Sunday, 3 November 2013

Twitter’s “anti-Facebook” IPO tactics win over some investors

NEW YORK: Institutional investors who met with Twitter Inc. this week say they are optimistic about its initial public offering and see little sign of the irrational exuberance that preceded Facebook Inc.'s splashy coming-out party in 2012.
On Monday and Tuesday, Twitter Chief Executive Dick Costolo and Chief Financial Officer Mike Gupta met with large fund managers and analysts in New York and on the East Coast to sell them on an IPO that seeks to raise up to $1.6 billion for the loss-making social media company.
Closely watched by Wall Street and Silicon Valley, Twitter's relatively conservative offering has differed from Facebook's $16 billion IPO in panoply of ways, from its vastly smaller deal size to a decision to list on the New York Stock Exchange over Nasdaq.
“It definitely was different than when (Facebook CEO Mark) Zuckerberg came through...It's the right kind of buzz,” said one fund manager who met with Twitter on Monday.
“With Facebook, the buzz was just stupid,” said the manager, who declined to be identified because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
Twitter last week said that it would price its IPO shares at $17 to $20 a piece, valuing the online messaging company at up to about $11 billion. That is less than the $15 billion that analysts had expected, and far below the $100 billion valuation that Facebook received in its IPO last May.
However, Facebook had reported an annual profit of $1 billion and revenue of $3.7 billion before it went public, whereas Twitter reported a net loss of $79.4 million on revenue of just $316.9 million in 2012.
At the upper end of its IPO price range, Twitter would be valuing itself at 20 times trailing 12-month sales currently, and about 17 times at the lower end, according to Reuters' calculations from Twitter's IPO filings. But its outstanding share base could swell by tens of millions of stock as holders exercise options and restricted stock units, inflating the valuation.
In comparison, Facebook trades at about 24 times trailing 12-month sales and LinkedIn Corp at roughly 30 times.
Yet the Fund managers viewed Twitter's price range as relatively conservative, basing their perspective on earlier guesses that had pegged the company's range as $28 to $30. Twitter itself mentioned that it had internally valued its own stock at $20.62 as recently as in September.
That has attracted some investors who expect Twitter's shares to climb after they begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Nov 7.
Twitter “is getting a really warm welcome from people,” said Scott Sweet, CEO of research firm IPO Boutique. “Of all the individuals and institutions I've talked to – which include multi-billion dollar hedge funds – no one has said they aren't playing,” Sweet said.
Facebook's float was marred by an 11 per cent drop in the stock on its second day of trade and successive declines over the next few months as investors questioned the company's ability to grow revenue through mobile devices.
It didn't help that, before its debut, Facebook's underwriters raised the size of the IPO by 25 per cent and also hiked the price range. Finally, technical problems with Nasdaq trading systems delayed the start of trade, sowing confusion amongst nervous traders. It took over a year for Facebook shares to reclaim their IPO price.
Another investor, who owns shares in Facebook and LinkedIn, said his firm is approaching all the Twitter underwriters to ask for a 10 per cent allocation, with the hopes of getting between 1.5 to three per cent.
“It's a stupid game that is played...if you can get what you want, then you don't want it,” he said. Some investors say they believe management has learned from Facebook's mistakes and are pricing the deal in a more conservative manner.
“It's the anti-Facebook” said a second fund manager, who also spoke on condition of anonymity and is planning on meeting with management later this week.
Twitter will hold its first large investor lunch in New York on Wednesday, and investor interest is expected to build as the roadshow proceeds. After stops in Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Denver, the roadshow ends in New York next week with pricing scheduled for Nov 6 and trading on the New York Stock Exchange to commence a day later under the ticker symbol “TWTR.”
The company founders “are gazillionaires already. I think they're not going to want to spend the year after the IPO dominated by the argument about 'why we the IPO,'” the second fund manager said. “Life is short

