Facebook’s new privacy plan: Stitch wings on a pig 6 Mar 2019 Boss Mark Zuckerberg is extolling the virtues of small, closed networks, the antithesis of the behemoth he created. His manifesto borrows from Snap, WeChat and Apple, creating service-like revenue but jeopardizing advertising. It raises the question of whether he’s serious.
Three digital ad giants are no better than two 20 Feb 2019 Google and Facebook’s combined share of U.S. online advertising is poised to fall for the first time this year. The reason: Amazon is taking a bite out of their slice. Even a muscular challenger does little to reduce the case for tighter regulation.
Verisign may be the real dot-com monopoly 19 Feb 2019 Facebook, Google and others are under fire for social-media dominance. But $21 bln Verisign exclusively manages .com domains. The U.S. government just extended its contract and allowed price increases. With a 63 pct operating margin in 2018, it’s already sitting on a gold mine.
German $6 bln non-LBO is sign of lean buyout times 15 Feb 2019 Hellman & Friedman and Blackstone are buying classifieds group Scout24. They can’t pile much debt on it, and the return looks way off the level investors usually expect. With buckets of cash, private equity needs to do deals. Buying fast-growing targets offer a little security.
Amazon, NYC shoot selves and each other in foot 14 Feb 2019 Jeff Bezos’s company is ditching its Big Apple HQ plan after local opposition to the $3 bln in incentives it would receive. It makes Amazon look short-term greedy and uninterested in community concerns. Punchy politicians, meanwhile, have cost the city jobs and tax revenue.
Hadas: Four principles for regulating the internet 14 Feb 2019 The web needs watchdogs, and they need guidelines. Make internet operations a privilege, not a right. Replace neutrality with a duty of care. Keep big data within strict limits. Provide ample honest information. These ideas will make the internet less profitable, but much better.
SoftBank’s Einstein pitch fails relativity test 6 Feb 2019 Masayoshi Son invoked the Nobel Prize winner’s theories to argue the Japanese group is worth $110 bln more. But adjust his sums for low liquidity and the possibility of squandered cash, and the black hole is small. Massive objects like the Vision Fund distort the laws of physics.
Singapore’s Grab tempts headquarters curse 1 Feb 2019 The ride-hailing app plans to occupy a newly designed $135 mln building, under an 11-year lease. From Myspace to Yahoo, lavish moves have been a bad omen. Grab has cash, but is young, unprofitable and in a fierce rivalry with Go-Jek. Tech optimism may have gone too far again.
Big Brother startups offer white knuckle returns 24 Jan 2019 Facial recognition startups SenseTime and Megvii are in fundraising mode. Video surveillance in China is tipped to be a $20 bln industry by 2022. Sticky questions could result in volatile valuations, but Beijing’s resolve to watch its citizens closely will drive growth.
Elliott puts eBay’s parts up for auction 22 Jan 2019 The $30 bln online merchant has a history of spinning off bits of itself. It has, though, missed opportunities in its core business. While the activist may persuade eBay to offload StubHub, for example, the big payoff could be selling the marketplace unit to a buyer like Walmart.
PetSmart shows lenders need more bite than bark 9 Jan 2019 Apollo Global helped finance the private-equity-owned company, only to see it transfer part of a key subsidiary to owner BC Partners as a dividend. Now Apollo is suing to get the assets back on leash. Lenders would do better to insist on much tighter covenants from the get-go.
Superapps will starve the rest in Southeast Asia 2 Jan 2019 Cash is being lavished on giants, Grab and Go-Jek, which dabble in everything from ride-hailing to groceries. It’s a Chinese approach to snaring online consumers. As investors follow SoftBank and Tencent’s seal, the gap will widen between these “do it all” outfits and the rest.
ASOS bloodbath undermines online saviour status 17 Dec 2018 The fashion group’s grim outlook knocked 40 pct off its shares. Internet retailers were supposed to be more robust than bricks-and-mortar peers, which have high staff and rent costs. Rising competition and fickle customers suggest slower growth and lower margins are here to stay.
Review: The attack of the killer fridges has begun 14 Dec 2018 The world is ever more connected via the internet, from cars and power grids to home appliances and toys. That means ever more things are dangerously hackable, security expert Bruce Schneier writes in “Click Here to Kill Everybody.” His title isn’t as hyperbolic as it may sound.
Google finds Congress still searching for a clue 11 Dec 2018 U.S. lawmakers who grilled company chief Sundar Pichai failed to land a blow, and showed themselves ill informed about what the search engine actually does. The knowledge gap is risky for tech firms, because it increases the risk of regulation that misses the mark.
Yelp activist push is worthy of five stars 10 Dec 2018 The $3 bln online review site has gone through management fumbles, fierce competition and a slumping share price. No wonder investor SQN is calling for fresh thinking. With Google and Facebook fighting bigger battles, Yelp should be doing better at winning over small advertisers.
Three roads lead to three $830 bln-ish values 6 Dec 2018 Apple, Microsoft and Amazon.com are neck-and-neck as the biggest companies by market cap. The valuations of the mature iPhone cash cow, enterprise-software giant and e-commerce behemoth may be similar, but they reflect the rock-paper-scissors opportunities and risks each faces.
Mark Zuckerberg pushes wrong kind of independence 15 Nov 2018 Facebook’s CEO is setting up an external committee to police fake news and hateful content after more revelations about how he and others dealt with Russian meddling. But outsourcing decisions won’t fix Facebook’s culture. Removing Zuckerberg as chair would be a good first step.
Snap shareholders deserve little sympathy 14 Nov 2018 Some are suing the social-media firm for misleading them before its IPO about competition from Instagram. Now U.S. watchdogs are conducting a probe. Bad conduct deserves punishment. But investors willingly bought stock with no rights in an immature company with lots of rivals.
Google staff protests point to growing labor clout 2 Nov 2018 They were aimed at the company’s failures in tackling sexual harassment. Ditto at McDonald’s a few weeks ago. When executives at such different firms have to listen, though, it’s another sign – backed up by the latest U.S. jobs data – that workers are becoming a scarce commodity.