Zuckerberg Swings and Misses, but….
With Monti creating a carbon copy move of yesterday, let’s tune in to some thoughts by Biderman on the Facebook situation.
By now there is no question that the Facebook IPO was totally screwed up. Not only was just about every aspect of the deal FUBARed, but the overall size of the deal, $18 billion, magnified the mess. Yes, Nasdaq and Morgan Stanley both did a horrible job. But ultimately the blame for the disaster is solely on Facebook’s 28-year-old CEO Mark Zuckerberg. All final decisions regarding each aspect of the IPO had to be made by Zuckerberg. That is what CEOs do.
I should know. Over the last 40 years in my career I personally have met or talked with over a hundred public company CEOs. What I have learned from that experience is that every company is only as good as the CEO. So going forward ultimately Facebook will only be as good as is Mark Zuckerberg.
Before the IPO was priced I was planning to buy a small amount after the offering and expected to hold it over time. I thought then and still do that Facebook has the potential of becoming a huge financial success. The key word being potential. Even though I gave Mark Zuckerberg strike one for how he handled the IPO I did buy a few FB shares Monday and Tuesday. If there is a strike two, I will sell my shares. On the other hand if Zuckerberg becomes a hitting machine, I will buy more. Full video below.
Herd Behavior
We need Expansion
Stop worrying about debt, inflation and abandon the austerity scheme. Krugman on the way forward saving the Eurozone. Interview via Spiegel online.
SPIEGEL: Mr. Krugman, does Greece have to leave the euro zone?
Krugman: Yes. I don’t see too much alternative now. It’s going to be terrible in the first year if they do leave. So I am really reluctant to say that it’s a little bit like shouting “Fire!” in a crowded theater, but what is the realistic option here? It’s not as if anything anyone’s proposing has any hope at all of getting them out of the mess they’re in.
SPIEGEL: If Greece should leave, will this finally contain the euro crisis or, rather, make things worse?
Krugman: What happens if Greece leaves? Then you have again a bank run in other peripheral countries because they’ve set the precedent. But, again, that could be contained with lending from the ECB (European Central Bank). What has to happen is that the ECB has to be willing to replace all euros withdrawn as is necessary. And I think the case we’re making for that lending becomes a lot easier because the Greeks were actually irresponsible. The Greeks actually did behave badly, and so the political case for unlimited exposure to Greece is very hard to make. A much easier case to make is for Spain and then Portugal and Italy, all of which did nothing wrong on the official side. So you could argue that the bad actor has been ejected, but we need to save the good actors.
A Modest Proposal to fix the Mess
By now majority know Europe is in a mess, but what should we do about it? Below are some proposals by Golem.
I propose our platform should be -
To stop bailing our insolvent banks.
To force private debts back on to those whose debts they were. They pay them or they die trying.
To recapitalize solvent banks to take the place of the insolvent.
To separate the casino from the deposit side of banking.
To raise the bar for ‘confidentiality’ so high you need binoculars to see it. A presumption of open public acces for ANY information for any public or publically traded body.
To roll back and severely limit the rights of corporations as people-like entities. They are not people. They should not have those kind of rights.
To regulate Derivatives.
To declare that all products must be marked to market. No excpetions. Those products the bankers say are hard to price … their problem. No one forced them to make hard to sell and price products.
News That Matters
Ft.com
European leaders put off any decisions on shoring up the region’s banks at a late-night summit on Wednesday despite rising concerns that instability in Greece was undermining confidence in the eurozone’s financial sector. Instead, the heads of the EU’s main institutions were given the task of drawing up proposals for closer fiscal co-ordination in time for another summit next month, including plans that could include a path towards a Europe-wide deposit guarantee scheme and, in the longer term, commonly-backed eurozone bonds. http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/81d5eab0-a539-11e1-b421-00144feabdc0.html
Millions of Egyptians went to the polls to choose a president in a historic election intended to end army rule and usher in a new democratic era more than a year after the uprising which overthrew Hosni Mubarak. Lines formed in front of voting stations and a brisk flow of voters cast their ballots, though turnout in the first of two days of the election appeared lower than in the first post-Mubarak parliamentary poll held late last year. http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/7ed1b966-a43a-11e1-a701-00144feabdc0.html
The shale gas boom in the US has led to a big drop in its carbon emissions, as power generators switch from coal to cheap gas. According to the International Energy Agency, US energy-related emissions of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, fell by 450m tonnes over the past five years – the largest drop among all countries surveyed. http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/3aa19200-a4eb-11e1-b421-00144feabdc0.html
All news below.


Latest comments