Business

Facebook to go public in $10B IPO

Facebook might finally be laying down the groundwork for a highly anticipated initial public offering, giving the social media company a value of $100 billion.
A Facebook executive speaks to members of the media last month. The company is believed to be planning an IPO early next year. (Susanne Lindholm/Associated Press)

Facebook might finally be laying down the groundwork for a highly anticipated initial public offering, long expected to take place sometime after April 2012.

The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the world's largest online social network is looking into raising as much as $10 billion in its IPO. The Journal cited people familiar with the matter but did not identify them by name.

The amount would value Facebook at as much as $100 billion. That's more than four times the market capitalization that Google Inc. had at the time of its 2004 IPO.

(The $100 billion value for the company is bigger than the $10 billion IPO price because Facebook will only sell about 10 per cent of the company to the public initially. The remained 90 per cent will remain privately held for now.)

Federal rules require companies with at least $10 million in assets and more than 500 shareholders to disclose its quarterly financial results and other details. The reporting requirement kicks in 120 days after the fiscal year in which a company exceeds the shareholder threshold for the first time.

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Facebook's fiscal year ends Dec. 31, so it would have until late April 2012 to comply with this requirement, having hit the threshold this year.

Fast growth

Founded in a Harvard dorm room in February 2004, Facebook has tried to hold off on an IPO to focus on building its product rather than pleasing investors. But the reporting rules, along with early employees and investors eager to cash in on their stock, are putting it in a bind.

A slew of smaller Internet and social media companies have been trickling on to the public stock market this year. Professional online network LinkedIn Corp. was the first to test the waters in May. Since then, the online deals site Groupon Inc., the Internet radio station Pandora Media Inc. and others have gone public. Others, including the reviews site Yelp Inc. and the online game company Zynga Inc., are planning to do so.

Though hotly anticipated, the latest crop of Internet IPOs has not gone smoothly. Groupon's stock is now trading below its IPO price. It closed at $15.24 on Monday, down 23.8 per cent from its $20 IPO price. Pandora has also fallen below its IPO price, though LinkedIn, among the few that's been profitable, is still well above it.

An email seeking comment from Facebook, which is based in Palo Alto, Calif., was not immediately returned Tuesday morning. Facebook has declined to comment on IPO speculation in the past.

With files from CBC News