Attention: Tech Stocks About To Surge?

With King Digital going public and Facebook’s $2 Billion acquisition, The Daily Ticker asks “Are we on the verge of another tech bubble?”

Idiots. 

On “the verge” implies that today’s valuation are normal and we are about to experience a huge run up, leading to an eventual “bubble”. We are in a massive bubble already. Today. Thanks to the FED and their monetary policy or lack thereof. The valuations are at astronomical levels and today’s active IPO market is a clear indication of that. Further, with our mathematical and timing work clearly predicting a severe bear market and a US recession between 2014-2017, the bubble is about to POP.  

Dumb and Dumber (Screengrab)

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Attention: Tech Stocks About To Surge?  Google

Daily Ticker Are we on the verge of another tech bubble?

Shares of King Digital Entertainment (KING), the mobile game maker of the popular Candy Crush, started  trading today for the very first time but below an IPO price of $22.50 a share which valued the company at  $7.1 billion. In early trading shares were down about 8% at $20.70.

Facebook (FB) announced it’s buying virtual reality firm Oculus VR for $2 billion--$400 million in cash plus stock–just five weeks after it announced a $19 billion acquisition of WhatsApp. Oculus makes virtual reality goggles used to play video games, but Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Tuesday he plans to expand its platform to include education, medicine and more.

Finally, Box Inc., a cloud storage company, announced Monday plans to raise $250 million through an IPO.Unlike King Digital, which had profits of more than half a billion dollars last year, Box has been operating at a growing deficit despite increasing revenues.

Could we be on the verge of another tech bubble?

“Don’t insult the real bubble of the 1990s,” says Henry Blodget, though he admits “some valuations are breathtaking,” like King’s. Its “numbers are already shrinking,” says Blodget. “I don’t know anyone who plays Candy Crush anymore.”

There are no current numbers for Oculus. Its virtual reality headset is available only as a prototype for developers and not for sale to consumers. “This is as speculative as you can get,” says Blodget. This acquisition is unlike Facebook’s other recent buys: $1 billion for Instagram, a company with 100 million users and $19 billion for WhatsApp with 450 million users (growing at a rate of 1 million users a day).

Most people have never used the Oculus virtual reality headset but those “who have tried it say it’s mind-blowing,” says Blodget. Still, he warns, “there’s a very good chance that this thing is worth zero in two years.”

Warning: Are Silicon Valley Nerds About To Eat It….Again?

Yes, we are indeed playing the game of musical chairs here. Today’s valuations are out of sync by any measure, particularly for the high tech start ups like Facebook, Twitter, Tesla, etc… Are these companies about to collapse as their predecessors did in the early 2000? 

My answer might surprise you…. 

NO. Nasdaq will not collapse to the extent it did in 2000-03 in the upcoming bear market of 2014-2017. At least based on my mathematical and timing work. Sure, the companies above will decline to the X multiple of the market when the bear market accelerates, but they will NOT collapse to the tune of 90-95% as they did back then. For instance, while it is highly unlikely that Facebook drops into the single digits over the next 3 years, it is likely Facebook will decline from today’s price of $70 to about $20. Making it a fairly good short bet.

Again, please do your own research and make your own investment decisions. Timing is the most important element here. If you would like to get it right, please check us out here.  

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Silicon Valley Nerds About To Eat It….Again. Google 

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Not many executives have seen their companies double in value in one day. Peter Bardwick has seen it twice. Bardwick was chief financial officer of financial news site MarketWatch when it started initial trading on Jan. 15, 1999, at $17 a share. By day’s end it hit $97.50, for a market value exceeding $1 billion. Fourteen years later, on Sept. 20, 2013, Bardwick, now CFO of digital advertising firm Rocket Fuel(FUEL), watched its stock almost double in value on its first day of trading.

