Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg just had a board-level conversation about possibly accepting money at a $4 billion valuation, but decided against doing so…
Also, the company has more than $200 million in the bank, which is enough to cover its costs for up to two years…
TechCrunch says it hears Facebook also received investment offers from two private equity firms that value the company at $2 billion. However, Facebook internally is valuing itself at $4 billion. And if Zuckerberg rejected the $4 billion offer, he’s certainly not going to be interested in a $2 billion offer…
What we’ve heard: Facebook stock trades privately at between a $2 billion and $3 billion valuation. That’s consistent with the numbers that everybody else is tossing around. And we’ve known for a while that when the ConnectU vs. Facebook legal spat was settled, Facebook valued itself around $3.7 billion.
What’s new this time around is that reports indicate Zuckerberg is extremely adamant about rejecting investment cash at a valuation he considers too low. When Facebook took a $240 million stake from Microsoft in November 2007, the investment was at a $15 billion valuation. Since then, it’s become clear that it was a preferred-stock deal and that Facebook’s true valuation has never been that high. But from what it sounds like, Zuckerberg would like it to get up there.
What’s the latest market valuation for Facebook?
Facebook valuation again...
Some highlights:
So, it seems that the $15 billion valuation was certainly overrated.
Another news: