Binjaitech--Zynga, the company behind
popular social gamesCityVille and Farmville, is expected to file
its final initial public offering prospectus as soon as today, paving the way
for a stock offering by mid-December, said a person familiar with the matter,
who requested anonymity because the plans are private.
The
San Francisco-based company intends to start an IPO roadshow on Monday in New
York, the source said. Zynga's IPO is expected to debut at $8 to $10 per share,
and raise $900 million on a $10 billion valuation. Zynga declined to comment.
Zynga
is one of the social-networking world's success stories, with 227 million
monthly users. Through September, it has notched $829 million in revenue, twice
as much as in the same period a year earlier. Zynga has earned $121 million
since the start of 2010, according to its S-1 filing.
The
IPO fortunes of Zynga are a crucial litmus test for the tech IPO market.
Despite the success of LinkedIn, IPOs for Groupon and Pandora have sputtered.
Groupon closed its first day of trading in early November at a $16.5 billion
valuation but has lost nearly 40% since and is now valued at about $10 billion.
Zynga's
performance will also weigh on the outlook for Facebook, which is expected to
go public in the first half. As the largest gaming company on Facebook, Zynga
is a major contributor to Facebook's revenue. Zynga purchases advertising on
the site and shares a portion of virtual goods purchases with the social
network.
Facebook
is expected to file for an IPO in April, when it is required to disclose
financials now that it has reached 500 shareholders. A public offering could
reach a valuation of up to $100 billion and raise $10 billion, according to a
source familiar with the matter who is not authorized to speak on behalf on
Facebook.
Facebook's
revenue will climb to $4.3 billion this year, double the $2 billion it rang up
in 2010, estimates market researcher eMarketer. Advertising will comprise a
huge chunk — $3.8 billion — as it did in 2010, when Facebook registered $1.86
billion in advertising revenue.
By
2013, Facebook is expected to earn $7 billion in advertising revenue, according
to eMarketer.
Facebook's
challenge, after a public stock offering, will be to grow revenue to match IPO
expectations, says Internet analyst Greg Sterling. "There will be pressure
to use more ads, and convert (members') personal data into revenue,"
Sterling says.
Zynga
also faces issues, including its heavy reliance on Facebook, which grabs 30% of
any revenue Zynga generates by the selling of virtual goods that users buy when
playing its games. In addition, CEO Mark Pincus, who owns 38.5% of Zynga's
voting power, exerts a great deal of control over the business.
Zynga
is making moves to wean itself off Facebook as a platform where most of its
customers play its games. In October, Zynga discussed plans for its own
platform, code-named Project Z. Zynga has a deal with Facebook that runs
through 2015. Ustoday
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