Red Hat IPO Details 97
Wil Mahan writes "Salon has a short article with some interesting details about the upcoming Red Hat IPO. It gives a brief overview of the S-1 filing, including potential "risk factors", such as the threat of being squashed by Microsoft. The full text of the filing is also available (warning: 1.5 MB of legalese). "
Whoo Hooo !!! (Score:1)
Can anybody get me in on the friends and family thing ? I'll take a few hundred shares.
--Aaron
Not only that.... (Score:1)
Re:No! (Score:1)
As for GPL, it is a joke. It is non-enforceable. Imagine if I incorporate some GNU code in one of my projects and sell the binary. Who is going to catch me? Nobody.
Your employee that will see it, for example.
Re:Uhm... Question. (Score:1)
Re:Uhm... Question. (Score:1)
The GPL is inseparable from Linux, and no matter what happens to Red Hat the company, Red Hat Linux will remain free.
Same can be said for Amazon (Score:1)
Bottom line is, the balance sheet doesn't mean too much these days (for the present anyway). If that were the case, do you think Amazon, EBay and Yahoo would be worth such staggering values?
Yahoo has services, not products (Score:1)
They never claimed to be a manufacturer of anything.
Re:Are RedHat exposing themselves? (Score:1)
If "Microsoft friendly" investors decide to buy up large amounts of shares of Red Hat Inc., then it would make good sense to buy them when they first come out. The price of the shares will surely rise. Microsoft can not "Buy" Red Hat.
It looks like a good opportunity to invest. (Score:1)
Red Hat, Inc. seems like a great oppurtunity to me. They are the authority on Linux Development, besides Linus Trovalds. Like Yahoo! that has rocketed to unwaivering heights, I believe this company will also be able to benefit from the spin-off technologies of Linux. The future is always uncertain for companies that have the purest of visions, and go against the megaloths like Microsoft. In the end though, I believe that the customer satisfaction will prevail. Who do you think the customer will like better? Microsoft Windows or Linux? It is that simple.
Re:Redhat: Open source corporation (Score:1)
So your "small investors who trade over the Web" aren't likely to get a chance to get in on the IPO.
By the time the "rest of us" get a shot at buying this stock, it'll be so sky high, there will be no way to afford it ...
I'll probably try anyway though :-)
IF? (Score:1)
Isn't this a done deal?
Maybe I'm confused (this is highly possible).
They have a chance (Score:1)
1) They've already had pretty good success selling a product they also give away.
2) They are synonymous with Linux and Linux is the current darling of the trade press.
3) People are looking for another Yahoo, Amazon or Ebay and will jump on it.
4) The Linux community will buy it because it gives us a real chance to own a piece of the pie and put our money behind something we believe in.
5) The stock will get
Re:People who invest with their hearts... (Score:1)
The funny thing is that this is actually a strength for an Internet company! It has *made* money in 2 of the last 5 years, compared to most of these companies which haven't seen a dime of profit yet (and don't predict any in the near future either). What a crazy world.
This should be interesting (Score:1)
When? (Score:1)
To answer my own question... (sort of) (Score:1)
Re:Uhm... Question. - Answers (Score:1)
Regarding the GPL, Redhat does not choose the license under which Linux is distributed, Linus and the other developers chose that a long time ago. If Redhat wants to distribute any code based on Linux they must use the license Linux comes with - the GPL.
typo in the Redhat IPO document (Score:1)
Re:Wow (Score:1)
Re:OpenIPO (Score:1)
would be crazy to hand this over to computer model that has very little experience.
Also, I'm sure they thought twice about handing over their company to a closed source bidding
program. Would that be their style?
If you are raising $10 mil and you are unknown, that might be ok. If you are raising $100 mil...
OpenIPO isn't that different from just a regular online broker. The only magic they have is
that they allow smaller investors to get a random crack at IPO shares (like playing the lottery).
The small guys still get screwed. You can't see the Road Show presentation unless you have $1 mil.
You need to have lots of money available to get shares because you need to bid high for a large
number of shares to increase your odds to a reasonable levels.
For a hot IPO like Red Hat, I image that they would be 20x over subscribed. That means if you
bid for 2000 shares at say $30/share, you would have pretty good odds at getting 100 shares and
paying $20/share. This means you have to be able to afford $60,000 to get $2,000 worth of stock.
If you bid less than that, you probably will have better luck in the lottery.
things can move faster than that... (Score:1)
current SEC rules it is possible to fast-track and do things in weeks if everything is clean.