Amid such Day One stock pops, high valuations, and buoyant equity markets, warnings of an asset bubble are again echoing across Silicon Valley. Nasdaq’s(NDAQ) 38 percent climb last year, and deals such as Facebook’s (FB) recent agreement to spend as much as $19 billion on fledgling messaging service WhatsApp, have added to worries about a crash like the one that sent the Nasdaq Composite Index plummeting about 80 percent from its March 2000 peak. By the end of 2004, 52 percent of dot-com startups that had sought venture capital—including investor darlings Pets.com and Webvan.com—were extinct, according to research by the University of Maryland and the University of California at San Diego.

“The real question is whether a crash will occur now or after the markets rise another 30 percent,” says Ian D’Souza, an adjunct professor of behavioral finance at New York University who co-founded Tri-Ring Capital, a technology-focused equity fund. Other investors, bankers, and venture capitalists say too much has changed to put the initial public offering market in danger of imploding now. “Investors have become more discriminating and more focused on the individual businesses,” says Bardwick. “In the ’90s, everything was just going up, and when that stopped, it happened in a really bad way.” MarketWatch never exceeded its opening-day value, falling to a low of $1.26 in 2001 before Dow Jones acquired it in 2005 for $18 a share, just above its IPO price. Rocket Fuel remains at almost double its IPO price.

Last year 208 companies went public in the U.S., raising more than $56 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Their stocks rose an average 21 percent on their first day of trading, the biggest annual average increase since 2000. In their debuts in November, Twitter (TWTR) jumped 73 percent and Zulily (ZU), a shopping website, rose 71 percent.

Companies and bankers are setting initial prices at reasonable levels, according to data compiled by Jay Ritter, a finance professor at the University of Florida. IPOs were priced at a median of 30 times sales in 2000, compared with 5.2 times last year, the data show. MarketWatch traded at 46 times 1999 sales on its first day, while Rocket Fuel’s valuation was 7.6 times 2013 revenue.

Thanks in part to the Fed’s low interest rate policies, startups have been able to delay IPOs while receiving repeated rounds of funding from hedge funds, private equity funds, and institutional investors. That means businesses are older when they go public and have longer sales and profit histories, making it easier for investors to value them accurately. Businesses backed by venture capital or private equity firms were 12 years old on average in 2013 when they went public, compared with six years old in 2000 and four years old in 1999, according to Ritter’s research. Twitter was seven years old at its IPO. “You want to make sure you have a company of reasonable scale before you go public, which ensures much more certainty in the planned financial results,” says Doug Leone, a managing partner of venture capital firm Sequoia Capital.

The median annual revenue for companies going public in 2000 was $17 million, compared with $109 million in 2013, adjusted for inflation, Ritter’s data show. And fewer companies are doing IPOs with no profits. Last year 64 percent of all initial offerings were done by profitless companies, compared with 80 percent in 2000, according to Ritter’s data.

The high cost of going public is a hurdle that discourages smaller companies and may lead to a more stable offerings market. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act, passed in 2002, requires extensive financial disclosure, raising the cost spent on auditors and legal work. “There’s just a much higher bar today,” says Ron Codd, a consultant to companies on the IPO track.

Another element missing this time: The boutique banks that underwrote many of the Internet IPOs in the 1990s don’t exist independently today. They were known as the “Four Horsemen”—Hambrecht & Quist, Montgomery Securities, Alex. Brown & Sons, and Robertson Stephens. None remain independent. Technology IPOs today are underwritten by the larger banks, primarily Goldman Sachs (GS) and Morgan Stanley (MS), which tend to decline underwriting IPOs of smaller companies, says Ritter.

While bankers and venture capitalists are confident about today’s IPO market, the shadow of the dot-com bust lingers. “Now in the Valley, the idea of a bubble is a practical conversation,” says Ted Tobiason, who worked at Robertson Stephens beginning in 2000 and now heads equity capital markets for the technology industry at Deutsche Bank (DB). “It’s a healthy discussion, which gets people to think about risk and not just potential upside.”