Amazon tries free, on-time delivery to lure India online

Bangalore: Free shipping on a 100 rupee ($1.60) book. Delivery times guaranteed to the minute.
These are some of the incentives the world's biggest online retailer Amazon.com is using to entice Indians to shop on the web, a sector where growth has been stifled by payment problems, low Internet usage and a challenging logistics environment.
Amazon's investors are counting on its international business and expansion to help drive growth and support its $165 billion market value, one of the highest among US firms.
India is Amazon's third emerging market investment after Brazil and China, and one Vice President and Country Manager Amit Agarwal said would take time to pay off.
Most Indians do not own a credit card, and less than half the 152 million Internet users have shopped online. Then there are the bad roads, the snarled bureaucracy and the petty bribery that greases business.
The potential, however, is vast.
Online retail sales in India are forecast to grow more than a hundred-fold to $76 billion by 2021 from just $600 million at the end of 2012, retail consultants Technopak said. E-tail sales in China, by comparison, are expected to grow to $650 billion by 2020 from around $200 billion in 2012, consultants McKinsey predict.
"A lot of invention is required to capture the potential of this market and our focus is to build this," said Agarwal, who returned to India to head Amazon's business after 14 years with the company in the United States.
"We are going through a lot of trial-and-error to fix problems on the ground," he told Reuters at Amazon's India office in the technology hub of Bangalore.
Convincing Indians to Click
Indians, on average, spend between $24 and $35 per online transaction, a figure dwarfed by the $150-$160 spent by US shoppers online per transaction, according to data from US based analysts comScore and Retail Decisions.
Agarwal spent two years advising Amazon's founder Jeff Bezos at the company's Seattle headquarters, and believes Amazon's long-term strategy will work in India like it did in the United States, where the company ran up losses for years.
"Right now we are focused on giving customers great service and making sure they shop more," he added, sitting behind a large desk that he brought back with him from Seattle.
Amazon's biggest local rival is Flipkart, set up by two ex-Amazon employees in 2007 and which has yet to turn a profit.
Since July, Flipkart has raised $360 million from investors that include South Africa's Naspers Ltd. It said it aims to have $1 billion in sales by 2015.
Agarwal would not give any forecasts or figures, but said Amazon's investments in India have a 7- to 10-year horizon.
He said Amazon was building its own logistics network, which it can leverage when the rules change and it can sell directly to consumers. Indian regulations now prevent international e-tailers from making direct sales.
Made for India
Amazon's initial entry into India was through the 2012 launch of Junglee.com, a price comparison site that gave it insight on what consumers want to buy and are willing to pay.
Amazon's India website, set up in June, is currently a market place for other vendors, in line with regulations.
Amazon is working with these local vendors to ensure goods are packaged properly to speed up delivery, Agarwal said. It is also training local couriers to make good on its promised delivery times in Mumbai, New Delhi, Kolkata and Chennai.
"We receive items from sellers in all kinds of situations. Most of them are not packed properly, stickered properly and that increases the delivery time," Agarwal said.
"Even if you go to really large sellers they don't know how to describe their item because they have never had to have a digital catalogue."
An unstable Internet banking system means online payments often fail, frustrating buyers and leading to abandoned purchases. Agarwal said Amazon uses a made-for-India system that keeps orders active and allows the customer to try again. The option of cash on delivery is also offered.
To avoid shipments getting stuck at toll booths or held up by police demanding bribes, Amazon gets all the permissions and documents required, as well as extra permits, just in case.
"We are not cutting corners. It is taking a longer time to build things but compliance is important and that takes care of blockages on the road to a large extent," Agarwal added.

Google releases 1st phone powered by 'KitKat'

San Francisco: Google is selling a new Android smartphone that it hopes will become more like a clairvoyant friend than a piece of hardware.
The Nexus 5 phone unveiled Thursday is the first device to run on Kit Kat, the latest version of Google's Android operating system.
As with previous Nexus phones, the latest will be sold only at full retail price, without subsidies that come with two-year contract agreements. It goes on sale Thursday in Google's online Play store starting at $349, undercutting many rival phones at contract-free prices. The phone will work on most US wireless networks, but not Verizon's. A Nexus 5 model also is available for European markets.
The Nexus 5 and Kit Kat software underscore Google's ambition to ingrain its search engine and virtual assistant, Google Now, even deeper into people's lives. In the process, Google hopes to gather more insights that will enable it to sell more advertising, which generates most of its revenue.
It'll be easier for Google to learn about a person's habits and needs so it can display helpful information, such as an online post from a favorite blog or a suggestion to use Fandango's movie-ticketing service when standing in a long line at a movie theater.
When visiting a tourist attraction such as Yellowstone National Park, Google Now might automatically show information about geysers from the Web.
 
"We want to get to the point where you glance at your phone and it always delights you with what you need,"
said Sundar Pichai, a Google executive who oversees Android.
The new phone's $349 price threatens to lure more cost-conscious consumers away from Apple Inc.'s iPhone, which retails for $649 for the 5S and $549 for the 5C when sold without a traditional two-year service agreement.
In an unusual twist for a software upgrade, Google built Kit Kat so it would work on cheaper smartphones equipped with less computing memory than top-of-the-line devices.
The move reflects the Mountain View, California company's desire to broaden use of the most recent version of Android. More than 1 billion Android devices have been activated, but a significant number are still using a 3-year-old flavour known as Gingerbread. That version remains popular because it works on those cheaper phones.
The mishmash of Android systems has made it tougher on app developers, who haven't been able to fully embrace the new features in previous upgrades without risking older phones not being to run their software. By contrast, Apple makes its iOS upgrades free all at once to several recent models. With Kit Kat, Google has a chance to bring older and cheaper phones up to date.
Google plans to make Kit Kat available for other devices within the next few weeks, but it will be up to individual manufacturers and their wireless carrier partners to decide if and when they will make the update available.
With the release of Kit Kat, Google also has improved its voice recognition technology so it can engage in more meaningful dialogue with users.
Kit Kat also showcases a new feature in Google's search technology to fuse results from the Web and applications installed on a phone. For instance, a request for a certain restaurant will show information drawn both from the Web and the app for the reservation service OpenTable Inc. Initially, only OpenTable and nine other mobile app makers have enabled this, but more are coming. This feature will also show up on other devices, including the iPhone, but for now it works best on the Nexus 5.
The new phone features a screen that measures nearly 5 inches diagonally - about an inch longer than the iPhone - and weighs about 4.6 ounces. That's about the same as the cheaper iPhone 5C, but more than the iPhone 5S's 4 ounces.
The Nexus 5 also includes a feature, called the "dialer," that will display phone numbers pulled directly from the Web instead of just a person's contact list

Arsenal beat Liverpool to open gap at the top

Arsenal maintained their challenge for a first trophy in nine seasons when they beat Liverpool 2-0 at the Emirates Stadium to open up a five-point lead at the top of the Premier League on Saturday.
A brilliantly taken opener from Santi Cazorla, who smacked in a rebound after 19 minutes, and an even better goal from Aaron Ramsey, who struck a swerving shot with the outside of his right boot after 59 minutes, took Arsenal to 25 points from their 10 matches.
Chelsea, who lost 2-0 at Newcastle United after winning their previous six games in all competitions, are second, level on 20 points with third-placed Liverpool.
But Chelsea's performance did not please their boss, Jose Mourinho, who said: "I did not like my team today, I am disappointed."
Manchester City, who beat Norwich City 7-0 at the Etihad Stadium; Southampton, who drew 1-1 at Stoke; and Tottenham Hotspur, who play at Everton on Sunday, all have 19 points, but Spurs can move into second place on 22 if they win at Everton on Sunday.
Champions Manchester United continued their improvement after their sluggish start to the season with a 3-1 win at Fulham, and although they stayed eighth, they gained points on some of the teams above them.
Liverpool, who had won three of their last four league games and drawn the other, started brightly at Arsenal but the home side took a grip on the game after breaking the deadlock.
Ramsey, who has now scored 10 goals this season, told BT Sport: "We got stuck into them and managed to get a goal early, which put us in good shape for the second half, and we managed to finish the job.
"They were full of confidence, they have been in fine form and they showed that early on, but we managed to weather the storm and got the goals."
SLUGGISH CHELSEA
Chelsea, who had also been in good form recently, never got going against Newcastle, and after a drab first half played in the rain at St James' Park, they allowed Newcastle to take control of the game in the second half.
The Magpies went ahead when Yoan Gouffran headed in Yohan Cabaye's accurate free kick directed to the far post after 68 minutes, and Loic Remy stabbed Newcastle's second in off a post after 89 minutes to seal the points.
"I did not like my team today," Mourinho told BT Sport.
"We had a couple of chances to equalise but they were more in the game than us, fought more than us and they were much more committed than us, so they were the best team on the pitch."
HART DROPPED
Manchester City dropped England goalkeeper Joe Hart, although his replacement, Costel Pantilimon, hardly had a shot to save as Manuel Pellegrini's men crushed woeful Norwich.
Hart, who has made a number of errors in recent weeks, watched from the substitutes' bench as six different scorers and an own goal gave City their biggest win in the top flight since 1968 and took them into the top four.
If Norwich's John Ruddy, Hart's England deputy, was hoping to capitalise on his rival's situation, City had other ideas, and Ruddy spent the afternoon picking the ball out of his net seven times.
Pellegrini told the BBC: "Norwich did not have a chance to score, we scored seven and could have scored more."
It was Norwich's second heavy defeat in Manchester in five days, having lost 4-0 to United in the League Cup fourth round on Tuesday, and coach Chris Hughton looked stunned afterwards.
"It's very difficult, I've never suffered a scoreline like that as a manager," he said. "Man City were outstanding today, but if you gift them the types of goals we did, then it becomes difficult to win any football match. We were nowhere near it today."
The rout started when Bradley Johnson put through his own net after 16 minutes and the goals then flowed from David Silva (20th), Matija Nastasic (25th), Alvaro Negredo (36th), Yaya Toure (60th) with a superb free-kick, Sergio Aguero (71st), and a smart finish from Edin Dzeko (86th).
The result left Hughton under increased pressure with his team in the bottom three.
UNITED STROLL
Manchester United, putting their shaky start to the season under new manager David Moyes behind them, were convincing 3-1 winners at Fulham with Antonio Valencia, Robin Van Persie and Wayne Rooney wrapping up the points in the first 22 minutes.
Elsewhere, Sunderland finished with nine men at Hull City after Lee Cattermole and Andrea Dossena were sent off in first-half stoppage time during their 1-0 defeat.
Stoke goalkeeper Asmir Begovic scored one of the quickest goals in English league history, hoofing a huge clearance into Southampton's net with the goal timed at 14 seconds.
Southampton scored a more orthodox equaliser through a Jay Rodriguez header to rescue a point.

