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How did myspace get to be worth $15 Billion? - Printable Version

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How did myspace get to be worth $15 Billion? - hewgnew_342634 - 05-05-2013 06:34 AM

It was bought for $600 million.


- A P - 05-05-2013 06:37 AM

lol okay look myspace got over 500,000,000,000 pages created sooo on each page there is a banner on the top.... even if they get 0.01 per view they make about 6,500,000$ per day TADA


- Bob - 05-05-2013 06:53 AM

It's worth whatever somebody is willing to pay for it in an arms length transaction. I wasn't aware it was for sale. Where did you get the $15bn number?


- sj - 05-05-2013 06:57 AM

Article from the NY Post:

"October 26, 2007 -- If Facebook is worth $15 billion, then MySpace is worth $65 billion.

That's the take of RBC Capital Markets analyst David Bank, who applied the $357 Microsoft ascribed to each of Facebook's 42 million registered users in Wednesday's deal to its larger News Corp. rival's 185 million registered users. (News Corp. also owns The Post.)

Bank put the eye-popping MySpace valuation in a research report yesterday as a way to illustrate that Facebook's implied $15 billion market capitalization isn't an accurate reflection of its actual worth.

Nor is MySpace's $65 billion hypothetical valuation.

"Facebook's true value isn't $15 billion," Bank said. "The deal with Microsoft isn't the same as buying something for $15 billion."

Indeed, at $15 billion, Facebook, which only has $150 million in revenue, is presumably worth more than 1,633 other publicly traded media companies worldwide, including such notable ones as Cablevision, InterActiveCorp., Discovery Communications and Liberty Global.

And at $65 billion, MySpace would be responsible for all but $3 billion of News Corp.'s entire market capitalization - which clearly isn't the case - and would be larger than CBS and Viacom combined.

In reality, Bank said Wall Street currently assigns a roughly $5 billion valuation to MySpace. He said that there aren't enough data points about Facebook available to determine its true value.

But Bank did point out several reasons behind Facebook's lofty valuation. Specifically, Bank said Facebook has greater growth potential than MySpace, if only because the latter has been around longer and is therefore maturing quicker. He added that Facebook is "the darling of a darling space [social networking], which simply gives it a substantial premium."

Bank said there is a way for News Corp. to get a valuation for MySpace on par with or in excess of the $15 billion that Facebook reeled in from Microsoft: sell a minority stake in MySpace to a partner or the public - "especially if all the hype surrounding Facebook continues," he said."

http://www.nypost.com/seven/10262007/business/myspace_love_facebook_value.htm


"In less than 3 years time, MySpace has become one of the top 5 most visited sites in the US, racking up 48 million unique visitors and 27.4B page views in June 2006. While it will probably never come close to the profitability of Google, eBay, or Yahoo, it has the potential to be the Internet’s next “platform” company. It has made for particularly interesting case study material for leapfrogging early social networking leader, Friendster."

http://www.startup-review.com/blog/myspace-case-study-not-a-purely-viral-start.php

Bottom line:
1. Huge Page Views
2. Great Length of Average Time Spent on MySpace by users.
3. Result: Big ad dollars on the net goes to MySpace (News Corp).


- Belovedwool894 - 05-05-2013 07:12 AM

those are just the ridiculous valuations that so called analyst
place on business's that are making no money