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Technology Stocks : Groupon, Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (12)6/3/2011 12:13:12 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 480
 
Deja Vu: Groupon’s Bubble 1.0 Approach To Accounting

blogs.forbes.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (12)6/3/2011 12:19:20 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 480
 
Groupon to Go Public — And Then Where?

streetfightmag.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (12)6/3/2011 12:28:50 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 480
 
Groupon: Doomed to Fail or Worth a Leap? A Twitter Debate

gigaom.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (12)6/3/2011 5:10:24 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 480
 
What are the most notable aspects of the Groupon S-1?

quora.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (12)6/3/2011 9:17:29 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 480
 
Some question Groupon's value after losses disclosed in IPO

By Lorene Yue and Paul Merrion and John Pletz

June 03, 2011

(Crain's) — Groupon Inc.'s IPO offers little reassurance to analysts who are skeptical about the online coupon provider's financial viability.

Its top-line growth is nothing short of phenomenal. Chicago-based Groupon generated $94,000 in revenue in 2008. Two years later, it pulled down $713.4 million, according to a prospectus filed yesterday with the Securities and Exchange Commission. In the first quarter of this year alone, it took in $644.1 million in revenue.

Meanwhile, however, the company lost nearly $390 million, excluding acquisition and other costs, in 2010 and another $103 million for the first three months this year. Last year's total loss was $413.4 million, with its cumulative loss coming to $603.8 million.

The document was the first step in the company's process of going public and stated that Groupon planned to raise up to $750 million in the IPO. Groupon has raised more than $1.1 billion from private investors.

"The numbers are like dropping a rock in a very calm pond," said David Menlow, founder and president of IPOfinancial.com in Milburn, N. J.

Groupon says it was profitable in first-quarter 2010 before deciding to pursue an aggressive marketing campaign to expand in the U.S. and overseas, resulting in a first-quarter loss this year. Its aim: To remain the industry leader amid rising competition from a plethora of small-time copycats to the likes of Google Inc. and Amazon.com-based LivingSocial.com.

"I didn't think Groupon was going to have the revenue push it did," Mr. Menlow said. "I also didn't expect the losses to be such a high percent of revenue."

“They spent a ton of money on a heady growth rate and we worry about that,” said Bill Buhr, IPO strategist at Chicago investment research firm Morningstar Inc. “At some point growth slows down and your financials are upside down.”

Despite the heavy losses, Mr. Menlow believes that "investors don't need to be sold" on buying Groupon shares.

Lou Kerner, a digital-media analyst with New York-based Wedbush Securities, also predicts that Groupon will have no trouble finding investors.

“I think there will be a lot of demand," he said. "You're getting unparalleled growth with Groupon.” As for its losses, he notes that Groupon is spending heavily now to acquire customers it thinks will be profitable over time.

The marketing push is paying off in subscriptions to its daily-deal emails. Subscribers jumped to 83.1 million in the first quarter from 3.4 million a year earlier, while the number of bargains surged to 28.1 million from 1.8 million.

But Mr. Buhr worries that as soon as Groupon stops its costly marketing efforts, subscribers will defect to other outfits. “What people are loyal to is the deal and the price, not the company that provided it,” he said.

“What was scary to me was the extent of that marketing expense,” A.B. Mendez, a research analyst at GreenCrest Capital Management LLC in New York, told Bloomberg News. “It's not yet clear what their longer-term margins will be or when they will be able to get to consistent profitability.”

Groupon announced plans to go public just two weeks after LinkedIn Corp., another social media darling, saw its stock almost triple from its $45 offering price in its first day of trading. LinkedIn's shares have eased off since then, closing at $78.63 on Thursday. That's still roughly 37 times revenues per share. (With no earnings, there is no price-earnings ratio to use as a benchmark.)

If the market values Groupon more conservatively at 20 to 30 times its revenues last year, it could be worth roughly $14 billion to $21 billion “whether it makes sense or not,” said Mr. Buhr. “To us it doesn't.”

The appetite for investing in Internet-based service companies has yet to be whetted despite the February IPO for Pandora Media Inc. and LinkedIn's May offering. Pandora, an online music service, has priced its shares between $7 and $9. Pandora isn't trading yet.