10 Things You Should Know About Cristiano Ronaldo


1. Cristiano Ronaldo’s Birthday Date 
Cristiano Ronaldo was born in 1985, on February 5th. He shares his birthday with Whitney Houston’s ex-husband Bobby Brown and he shares his birthday date with Ivory Coast’s Sven Goran Eriksson.Coincidentally, Cristiano Ronaldo also shares his birthday date with Ivory Coast’s Sven Goran Eriksson against whom he’ll come up in Portugal’s first match at the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa! 

2. Cristiano Ronaldo’s First Club Trophy 
Cristiano Ronaldo won his first trophy in 2004 with Manchester Utd in his first year at the club.He motivated and inspired the Red Devils to lift the 2003/2004 FA Cup after defeating Aston Villa and he opened the score sheet after 44 minutes. 

3.Cristiano Ronaldo's Name 
He was actually born as Cristiano Dos Santos Aveiro, but his father who was a huge fan of then-USA president and former actor Ronald Reagan decided to give Cristiano the name “Ronaldo” as his second name, and he has carried his second name on his Real Madrid jersey. 

4. Cristiano Ronaldo For Manchester United’s No. 1000 EPL goal 

5. Cristiano Ronaldo, Portuguese Record Maker 
He arrived ahead of the 2003-2004 season for a fee of 12.24 Million Pounds after impressing SAF and the rest of the United squad during a Sporting Lisbon vs Manchester Utd friendly match. 

6. Cristiano Ronaldo’s Manchester United’s No. 7 Jersey 
The former Sporting Lisbon young player was ordained by Sir Alex Ferguson to wear the Red Devils’ famous number 7 jersey which had been carried by legends such as Georges Best and David Beckham in the past.”After I joined, the manager asked me what number I would like. I said 28. But Ferguson said ‘No, you’re going to have No. 7,’ and the famous shirt was an extra source of motivation. I was forced to live up to such an honor” said Ronaldo. 

7. Cristiano Ronaldo, The EPL Hero 
Cristiano Ronaldo broke yet another record in January 2009 when he became the first player from the English Premier League to lift the FIFA World Player of the Year award.He beat Barcelona’s Lionel Messi and Liverpool’s Fernando Torres to create a new record in the history of the English Premier League and of the FIFA World Player of the year award.Note that Cristiano Ronaldo was also the first Portuguese player to clinch that title since Luis Figo in 2001. 