The old "cool down" period was part of a regulation to protect the price of the IPO from
manipulation, but nowdays if you follow the rules, things can happen much faster.
The red-herring (which is usually similar to the filing) doesn't have a share price or an effective
date because when you print it, it has to be true (so they don't until they are 100% sure which is
usually the day before the effective date). They just have fill-in the blank spots for this info.
There is no way to know for sure the effective date until it happens (or you are an insider).
However, many companies schedule their road show the week before the effective date.
The investor services that list upcoming IPOs key off the fact that a company has scheduled a
road show to tell everyone that an IPO is coming the following week.
They can pretty much pull the trigger at any time... keep your eyes open
IPO 101 (Score:1)
Start a company, decide you want to take it public. The first time you sell shares to the
public is called an Initial Public Offering (IPO).
Hire a experienced CFO (chief financial officer)to select an investment banker to lead your
underwriting syndicate. The underwriter(s) are securities brokers that help you take your
company public.
In exchange for money (usually shares in the company) they do the paper work and introduce
you to institutional investors and pay for the road show. They also can serve as "market makers"
for your stock after you go public. A "market maker" owns enough stock to facilitate trades.
(Stocks are trades, so if there is no-one to trade with, the stock is not very liquid).
The reason you want institutional investors (mutual funds, banks, pension funds, etc) rather
than small investors is for several reasons. Because your offering is required to be fair,
you want your IPO all at the same time so that things don't change (price, market, company info).
Also, institutional investors give the company feedback on price support (to select a stable price). Also institutional investors will hold the stock for a while which prevents the shares from being too volatile.
Because of this institutional investor focus, the only way to get in on this is have a good account
with a brokerage that is involved with the IPO. Usually brokerages only allow their best customers
access to IPO shares.
Investment banker and CFO will tell you how screwed up your books are.
Fix them. If they are really screwed up, this could take a while. The ownership, debt, stake
holders, assets, contracts, etc, etc, need to be clear. In a small company this can be a mess.
You negociate the lock-up period for officers and employees (the lock-up period is how long
after the IPO that you aren't allowed to trade in your own stock), this is usually 6 months.
For key employees with lots of shares, some stock could be locked up as long as 2 years.
The executive management team along with the Investment bankers will change your biz plan.
(your plan needs to be investor friendly)
You usually talk to a few other investment bankers about your biz plan to clean it up.
You write a S-1/Red herring which will become a prospectus which says what you're about,
who owns the company and what the all the risks are. You can't add to this later w/o refiling so
you have to get this right. Ommitions are considered lies so you put the kitchen sink into this.
(BTW, it is called a red herring because all the red colored warning bars and text)
You file this with the SEC, at this point you are in a quiet period and can't say anything about
your company unless it is in your filing.
After some informal shopping around the red herring, you either decided to fix it or go ahead.
This is the "cooling down" period.
You select an pricing range.
Schedule a road show with institutional investors to formally present your red herring. You say
exactly the same thing to everyone (it's the law).
Since you want diversified investors, you generally do New York, Chicago, Denver, Dallas,
San Francisco, Los Angeles, all in 1 day (that's why they call it a road show) and a few
conference calls overseas to boot.
Since you can't offer to sell and they can't buy, you get "subscriptions" which indicate interest
in buying. (Usually IPOs are oversubscribed)
You select the actual price.
You pull the trigger and go public. Then the subscribers are allowed to buy (they can always
back out). The amount of stock is usually allocated because of over-subscription.
For instance if somebody subscribes for 100,000 shares, they may only get to buy
10,000 if it is 10x over-subscribed.
From road show to IPO is usually less than 2 days to prevent the possibility of things changing
when you talk to two different people. This is the reason for the roadshow and why it is
impossible for anyone, except good broker customers to get IPO shares.
SEC rules require everyone to be qualified (IPOs are considered risky) and that everyone have the
same info. If you only talk to qualified investors and talk to everyone in the same day
that you sell the shares, this satisfies the requirement.
Now except for the lock-up, the stock is free game for everyone.
In the bumpy road version, repeat steps as often as necessary. Sometimes you can't even hire
an investment banker or a CFO. This could be considered a bad sign
It goes w/o saying if you want to take your company public, you'd better start planning
on day 1.
Re:Ok, how does this work??? (Score:3)
subscription. For small guys like us, an IPO isn't any different than any other stock offering.
Just get a stock broker and put in an order to by a certain number of shares at a certain price.
Unfortunately, for an IPO there isn't a price history until it the IPO happens (remember the I
is for initial). There is a range usually given in the filing, but these are just guidelines
and can be changed at any time (and usually up and at midnight before a hot IPO).
If you are daring, just pick a price above the range and put in an order and hope for the best.
If your bid is too low, no shares are available to match what people are asking, and you get nothing.
What you shouldn't do is put in a market price bid for an IPO. You would be pretty much assured
of paying the highest asking price and shortly after an IPO, the price usually drops.
Stock transactions are trades, so a buy order has to be matched with a sell order. To facilitate
trading, stocks are usually handled by one or more "market makers" (usually the stock underwriter for
IPOs). The "market makers" usually own enough shares to put in sell orders to match random buys
and to net out transactions at the market price. This gives them some power to manipulate the price.
In an IPO, the sells come from either the underwriter, the company's investors, or the
subscription shares which you probably won't get because who would sell them to you at such a
low price
The buy orders come from the gullible speculators trying to get IPO shares. To increase their odds
of getting shares, people put in high price/share limits. This of course bumps up the stock price
since the market makers look at the orders and of course pick the highest prices
Usually the day of a hot IPO, the people with shares hold on to them (don't sell) until they see
a few orders. The market maker can put in a few buy/sell orders to test the waters and then things
usually get going (and ususally up). There's a small chance if you put in an order during the
testing stage, the it will get traded but don't count on it! (everyone else has the same idea)
Unless you know what you are doing, or are just looking for token shares, I wouldn't suggest
planning on investing in an IPO.
Uhm... Question. (Score:1)
Another S-1 summary on LWN (Score:3)
jon
OpenIPO (Score:2)
You may also be interested to see what folks have to say about RHAT over at techstocks.com, here [techstocks.com] and here [techstocks.com]. (You might need to register to see these, not sure...)
Y2K testing (Score:2)
I bet that outside company loves this particular job, too - "you mean we get ALL the source code to EVERYTHING? Whoohoo!"
All I know... (Score:1)
I've been meaning to do this eventually to self-manage mutuals, maybe buy some small lots of stock, etc. This is just the thing that tipped those proverbial scales.
I think of it partly as 'vanity stock' - even if I have to wait until it opens to public trading I will buy some stock just 'cuz.
Of note to Canadians - don't fall for the E*trade Canada line - they're not the same and they don't do IPO or commodities. I nearly went the wrong way there.
Re:All I know... (Score:1)
What's an IPO? (Score:1)
Not trying to sound ignorant or anything, but what is this "IPO" thingy? And the talk about "S-1"?
I understand it has something to do with stocks, but I don't know anything about how this stuff works over there. If someone could just expand the acronyms for me it might help...
Linux Weekly has a nice summary (Score:1)
--
Re:You Must have lots of Money. (Score:1)
Are RedHat exposing themselves? (Score:1)
Now I'll be the first to admit I'm not very knowledgable when it comes down to stocks and shares, but this hyperthetical scenario is possible. Isn't it?
Macka
Has the GPL ever been tested in court? (Score:1)
From the article:
Is this true? (I'm sure some of you out there know the answer for sure, and I don't mean just ESR and RMS!)
If so, one way to look at it would be to say that it's completely unenforceable, to the extent to which violations aren't even followed up in court.
Another interpretation would be to say that it's one of the most perfectly enforced licenses in existence--so daunting that nobody's ever really tried to violate it. :)
Better than the law of gravity, that...
-W-
Re:You Must have lots of Money. (Score:1)
Re:Uhm... Question. (Score:1)
Wow (Score:1)
Re:Wow (Score:2)
Re:You Must have lots of Money. (Score:2)
Re:Redhat: Open source corporation (Score:1)
Ben & Jerry's did something similar to this when they took their company public. Each family in Connecticut had the opportunity to get in on the IPO for a minimum investment in the low hundreds. The story is detailed in their book "Ben & Jerry's Double-Dip : How to Run a Values-Led Business and Make Money, Too"
So it is possible!
How to you buy stock for an upcoming IPO? (Score:1)
Seems like a Good chance to make/loose money!
good + services = products (Score:1)
Re:Ok, how does this work??? (Score:1)
Red Hats IPO like so many others is unpredictable so it may be like Geocities back last October. It ran up, the market took a nose dive and you could pick up the shares cheap, then it started to rise and Yahoo bought them so even if you did pick them up at the IPO you made money if you didn't get discouraged. Then again it could be like Ebays and you'll never see anything near the IPO again.
