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Flopbook,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Syndicate: If You Can Get It, Run The Other Way 

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By Invictus - May 19th, 2012, 4:05PM

Given the insane hype surrounding the Facebook IPO, it should really have come as no surprise to anyone that it’s being perceived as a massive flop. (A search at the NY Times website turns up no articles about Cisco Systems 1990 Initial Public Offering (Feb 16, 1990 at a split-adjusted price of $0.06); it does turn up a story that references Cisco’s Restaurant, Bakery and Bar in Austin, TX). In fact, it has been widely reported that the underwriters had to step in to prevent the stock from falling below its $38 issue price, which would have truly been an unmitigated disaster. YUP While investors stood to make a bit of money from the Facebook IPO (if they timed their sale right), it clearly did not live up to the breathless media coverage of the last several weeks. It was all too reminiscent of the “Countdown to PALM” we were treated to a dozen years ago on CNBC (who remembers that?). And while the contrarian in me wants desperately to get long FB when I see “Experts Say Now’s Not the Time to Buy Facebook,” my gut tends to agree.

The wildcard in the FB offering, to me, was the fact that no one could quantify the brand name recognition and what its potential impact would be on investors’ appetites. With [fill in the blank] hundreds of millions of “users” (however you choose to define them), how many of them would want


LONG ONE, this is the end part


And then came the stock. A flood of it. More than anyone, anywhere, expected. Advisors who’d indicated for stock got more than they’d asked for. Those who didn’t even indicate – or didn’t rank highly enough on the process-driven totem pole to get stock – suddenly found themselves awash in stock they never expected to get, and that they had told clients to forget about. The unconfirmed word was that FB had instructed its underwriters to broaden retail participation (but even that would not account for what was unleashed on retail).

And then the fun began. Given all the regulatory changes of the past few years, clients now need to certify their eligibility to participate in the IPO market. Yes, really, they do. A copy of the form they need to sign and submit can be found here. Well, guess what? Since retail syndicate has more or less become a running joke, no one had these forms on file. Hilarity ensued, as brokers emailed these forms to clients, who signed them and got them back (via fax or scan/email). They then had to be signed off on at both a local level and in document control, which was quickly overwhelmed to the point of multi-hour delays in processing. To all participants’ great credit, however, I hear any and all available resources were thrown at the problem and that, in the end, no one who wanted to participate was unable to do so.

In the end, no harm no foul, I suppose. Morgan Stanley and the syndicate stepped in to support the stock at $38, so no one who’d gotten IPO shares has (yet) taken a loss. Anyone who did not participate in the IPO had the opportunity, late in the day, to buy all they wanted at the IPO price. Who really comes out of this looking the worst, in my very humble opinion, is the media, which just can’t help itself these days. If it had not been all Facebook, all the time, 24/7, for the past month, perhaps this would not now be viewed as such a huge disappointment which, truth be told, it’s not. A new, different type of company (i.e. “social media”) went public – just like CSCO did in 1990. It is, as Zuckerberg said, a milestone, but by no means an end in and of itself. Absent the record-setting hype that surrounded this deal, things worked more or less the way they’re supposed to. It was the ridiculous doubles and triples of the late 90s early 2000s that were the anomalies.

http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2012/05/syndicate-if-you-can-get-it-run-the-other-way/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheBigPicture+%28The+Big+Picture%29




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Realist - Everybody in America is soft, and hates conflict. The cure for this, both in politics and social life, is the same -- hardihood. Give them raw truth.




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