Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Recession Wipe USD$ 5B From Facebook Value

SAN FRANCISCO, May 27 — The Russian investors Digital Sky Technologies (DST) paid US$200 million (RM700 million) for a 2 per cent stake in Facebook yesterday, valuing the social networking site at US$10 billion – or two-thirds of what it was worth 18 months ago.

Facebook, which was founded in 2004 and remains a private company, sold a 1.6 per cent stake to Microsoft in October 2007 for US$240 million. That investment valued the whole company at US$15 billion.

The social networking site, which has more than 200 million users, said last night that DST was also looking to buy US$100 million of stock for existing shareholders. DST will not get a seat on the board.

Mark Zuckerberg, the chief executive of Facebook, said the deal with Microsoft was part of a larger partnership and that it had been signed at the “absolute peak of the market”.

The company said the value of the company had fallen because of “changes in the economy” which was in line with the rest of the market. The move to raise cash is part of a plan to fund growth, and Zuckerberg pointed out that the company did not have to raise the extra money.

Facebook said it had been approached by “a number of firms” over a potential cash injection but had chosen DST, a Russian group that specialises in internet investments, because of its “global perspective”.

Zuckerberg added that the company was not actively looking for any other investments at this time.

DST is based in Moscow and London. It is the largest investor in Russian-speaking and eastern European markets, but the Facebook stake is its most high profile international move.

Zuckerberg, who started Facebook when he was studying at Harvard University, said yesterday that despite the move to sell the almost 2 per cent stake, the company was in “no rush to go public any time soon”. The group turned down a US$1 billion takeover attempt from Yahoo in 2006. Zuckerberg added that the company expects to be “cash flow positive” by next year. — Independent

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