Groupon's filing did not offering pricing details or the number of shares that would be issued. The $750 million figure also appears to be a placeholder for a sum that will be determined later when the company prices its offering. Groupon did, however, state that it will seek the ticker symbol GRPN.

The filing also details ownership of the fast-growing company, which will use a two-class stock structure to give founders Andrew Mason, Eric Lefkofsky and Brad Keywell control of Groupon even after its stock becomes publicly traded.

Mr. Lefkofsky, who bankrolled Groupon founder and CEO Mr. Mason with $1 million, owns 21.6% of Class A stock and 41.7% of Class B shares. His longtime business partner, Mr. Keywell, owns 6.9% of Class A shares and 16.7% of Class B stock.

Mr. Mason owns 7.7% of the Class A shares and 41.7% of Class B shares. The 30-year-old CEO, who dropped out of the University of Chicago's public policy graduate school to launch Groupon, borrowed $144,000 from the company to buy 1.8 million shares of stock.

According to the filing, Mr. Mason's salary was just $180,000 last year, but he volunteered to reduce his salary this year to $575.

But the company has had to spend up to attract top-flight talent as it prepares to go public. President and Chief Operating Officer Margo Georgiadis recently was hired from Google at a salary of $500,000. She also received 1.1 million shares of restricted stock.

Chief Financial Officer Jason Child, brought in from Amazon.com, is paid $350,000 and received $9.4 million in stock. Rob Solomon, an ex-Yahoo executive who is leaving as president and chief operating officer this summer, had an annual salary of $350,000 and received stock options valued at $5.1 million.

Groupon, which got its start off a previous website called the Point, has become one of the fastest-growing companies in the nation. The firm, which has more than 7,000 employees and operates around the world, offers its subscribers discounted deals to retailers, restaurants and services.

The company has sold more than 70 million Groupons since its founding.

"If you're thinking about investing, hopefully it's because, like me, you believe that Groupon is better positioned than any company in history to reshape local commerce," Mr. Mason wrote in the company's prospectus. "The speed of our growth reflects the enormous opportunity before us to create the more efficient local marketplace. As with any business in a 30-month-old industry, the path to success will have twists and turns, moment of brilliance and other moments of sheer stupidity."

Also in the filing, the company wrote: "We anticipate that our operating expenses will increase substantially in the foreseeable future as we continue to invest to increase our subscriber base, increase the number and variety of deals we offer each day, expand our marketing channels, expand our operations, hire additional employees and develop our technology platform."

One way that Groupon has stayed ahead of the curve is buying competitors. With a bigger cash hoard from the IPO, it “will definitely try to buy up some (more) of the competition,” said Josef Schuster, president of Chicago-based IPOX Schuster LLC, a Chicago-based investment firm specializing in IPOs. In the long run, “that can't be good for the stock price.”



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (12)6/3/2011 9:41:04 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 480
 
Just another payday for the Groupon gang
___________________________________________________________

By John Pletz

June 03, 2011

(Crain's) — Groupon's initial public offering may turn out to be the biggest payday for its founders and other insiders, but it's far from the first.

Founders Eric Lefkofsky, Bradley Keywell and Andrew Mason, along with some early investors in the daily-deal site, pocketed hundreds of millions of dollars in private sales of Groupon stock last year.

The value of their remaining holdings will depend on the per-share price of the IPO. But it's clear those shares will be worth billions.

The numbers show the amount of wealth created in just three years since Groupon's founding. And the share sales reveal the extent to which insiders at hot start-ups can cash in on pre-IPO buzz before the company becomes subject to stock market fluctuations and full-fledged Wall Street scrutiny.

According to the prospectus filed yesterday for the $750-million IPO, Groupon valued its shares at $15.80 for internal purposes in February. The stock could be worth much more if Groupon enjoys the kind of investor interest seen by LinkedIn, another Internet company that saw shares climb 30% en route to its IPO.

At the $15.80 price, Mr. Lefkofsky holds shares worth at least $1 billion. Mr. Lefkofsky, who bankrolled Mr. Mason with $1 million, also pocketed $390 million selling shares to later investors, including New Enterprise Associates Inc. and Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz.

Mr. Lefkofsky, 42, owns the shares through entities jointly held by him and his wife, Elizabeth.

