Kaufman Bros. analyst Shaw Wu this morning launched coverage of Palm with a Hold rating and a $16 price target. He writes in a research note that the company is well-positioned in the smart phone sector with its WebOS software, but that the valuation is expensive; he also is concerned about ongoing operating losses and a weak balance sheet.
by Eric Savitz, Blogger and Columnist, Barron's, Tech Trader Daily
Goldman Sachs is a little bit in love with Research In Motion this morning. “…we want to take advantage of the stock’s very compelling valuation and upcoming catalysts, including the Storm launch and fiscal Q3 (November) earnings,” according to the firm’s Simona Jankowski. She believes that the launch of both the Bold and the Storm in the same quarter can reduce the risk to RIM’s numbers. Also, sales of the Bold are “off to a good start.”
Has news site Digg really made no progress in two years? That’s what you’d have to conclude from the value investors are placing on Digg after its most recent investment: $164 million.
Tech bloggers and investors have come up with a new parlor game: Guessing Facebook’s “real” valuation. Nobody seems to believe the company’s official $15 billion valuation that it announced when it raised its most recent, not-yet-closed round from Microsoft and others.
Netflix shares are coming under pressure today following a skeptical note on the company from Needham analyst Charlie Wolf.
Wolf today picked up coverage of the company with an Under Perform rating; he writes that “the company’s current valuation incorporates unrealistic subscriber acquisition cost and churn rate assumptions.” He calculates fair value for the shares to be $22, well below the current level.
Clouds are gathering over Silicon Valley’s consumer Internet companies. The sale of social-networking company Bebo comes at a time when private investors are changing their tune. They’re no longer pumping money into start-ups at the same huge valuations they were doing last year.
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