Are Microsoft trying to sucker the competition?

The Wall Street Journal has a piece today claiming that Microsoft are thinking of investing in FaceBook. TechMeme is buzzing with the news.

According to the WSJ article

Microsoft could purchase a stake of up to 5% in the closely held startup, at a cost in the range of $300 million to $500 million

This would value FaceBook at between $6bn and $10bn which seems high when FaceBook expects to have a profit of $30m on revenue of $150m this year, but what do I know?

I don’t suppose there is any possibility that Microsoft are trying to sucker Yahoo! or Google to jump the gun and throw a bucketload of money into FaceBook?

4 Responses to “Are Microsoft trying to sucker the competition?”


  1. 1 Declan

    $6bn for Facebook, the dot-com bubble returns.

    Why only 5%? That seems an awfully low percentage for Microsoft to buy in any company? Your right something doesn’t seem right in that deal.

  2. 2 Branedy

    Never having seen Facebook, (I’m from the darkages) this reeks of something more in the portfolio of Facebook than what is showing on the surface.

  3. 3 Branedy

    FYI, 5% of the rocketship still gets you into Orbit.

  4. 4 Ryan Coleman

    The reality is Microsoft probably realizes that even if they acquired Facebook they never could fold it into the company. A few hundred million gets them in the game (and possibly on a right of refusal list should aquisition talks come up) while at the same time giving Facebook a valuation that sticks them way outside of what most competitors could afford to pay… Defensive investing :)

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