The best advice I can give is if you really really want a specific number of shares buy maybe half or less on the IPO that way you have some, if it acts like ebay, then if it turns down go ahead and pick up the remaining shares a price you think is decent.
Stocks are a gamble, buy what you know, buy what you don't know, just make sure you diversify your holdings so you don't get burned in the long run.
People who invest with their hearts... (Score:1)
Ok, how does this work??? (Score:1)
Poverty isn't what it's cracked up to be (Score:1)
Re:Wow (Score:1)
The Law of the Jungle (Score:1)
Lest we forget the recent tendency of IPO's gaining public appeal quickly via "small ideas" like e*Trade, et. al., allow me to paraphrase the words I read in a Newsweek article a couple of weeks ago:
"Investors don't care about the economic risks involved in giving away free software -- they just want to make a fast profit
Six weeks from now we won't be concerned about Red Hat's IPO status -- because penny-rate investors won't, either
Hmmm (Score:1)
--
Redhat: Open source corporation (Score:1)
I see this as part of an emerging New World, in which the Little Guys, the individuals, can survive and profit without Big Business. Maybe I'm an idealist, but isn't that what the open source movement is all about? Spirit of demoracy and freedom, and all of that? Maybe I'm just on crack. :-)
Re:You are on crack. (Score:1)
Re:Stock crash? (Score:1)
Being on the winning side in the fight for World Domination, big bucks, no whammy's, STOP.
Re:Another S-1 summary on LWN (Score:1)
Their plans for the web site include: personalizations ("my.redhat.com" - really), advertising and sponsorships, content subscriptions (things like "market reports" and support will be available - for a fee), e-commerce, and licensing of their content to other content providers.
Oh my god, it's a PORTAL... ROFLMAO! Well I hope they'll make the site better, cuz IMHO it kind of sucks now...
Frank Batten, Jr. holds 25.0% of current stocks. Who is this guy?
Re:RedHat IPO is only for BIG investment accounts! (Score:1)
A) Already have an account worth at least $5.000.000
B) Preferably been a long time customer of Goldman, Sachs & Co
C) The account must be 4 months old at least, but if it is only 4 months chances are still slim since older customers have a greater chance of "gettin' any"
Now where did I put those $5.000.000??
Re:When? (Score:1)
Typically they set a target week -- Aug. 9, in this case -- and tweak it depending on how things are going. In the interim, they're meeting with BIG investors to take orders for shares. If those meetings go badly, the IPO can be postponed or canceled.
To get the exact day of the IPO, you have to bug the underwriting bank pretty much daily. Or... there are IPO news sites around the Web that report on expected launch dates.
Re:Benefits for the community if Red Hat goes publ (Score:1)
You are either very rich or very naive.
I bet you're one of those people who votes too...
Re:Uhm... Question. (Score:1)
Microsoft is the most paranoid company on the face of the earth, and whenever they see ANYTHING that even remotely in a million years on a distant planet in Alpha Centauri might threaten their domination of "every desk in every home" (Netscape, Java, DrDos, etc) they go in super defense mode - regardless of whether it is actually a threat or not.
Paranoia is the #1 sign that something is very wrong in Redmond...
Re:Uhm... Question. (Score:1)
To think that Microsoft is not going to rise to the bait is being very naive...
Re:Wow (the risk of over-commercialization) (Score:1)
Re:Wow (Score:1)
Re:Uhm... Question. (Score:1)
Common stock is the stuff that fluctuates on the market. Without having read the whole document (too boring) I'd say that RH is issueing common stock, and the present owners are using their pre-emptive rights to maintain a controlling interest.
Re:All I know... (Score:1)
Re:Are RedHat exposing themselves? (Score:1)
I don't see the problem here. IMO, RedHat is moving more towards profit and publicity every day. Although great for personal gain it might not be so good for the future of GPL. Corporations are only investing in RedHat so they can eventually buy it up. Widespread distribution (read: popularity) is not always good. ie: what happened to the bbs scene between 93-95 when all the kids got modems for christmas. err, nevermind.
Investemnet Club Participation in IPO? (Score:1)
If you are interested send email to
Re:What's an IPO? (Score:1)
The first time a company sells stock, it's called an IPO.
Chuck
Re:Investemnet Club Participation in IPO? (Score:1)
If others are interested in forming a club to participate in the IPO, please send email to invest@investmentclub.org [slashdot.org].
Re:Are RedHat exposing themselves? (Score:1)