Mr. Keywell, 41, sold $157 million in stock, but still holds $326 million in shares through an entity owned 80% by his wife, Kimberly, and 20% by his children.

Mr. Mason, 30, sold stock worth $27.9 million and still holds shares worth $371 million.

Venture capital fund NEA, a frequent backer of Mr. Lefkofsky's projects and Groupon's first outside investor, sold shares worth $70 million and holds stock worth $691 million.

Accel Partners sold $20 million worth of stock and holds shares worth $262 million.

Others who've cashed out include former board member John Walter. The former CEO of R.R. Donnelley & Sons Co. sold shares worth $28 million.

Kenneth Pelletier, an early Groupon employee who stepped down as chief technology officer in late March, sold shares worth $11 million and still holds stock worth $17 million.

Rob Solomon, who joined Groupon in early 2010 and stepped down as president and chief operating officer in March, cashed in stock options worth $4.9 million and holds options on shares worth $21 million after exercise costs.

Shareholders of CityDeal, a German-based daily-deal company bought by Groupon in May 2010, cashed out $170 million worth of stock and still hold a 10% stake in the company worth $484 million.



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (12)6/3/2011 9:48:11 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 480
 
Groupon S-1 Reveals Business Model Deteriorating in Oldest Markets

businessinsider.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (12)6/3/2011 3:00:06 PM
From: stockman_scott1 Recommendation  Respond to of 480
 
Yep, this new IPO might be a screaming buy...LOL...

Groupon is Effectively Insolvent

JUN 03, 2011 9:40 AM

I'll start by tipping my hat to Andrew Mason. He caught social mood just right, creating a coupon/local/flashmob hybrid business model at the perfect time, and has created the fastest-growing company on a revenue basis in American history. That being said, it's operating like a Ponzi scheme that needs constant infusions of cash to stay afloat as it's hemorrhaging money.

We'll start by looking at the balance sheet, which is typically a waste of time for hypergrowth companies. However, for Groupon there are all kinds of red flags. They have $290 million in current assets ($208 million in cash) and $520 million in current liabilities -- current assets minus current liabilities puts them $230 million in the hole. This wouldn't be a problem except for the fact that they're wildly unprofitable, which we'll get to...

minyanville.com



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (12)6/4/2011 5:28:30 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 480
 
Groupon IPO to deal new members into Chicago's billionaires club

chicagotribune.com

Chairman Eric Lefkofsky could become city's wealthiest person; CEO Andrew Mason, co-founder Brad Keywell would also join top list, and how they use their money likely to influence area business & philanthropy

By Melissa Harris
The Chicago Tribune
June 5, 2011

For decades, some of the same names — Pritzker, Crown, Wrigley — have ranked near the top of any list of Chicago's wealthiest people. And they have displayed it by tacking their names on everything from fountains to athletic fields to libraries.

But a company called Groupon, started less than three years ago by a graduate school dropout, is about to upend that.

If Groupon's initial public offering values the company at close to $30 billion, as some say it will, Chairman Eric Lefkofsky would become Chicago's richest man. His remaining stock in Groupon would be worth $6.48 billion. That excludes at least the $382 million he and his wife earned from prior sales of the stock and money generated from the IPOs of two other businesses Lefkofsky founded.

Put another way, Lefkofsky's remaining Groupon stock alone would exceed the entire net worth of Chicago's current wealthiest man, real estate magnate and Tribune Co. Chairman Sam Zell, whom Forbes estimated in March to be worth $5 billion.

At a $30 billion valuation, Groupon Chief Executive Andrew Mason would hold stock worth $2.31 billion. That would make the 30-year-old the fifth- or sixth-wealthiest person in Chicago on Forbes' list, behind Beanie Babies co-founder Ty Warner and ahead of hedge fund manager and Citadel CEO Kenneth Griffin. (Oprah is one step ahead of Warner.)

Company co-founder Brad Keywell, 41, would hold stock worth $2.07 billion through a family-controlled entity. He also would move into the top 10, possibly placing him ahead of Thomas Pritzker, Penny Pritzker and William Wrigley Jr.

There is no way to predict Groupon's worth until the IPO, plans for which were announced Thursday. But given the exuberant market for brand-name tech stocks, a high number is certain. Sources told the New York Times it will be $30 billion; others cite a lower number of about $20 billion.