8. Cristiano Ronaldo, Diego Maradona’s Record Breaker 

9. Cristiano Ronaldo’s Best Young Player Title in Germany 2006 

10. Cristiano Ronaldo, FIFA Ferenc Puskas Award Winner

UK PM to unveil plans for Islamic Market Index

LONDON: Prime Minister David Cameron is launching a new Islamic Market Index on the London Stock Exchange on Tuesday, part of a wider British effort to tap into the burgeoning market in Islamic finance.
According to prepared remarks released to journalists ahead of time, Cameron is expected to say that the British capital is ''the biggest center for Islamic finance outside the Islamic world. And today our ambition is to go further still.''
''I don't just want London to be a great capital of Islamic finance in the Western world,'' he is due to say. ''I want London to stand alongside Dubai as one of the great capitals of Islamic finance anywhere in the World.''
The market in Islamic investments has grown dramatically since 2006, and its value is expected to hit GBP1.3 trillion ($2 trillion) next year. Malaysia's capital, Kuala Lumpur, is regarded as its hub, but London has been courting the industry aggressively.
Islamic finance conforms to Islamic law, or Shariah, which forbids charging interest and requires deals to be based on tangible assets. Speculation is banned, as is dealing in futures. Although still small compared to the world of mainstream finance, Islamic finance is expected to hold growing appeal for Gulf investors seeking to invest oil revenue or pious Muslims who want retail Islamic banking services.
The London index – which would track the ups-and-downs of Shariah-compliant investments – is being launched as Cameron seeks to make Britain the first country outside of the Muslim world to issue an Islamic bond sometime next year. It is expected to be worth around GBP200 million.
The announcements are meant to coincide with the World Islamic Economic Forum being held in London. King Abdullah II of Jordan, Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif are among the nearly 1,800 political and business leaders expected in London for the meeting, which for the first time is being held in a non-Muslim country.

FBR eyes billions in tax from Gulf investments

KARACHI: After having failed to expand the tax net within the country, the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) is embarking on an highly ambitious mission to collect data of rich Pakistanis who have invested hundreds of billions of rupees in real estate in the Gulf countries, mainly the UAE, with the aim to tap into the alleged laundered money for collecting income tax.
At present the authorities have absolutely no clue of the amount that may have been laundered out of Pakistan, and invested into property there.
However, senior officials believe that with the help of the UAE authorities they would identify the tax evaders and collect between Rs300bn to Rs400bn in additional taxes.
A high-ranking official of FBR confided to Dawn on telephone from Islamabad that up to Rs400bn could be collected in direct taxes (income tax) once the government invokes the treaty between Pakistan and UAE for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and prevention of fiscal evasion with respect to taxes on income, and the authorities in the Gulf state agree to provide data of the last five years of all the Pakistani investors.
It is a daunting task as the UAE authorities may not like to disturb their booming property market. The key to this entire exercise is the implementation of the tax evasion treaty.
The official said that sub article (1) of Article 27 of the treaty between the two countries explicitly states: “The competent authorities of the contracting states shall exchange such information (including documents) as is necessary for carrying out the provisions of the convention or of the domestic laws of the contracting states concerning taxes covered by the convention, in so far as the taxation there under is not contrary to the convention, in particular for the prevention of fraud or evasion of such taxes.”
Apart from invoking the bilateral treaty, the FBR’s proposal is based on various conventions of the United Nations, according to which, member states could not become or prove to be safe havens for three types of laundered money: that which is generated through illicit drug trafficking, money from tax evasion and money from malpractices and corruption.
Although all the money invested by Pakistanis in the Dubai real estate market is not illegal or laundered, the official insisted that a substantial amount had been siphoned off or transferred through illegal sources and is unaccounted for in Pakistan.
The official said the government should immediately invoke the treaty so that billions could be recovered in income tax (direct tax), or about 30 per cent of the invested amount, through various sections of the Income Tax Ordinance 2001.
However, the official suggested that the government should give amnesty to those Pakistani investors in Dubai real estate who would bring the laundered money back to the country through proper banking channels, and the law has the provision about it under section 111 (4) of the Income Tax Ordinance 2001.
This would greatly help the country improve its fast-depleting foreign exchange reserves, he said, adding that strong political will was needed to take such a measure because most of the laundered money belonged to politicians, bureaucrats, businessmen, industrialists, feudal lords and illicit drug and arms traffickers.
Responding to a question, the FBR official said the allegedly laundered money was huge and it was difficult to evaluate its real size.