Ponzi Unicorns!
Lyft Inc. went public on Friday at $72.00 a
share, bumping up to $78.29 at the end of the day, even reaching $88.60 in one
market. Connected monied investors, who
got the initial shares in the IPO, hopefully dumped them at that point. By the way, this is typical IPO sales behavior,
to sell quickly and make a quick profit on the strength of the hype. On Monday, the shares closed down at $69.01. What it will do today and in the future is not predictable. This is in an ‘up’ market nearing
the record highs of January 2018.
What is
obvious is that Lyft has never made a
profit. Many of their drivers, who are
wrongly classified as ‘independent contractors,’ sometimes average as little as $3.57
an hour. There are efforts to form a
union and to change the classification to ‘employee.’ A strike by drivers
against Lyft and Uber just happened in Los
Angeles over what can only be called a wage cut. The
Intercept pointed out yesterday that ‘gig’ companies are trying to race to
the IPO finish line before labor laws catch up with them. Heavy legal liabilities hang over these
companies related to the 'independent contractor' fiction.
Last year
IPOs from ‘Snapchat” and “Blue Apron” still exist below their IPO
price, though Docusign is above it. Of
the 20 companies that went public last year from Silicon
Valley and bio-Pharma, only a few ever made a profit before their
IPO offering.
Are there other
Silicon Valley-type firms that have never made a profit besides Lyft and Tesla, yet might do an IPO on
Wall Street this year? Well yes! Uber
Technologies Inc., Pinterest Inc.,
Palantir, Zoom, Slack Technologies Inc., Postmates Inc. and WeWork all are
in the pipeline. Airbnb Inc. is another, though it became
profitable 2 years ago after being in business since 2007. These companies have been floated by venture
capitalists, and will now go on to try to get money from the general public.
All these
firms do not return a dividend to their investors. So the only way to make a
profit is that their price will go higher.
Then ‘investors’ can sell the stock to the next gambler for a better
price than what they bought it for. That
is the ‘ponzi’ trade.
The poster
child for recent no-profitability is Theranos, which
was a privately held company once valued at $7B, but now worth $0. Theranos
was a Silicon Valley tech outfit that claimed it could test for 200 kinds of
health problems through a simple ‘fingerprick’ blood test submitted to a
smallish black box called the “Edison.” It was run by a wide-eyed blonde sociopath
named Elizabeth Holmes, who duped people like George Schultz, Henry Kissinger,
Bill Clinton and Betsy DeVos into endorsing her and her product. The box and pinprick didn’t work, though it
sucked in multi-millions in investor money and got a short contract from Arizona Walgreens. Theranos
never made money. The SEC, CMS, the
courts and the press eventually caught up to Theranos in 2015 and it is now defunct. Its story is now an excellent documentary on HBO, “Out For Blood in Silicon
Valley.”
If you have any kind of memory of financial crashes, the 1999-2000 ‘Tech Wreck’ should come to mind in the present situation. A vast gaggle of internet dot-coms used venture capital and Wall Street backing to promote iffy software products that eventually became a huge wave of IPOs. Even though almost all of them had never made a profit. Sound familiar? They sucked in money from the public and many subsequently collapsed, causing the stock market to take a nose dive, with many individuals losing their shirts. The NASDAQ lost $5T in stock valuations in two years.
Today, Wall
Street has christened these high-valuation, no-profit firms as ‘Unicorns,’
which should give us pause. Is this new
wave of magical IPOs another uni-wreck waiting to happen? These firms certainly have a longer track
record than the dot-coms, but the lack of profits over a number of years
remains a heavy cautionary note in a capitalist economy. This can put a crimp on any prospects of
their stock price going up. A recession
in 1-2 years, being predicted even by most bourgeois economists, will not buoy
these companies either. So would you like to buy an imaginary and magical
creature?
Other
reviews on this subject: “The Ponzi Factor,” “The Great Crash,”
(Galbraith); “The Big Short,” “Flash Boys,” “Liar’s Poker,” (all 3 by Lewis);
“The Wolf of Wall Street,” (Scorcese); “Griftopia,” (Taibbi); “House of Cards,”
“Liquidated – An Ethnography of Wall
Street,” “Den of Thieves,” “Kraft Heinz.” These reviews are all below, so use the blog search box, upper left.
Red Frog
April
Fool’s Day 2, 2019
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