> Funny how every single 'right' thing they did benefits the early owners only and no one who buys the company stock thereafter.
Hypothetically, there's not really any reason to put scare quotes around the word right: At its core, every company is a vehicle for delivering value to its current owners. Future owners are not current owners, and the only defense mechanism they have is good old-fashioned caveat emptor.
In a well-functioning system, that would be sufficient: Few companies would follow the "pump and dump" scheme because it would be so difficult to pull one over on prudent, skeptical investors that approach would rarely meet success. I think, though, that we are not seeing a well-functioning system. We're finding a system where companies inevitably flow toward less and less savvy investors, until eventually you've got half your family members talking about how they're thinking about getting in on the Facebook IPO based on nothing more than that they keep hearing in the news that it's selling for a lot of money.
Incidentially, I was terminally amused by all the news articles talking about the "failure" of the Facebook IPO. On the contrary, if I were one of Facebook's pre-IPO owners I think I'd have been laughing all the way to the bank. Only in what passes for popular financial news could someone do the equivalent of characterizing a masterfully executed Poker bluff as a woeful failure without being rightfully dismissed as someone who's terminally clueless about the rules of the game.
Hypothetically, there's not really any reason to put scare quotes around the word right: At its core, every company is a vehicle for delivering value to its current owners. Future owners are not current owners, and the only defense mechanism they have is good old-fashioned caveat emptor.
In a well-functioning system, that would be sufficient: Few companies would follow the "pump and dump" scheme because it would be so difficult to pull one over on prudent, skeptical investors that approach would rarely meet success. I think, though, that we are not seeing a well-functioning system. We're finding a system where companies inevitably flow toward less and less savvy investors, until eventually you've got half your family members talking about how they're thinking about getting in on the Facebook IPO based on nothing more than that they keep hearing in the news that it's selling for a lot of money.
Incidentially, I was terminally amused by all the news articles talking about the "failure" of the Facebook IPO. On the contrary, if I were one of Facebook's pre-IPO owners I think I'd have been laughing all the way to the bank. Only in what passes for popular financial news could someone do the equivalent of characterizing a masterfully executed Poker bluff as a woeful failure without being rightfully dismissed as someone who's terminally clueless about the rules of the game.