Facebook is buying WhatsApp for $16 billion

StretfordRed

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I'm not aware of the details(and don't care to be), but that figure may be deceiving. Buy out offers are often structured with contingencies.

It's $3 or 4 billion in cash, the rest in stocks lol

*edit, I am saying lol like this is something small. They only have 50 employees. The spread of dough is going to be :lolbron::banderas:
 

StretfordRed

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As I said in the Verge article/comments

Uh, as a person who is in the UK and is an avid user of Whatsapp over SMS and anyother messaging service, I am truly annoyed with this.

I just generally don’t trust Facebook. I keep them at an arms length with my privacy on the site. I changed from Nexus 4 to iPhone because I didn’t like the expansion of Permissions on the Android app, but use Instagram pretty much regularly.

I just don’t understand this move if they weren’t thinking of some sort of merger with Messenger, which I obviously do not use as a main instant messaging tool for anything.

Just a little disappointed really. I don’t want every service I use being controlled by only 2 or 3 companies. I’d love for my personal communications to stay silo. I guess I will be in the process of finding a new messaging service now, or even just go back to SMS
 

Sensitive Blake Griffin

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I looked up Facebook's financials. For 2013 Fiscal year:

Revenue: US$7.872 billion

Total Assets: US$17.895 billion

Total Equity: US$15.47 billion

:damn: HOW THE fukk CAN THEY EVEN AFFORD THIS????!!!!!!!
they said they receive 16billion in cash and stock. Go look at their retained earnings
 

satam55

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Connect or die: why Facebook needed WhatsApp
Facebook's mission statement isn't a promise, it's a threat


By Ellis Hamburger on February 19, 2014 09:48 pm

mark-zuckerberg-verge_large_verge_medium_landscape.jpg


When Mark Zuckerberg says he wants to "connect the world’s people," it’s not some gentle, humanist statement. Zuckerberg intends to own the communications layer of the world we live in — if today’s $16-plus billion acquisition of messaging service WhatsApp is any indication. Facebook grew up inventing the world’s leading social network for sharing with everyone you know, and it now owns what could be called the world’s largest private social network. Between the two companies, about one billion photos and 30 billion messages are sent per day.

While Facebook slaved away creating a utility used by 1.25 billion people, WhatsApp has replaced an essential utility for many, SMS. WhatsApp is used by over 450 million people every month, and often in places Facebook and its Messenger app had little success reaching, like Spain and Switzerland. By filling in the gaps with WhatsApp, Facebook’s communication pipes are thicker and spread far wider than ever before. The company commands an enormous portion of the world’s messages and photos sent per day. And don’t forget that WhatsApp users send a whopping 200 million voice messages per day. For many, WhatsApp has likely replaced voice calls as well.

whatsapp_chart_1.png


Facebook’s latest acquisition might appear to be a simple land grab for the hottest mobile app in the world, with some delightful side effects, but the reality is far bigger. Each company Facebook acquires is another hedge against the various public and private ways people choose to communicate. Instagram lets people share photos in a way Facebook’s friending model wouldn’t allow. WhatsApp lets people share messages in a way that’s familiar to first-time feature phone and smartphone users — something Facebook can’t boast. Facebook’s product portfolio is becoming vast, full of competing services and apps, and that’s okay.

Facebook is now a conglomerate kind of like Disney, says Re/code’s Kara Swisher, owning all the best brands and serving all demographics simultaneously. Facebook plans to operate these and likely future product acquisitions independently, to see which one gets the biggest. The company simply doesn’t want to mess with the formula that’s ostensibly killing it, whether it’s Instagram, WhatsApp, or the next hot communications app.

WHATSAPP_chart_2.png


But Facebook is not just diversifying its product portfolio. It’s also diversifying its business model. Facebook had the opportunity to make WhatsApp free, like all of its other products, but chose not to. WhatsApp CEO Jan Koum promises that the service will remain ad-free under its $1 / year revenue model. With Koum on Facebook’s board, perhaps the company will consider similar revenue streams in the future. WhatsApp’s runaway success with its own business model proves that there’s a lot of breathing room for essential services to monetize without ads or in-app purchases.

It’s unclear how much say Koum will have in future Facebook products, but by including him in its board, Facebook is also diversifying its thought process. Facebook’s internal slogan is "move fast and break things," but WhatsApp has done the polar opposite. While competitors, Facebook Messenger included, added features, removed them, came alive, and went under, WhatsApp held fast to its belief in one goal: to replace texting. As Dan Frommer points out, the opportunity to replace texting is still enormous — SMS is still a $100 billion / year industry globally — and WhatsApp is the company in the best position to seize that opportunity. If WhatsApp had abandoned its goal to create a platform for games, or jump on the photo-sharing app bandwagon, it might not have been in the position it is in today.

http://www.theverge.com/2014/2/19/5428022/connect-or-die-why-facebook-needed-whatsapp
 

Jone2three45

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I hate how they changed shut with Instagram and Pulp. I can only imagine what they are going to do with this app.
 

Ohene

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they said they receive 16billion in cash and stock. Go look at their retained earnings
Book value is irrelevant though...that'd make the deal even more ridiculous.

Overall...that 15 million in shares though is about 9% of FB's current market value. That's an extremely steep, dilutive price but I understand it. It's a good acquisition but still...its overpriced. We cant forget what it is after all...a mere messaging app. But we aint anybody to talk so I'm sure FB mgmt knows what its doing. Time will tell.

Morgan Stanley musta made a hell of a pitch though to get that kinda money outta FB
 
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