Facebook Market Value Tops $100 Billion

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Balasubramani Mariappan

Facebook Inc. (FB)’s market value passed $100 billion amid optimism that the world’s largest social network can bolster sales from mobile advertising.

The stock increased 1.9 percent to $41.34 at the close in New York. Earlier, it touched $41.94, the highest intraday price since Facebook’s first trading day on May 18, 2012. The shares have advanced 55 percent this year, compared with a 16 percent gain in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.

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Concern about Facebook Inc.’s ability to sell more ads for wireless devices weighed on the shares after its $16 billion IPO, the largest technology offering on record. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

 Gene Munster, an analyst at Piper Jaffray Cos., talks about Facebook Inc.’s second-quarter results and the outlook for the company. Surging demand for mobile advertising helped profit and revenue top analysts’ estimates in the second quarter yesterday. Munster speaks with Emily Chang on Bloomberg Television’s “Bloomberg West.” (Source: Bloomberg)

The burgeoning market value is a turnabout for Facebook, which slumped as low as $17.73 in September. Concern about Facebook’s ability to sell more ads for wireless devices weighed on the shares after its $16 billion IPO, the largest technology offering on record. In a sign that Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg is making progress in mobile, Facebook last month said promotions on smartphones and tablets generated 41 percent of quarterly advertising revenue, helped by new marketing tools.

“The market is gaining confidence that Facebook is going to be a viable profit-generating machine in the future,” said Laurence Balter, an analyst at Oracle Investment Research in Fox Island,Washington. “People are checking their Facebook page more and more all the time.”

P/E Ratio

Facebook shares are now trading at about 180 times earnings. That’s a greater price-to-earnings ratio than all except three companies in the S&P 500, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. A higher multiple can signal that investors think the company may report stronger profit growth in the future.

At a market valuation of $100.7 billion, the Menlo Park, California-based company joins a list of technology companies worth more than $100 billion that includes online retailerAmazon.com Inc. (AMZN), valued at about $130 billion, and chipmaker Intel Corp., which has a market capitalization of about $111 billion. Still, Facebook remains much smaller than iPhone maker Apple Inc. (AAPL), the most valuable U.S. company at more than $450 billion, and Google Inc. (GOOG), with a market capitalization of about $289 billion.

Facebook stock is approaching its all-time high of $45, an intraday record it set on the day of its trading debut.

The shares have climbed 56 percent since July 24, when the company reported second-quarter results that topped analysts’ estimates. Revenue rose 53 percent to $1.81 billion, topping the average prediction of $1.62 billion. Profit excluding certain items was 19 cents a share, while analysts had projected profit of 14 cents.

As it makes strides in mobile advertising, Facebook is pruning features that are underperforming. The company is phasing out physical goods from its gift-giving feature, which let users buy and send items to their friends through the website. Instead, the service will focus on gift cards, which made up about 80 percent of the program’s transactions since it was unveiled late last year, the company said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Brian Womack in San Francisco atbwomack1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Pui-Wing Tam at ptam13@bloomberg.net

Apple Tells Us Why iPhone Is the Best After Galaxy S4 Launch

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You’ve seen the specs: a 5-inch screen with 441 pixels per inch, 1080p display, a quad-core 1.9GHz processor and a 13-megapixel camera. Feature for feature, Samsung‘s next-generationGalaxy S4 has the iPhone beat.

But just two days after the S4’s launchApple released a webpage explaining why its flagship smartphone is better than the competition.

“There’s iPhone. And then there’s everything else,” the page’s headline blares. Apple goes on to cite all the reasons why its phone is “unlike anything else,” some of which are listed below:

  • The iPhone has received eight consecutive J.D. Power and Associates awards for customer satisfaction with consumer smartphones.

  • Only the iPhone and other Apple products have Retina display.

  • The iPhone has a long battery life — including up to eight hours of talk time — while maintaining a “thin and light design.”

  • The iPhone has “ultrafast” wireless and LTE.

  • Only the iPhone and other Apple products have access to the iTunes Store and the App Store, which offers over 800,000 apps. What’s more, they are all reviewed by Apple to protect against malware.

  • Only the iPhone has Siri, the intelligent personal assistant.

Check out the entire list, here.

What do you think of Apple’s reasons to use the iPhone?