Thursday, September 23, 2010

Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook Donates $100 Million In Facebook Shares


Mark Zuckerberg, CEO
According to the following article from Forbes, Mark Zuckerberg will make a $100 million pledge to the Newark School system. At only 26-years-old, he’s following in the charitable footsteps of Microsoft’s Bill Gates, Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffett and Oracle’s Larry Ellison. Regardless of how you might feel about these people personally, there's no question that their generosity is making a huge difference to many people's lives.
    .. June


-------------------


How Will Newark Turn Zuckerberg’s $100 Million Worth Of Facebook Shares Into Cash?
Steven Bertoni - Money Talks - Forbes:

This Friday, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg will reportedly appear on Oprah to announce his $100 million pledge to the Newark School system. At only 26-years-old, he’s following in the charitable footsteps of Microsoft’s Bill Gates, Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffett and Oracle’s Larry Ellison.

The pledge is the easy part. The difficult question is how will Newark turn the privately owned, illiquid shares of Facebook into usable cash for their troubled school system

Zuckerberg is worth $6.9 billion, but that is mostly paper wealth based on his ownership of Facebook. Zuck likely has very little cash on hand–he lives in a humble rented house in Silicon valley. So it’s natural that he’d pledge his Facebook shares instead of cash-money.

The trouble is that these shares are not listed on a registered exchange. Past Facebook transactions have occurred through private equity deals or have traded on exchanges like SecondMarket, which specialize in unregistered, hard-to-trade securities. People at SecondMarket declined to comment on the story.

These markets for unregistered shares are opaque and thinly traded. The current SecondMarket bid for shares of Facebook is $65–that puts a $28.6 billion valuation on Facebook; much richer than recent estimates of around $23 billion. The market price seems inflated.

Read on . . .

No comments:

Post a Comment