Other people connected to Groupon also stand to become rich. Members of Chicago's tech community say it is important that some of those other people are midlevel Groupon employees, who later could use their wealth to start businesses.

"Even if only a fraction of that $6 billion gets into the hands of the twenty- and thirty-somethings running the show there it will be enough to shake up the tech and startup scene here in a very good way," Leon Chism, the chief technology officer of Analyte Health, wrote in a blog post in December, when Groupon was weighing a $6 billion offer from Google to buy the company, which it rejected.

Chism, however, added an important caveat: The city would reap a windfall only "provided our newly minted million- and billionaires don't head for warmer climes themselves. Or sit on their cash."

Although the three co-founders will become extraordinarily rich, they are expected to exercise that wealth differently from the old guard and possibly from each other.

"The way they're going to do things is hard for anybody to predict because it is going to be so creative and so entrepreneurial," said Mae Hong, director of the Chicago office of Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors. "They're going to do things most people have not thought of before."

Lefkofsky echoed that thought in a long blog post he wrote last year about his business philosophy and Lightbank, the venture capital firm he and Keywell founded.

"We're drawn to creating things that don't exist, but should, and nothing like Lightbank exists," Lefkofsky wrote.

Lefkofsky sits on the boards of the Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Museum of Contemporary Art, Art Institute of Chicago and Children's Memorial Hospital. So far, his philanthropic work has been traditional, coming in the form of donations from his private family foundation. In 2009, the most recent year IRS records are available, the foundation gave its largest donations to the two art museums and the Jewish United Fund. In total, the couple gave more than $1 million.

That was before Groupon's ascent.

Lefkofsky is passionate about art, while Keywell is an avid reader. In addition to writing a book and co-authoring a children's book with his daughter, Keywell's website lists more than 60 books he recommends and states that he tries to regularly read 14 publications, from The Economist to Transport Topics to ARTnews.

Of the three co-founders of Groupon, Keywell has spent the most time on projects outside of Lightbank. In addition to leading Gov. Pat Quinn's Innovation Council, Keywell served on former Mayor Richard Daley's technology infrastructure council and his Chicago-China Friendship Initiative.

And Keywell has begun laying a legacy with Chicago Ideas Week, which will launch in October. Although the week will include several VIP dinners, most of the events, including lectures and behind-the-scenes tours of area businesses, will be open to the general public and cost $15 or less to attend.

"They could have a democratizing effect," Hong said of Groupon's founders. "They could lower the barriers to entry for ordinary people to participate in things they normally wouldn't be able to participate in. In a lot of ways, that was the whole premise of how Groupon started, making it easy for people to try new things."

Of all of Groupon's founders, the least is known about Mason's interests. That's largely because he has been known to work around the clock, calling Lefkofsky at home in the middle of the night, for instance. He has had time for little else.

But he is passionate about music and social activism. He majored in music as an undergraduate at Northwestern University and dropped out of the University of Chicago's graduate public policy program to start Groupon's predecessor, The Point. While Groupon leverages the masses to obtain discounts, The Point tries to leverage the masses to get involved in social causes.

Mason has started a small private foundation here, indicating a long-term commitment to the city. But he also has had some harsh words for Chicago as of late.

"My biggest mistake was waiting to open an office in Silicon Valley," he told technology blogger Kara Swisher during an interview at the AllThingsD conference in California last week, according to a live blog of his remarks. "Chicago is a great town, but it doesn't have the depth of talent that you guys have."

Perhaps he'll set out to use his new riches to change that.

Tribune reporter Wailin Wong contributed.

Melissa Harris can be reached at mmharris@tribune.com or 312-222-4582.

Twitter @ChiConfidential

Copyright © 2011, Chicago Tribune



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (12)6/4/2011 5:59:19 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 480
 
The deal: Groupon IPO has gall
_______________________________________________________________

By DAVID ROEDER
Columnist
The Chicago Sun-Times
Jun 4, 2011

In the industry that tracks initial public offerings, there is a need for winners. The IPO market has been in a slump for years, and it just recently has perked up with interest in a new generation of companies that show potential for making money from the Web.

Hedge funds and other managers of huge sums want to believe Groupon will work, because they will cash in on the early, discounted price of a successful IPO. Finding that kind of easy money has been beyond most managers’ abilities lately.

In Chicago, Groupon’s home, the need to believe almost aches in the business community.

Civic boosters see a company employing 2,100 people in Chicago, about the number of people who work at the Oak Brook headquarters of McDonald’s (MCD). Groupon was just a tiny startup in 2008.

Chicago never had much of a share of the great technology boom, and Groupon could fix that. It would certify the city as a hospitable place for innovation. With a business that connects merchants to new customers via coupon offers, Groupon is a perfect fit for Chicago, once the mail-order capital of the world.

With its headquarters in the old Montgomery Ward complex at 600 W. Chicago, the symbolism couldn’t be stronger.

Rooting for Groupon in some quarters is an article of faith. But the prospectus it filed for its IPO is enough to rattle most believers.

Groupon has lost $540 million since its launch. It spends heavily to enter new cities and vie for new customers, and the company does not project when it will turn a profit.

In a letter to potential shareholders that was part of the IPO filing, co-founder and chief executive Andrew Mason spoke with the disarming candor of a hip tech executive and made three points: We will make mistakes, we will spend profligately and we will be distracted from our core business. Dividends? In your dreams.

It’s an interesting way to solicit money. Mason is trying to say that Groupon wants to create a sustainable brand that one day will operate on such a scale that its vast marketing expenses will shrivel by comparison.

“If people go to Groupon the way they go to Facebook or Amazon [AMZN] or eBay, [EBAY] then they have a viable business model. I don’t know if they’re going to get that,” said Bill Buhr, IPO strategist at Morningstar.

He thinks Groupon’s challenge is maintaining customer loyalty. A Bloomberg story said with the news service’s customary aplomb that Groupon has 482 competitors, but it didn’t cite a source for the count. Still, the competition is vast and now “coupon aggregators” are on the Web.

One thing Groupon has gotten right is the timing for going public, Buhr said.

“I don’t think they wanted to do it this quickly, but LinkedIn [LNKD] showed there is a huge demand for this space,” he said.

Mason’s letter talks about his commitment to constantly reinventing the company. And he draws investors’ attention away from such mundane measures as net income to something new, Adjusted Consolidated Segment Operating Income, or Adjusted CSOI.

“[W]e think of it as our operating profitability before marketing costs incurred for long-term growth,” he wrote.

Buhr said it’s a red flag when companies highlight “some number that they just made up.”

Mason also wrote: “In the past, we’ve made investments in growth that turned a healthy forecasted quarterly profit into a sizable loss.”

They could do that with seed money, then second-stage investor money, then money from preferred shares sold privately, and now they propose to do that with IPO proceeds that are unquantified at this point. The $750 million in the filing is just to whet appetites. Some experts think Groupon could raise $3 billion.

The banks running this deal could make a fortune. Employees could get rich by selling out. Great for them. As for the rest of us, we can’t say we weren’t warned.

Can Groupon issue a half-off coupon on itself?

____________

THE CLUB SCENE: Analysts at William Blair & Co. were impressed with the latest quarterly results for warehouse club Costco Wholesale (COST), despite a surprising $49 million charge to write down the value of inventory. The charge caused profit to miss targets.

The Blair team said it would buy the stock on weakness. Costco closed Friday at $77.81 and the shares have fallen from around $83 in mid-May.

CLOSING QUOTE: On criticism of an escalating pay package for CME Group (CME) chief executive Craig Donohue despite the stock showing subpar returns, “The stock hasn’t performed. No one is happy about that. We are doing very well as a company but for whatever reason the stock hasn’t performed so they have to withhold vote on his compensation. I don’t think it’s appropriate but at the same time we will deal with the shareholders at the meeting and explain our viewpoint on why it’s appropriate to keep someone like Craig at the compensation we have today." —CME Group Executive Chairman Terrence Duffy on Fox Business Network. CME’s annual meeting is Wednesday.

Copyright © 2011 — Sun-Times Media, LLC



To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (12)6/4/2011 3:17:03 PM
From: stockman_scott1 Recommendation  Respond to of 480
 
Groupon S-1: Mind The Ratios

bostonvcblog.typepad.com