  • facebook was losing subscribers
  • whatsapp was growing
subscriber value
number of subscribers
700,000,000
price bought
20bn
price / subscriber
28$

valuation methods depend on the industry

short term drivers based on company

industry driver
consumer tech subscribers
enterprise tech revenue
semiconducter tech earnings
hotels revpar
industrials earnings & volume
telecommnications arpu
retail earnings & SSS
biotech FDA approval
definitions
revpar
revenue per available room
arpu
average revenue per users
sss
same store sales
notes
  • same store sales

    • investors want to see that the individual stores grow organically
    • e.g. mcdonalods started staying open all day, and profits skyrocketed
  • fda approval is necessary for biotech

    • no approval no profit
    • once you get it, it's printing money
    • stocks go up or down a ton depending on approval

long term drivers

earnings and cash flow

additional valuation methods

example of IPO

  1. microsoft offers to buy company for 1bn

    • reject it bc too low
    • want to go big
  2. talk to our VC Sequoia for advice

    • they recommend we talk to Goldman sacks
  3. Goldman Sacks recommends we bring in other banks

    • reasons

      • this going to be a large IPO
      • Sequoia wants to spread it out
      • we will have a better job negotiating a good deal if we have more banks
    • banks

      • Morgan Stanly
      • UBS

Goldman Sacks Divisions

Investment Bankers
  • underwrite the IPO

    • legal documents
    • excel valuation

      • what valuation you should use
    • list all the risks "IPO Perspectous"

      • all risks have to be disclosed
      • also called an S-1
Equity Capital Markets (ECM)
  1. write 20 page sales memo for the GS sales team

    • condense information in the S-1 Perspectous
  2. train sales team how to market the deal

    • pros & cons

      • always bring up the risks
    • integrity is key
  3. call clients

    • mutual funds

      • Fidelity
      • Citadel
    • hedge funds
  4. after orders are submitted ECM decides how many share each client gets

    • Goldman and the company doing the IPO negotiate on this

      • Goldman will fight for their own clients
      • companies typically want long term shareholders

        • the clients who understand them
        • companies can always track investors who sell shares

          • SEC law that mutual funds have to disclose every three months what their long positions are
          • companies that don't flip tend to get more shares
  5. Traders then distribute shares to the clients
  6. Goldman wires the IPO proceeeds to the company minus the fees.