At last week’s D10 Conference in California, “disruption” was the predominant theme, according to The New York Times.
- “Everything is being disrupted, including education, stock prices, business models and even our own industry,” said investor and technologist Esther Dyson. “It’s also clearly a world where you can’t count on anything anymore. Google, Facebook, Microsoft and others are simultaneously friends and enemies. There’s clearly a shift in their alliances.”
- One such disruption is Facebook’s recent foray onto Wall Street: “Of course everyone agreed that the recent Facebook IPO, which came out of the gate at $100 billion valuation and just two short weeks later is painfully close to three quarters of that, will inevitably affect the industry for some time,” suggests NYT.
- Co-founder of Freestyle Capital Josh Felser said that because of Facebook’s ongoing struggle, investors will be more cautious. “I think there is a fear that the path to outrageous public market valuations is more treacherous than we all thought. The IPO poster child, Facebook, has been a flop and there is definitely chatter that other IPOs are being delayed.”
- Mary Meeker, partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, described the latest run of initial public offerings by tech companies as “compelling in market value,” but “not compelling in performance.”
- “She cited Facebook, Zynga, GroupOn and Yelp, which are all trading well below their IPO price,” notes the article.
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