Red Hat IPO Update 136
malacai sent us
a press release
that finally gives some good details on Red Hat's impending
IPO. 6 Million Shares. $10-$12/share. The Week of August 9 (no
surprise that its during LinuxWorld). The symbol will be RHAT.
Re:Red Hat worth 60Mil? (Score:1)
Re:I can just see it at LinuxWorld... (Score:2)
Re:I can just see it at LinuxWorld... (Score:2)
Re:But is it a good investment? (Score:1)
Check out The Motley Fool [fool.com] for the whole story
What are you talking about? (Score:2)
If people make money off of buying and selling Red Hat stock, so be it. It's not money out of Red Hat's pocket. The higher the stock price goes, the more money Red Hat has to play with.
Re:But is it a good investment? (Score:1)
Whilst they won't make Micro$oft amounts of money from selling the OS, they could potentially make quite a bit as Linux gains in popularity (assuming it will). The support side can be rectified, especially with the money that the IPO will bring in. Companies depending on RH Linux would probably be quite keen to purchase support from them, if they're going to get good service.
They could also negotiate lucrative support deals with hardware manufacturers, simular to the one that Linuxcare have done with Dell(?).
I may invest a few quid, especially as I got RH6 free off the net - rather them than lining Bill's pockets.
HH
PCs are like air-conditioning. When you open the Windows, they cease functioning.Re:But is it a good investment? (Score:2)
I was a speculator who unfortunately bought and sold Ebay on its IPO day. Bought at 50, sometime later checked out Ebay website and panicked when I realized that I knew nothing about the company except for the media hype, went back to Fidelity and sold at 48.
Yep, I'm a schmuck, and everyone who's dabbled has these kind of stories.
But I think for Red Hat's IPO I am armed with a few things: 1. Linux media exposure is large and growing, 2. Linux acceptance in business is growing, 3. Company that has or is headed toward a monopoly in a facet of the Internet (like Oracle, Verisign, etc.) 4. Strong, strong branding. 5. New, fresh place for investors to place their attention (comptetitor to MS).
I'll be the first to say I have middle-tier sophistication in this stuff, but I've seen lots of opportunities go by where I took a rational approach and lost out because I talked myself out of it (Ebay, Yahoo, the list is long).
I also think that they still have time to build a great support organization, esp. with all that cash. Is there a clear leader yet?
Therefore I'm appropriating some speculative capital that's either going into RHAT or into choice "dirty" domain names
-Blanco
Best wishes (Score:1)
I really hope that they do well. I am not of the camp that thinks that they are selling out. On the contrary, I think that they should finally be rewarded for the years of holding onto Linux even when it was just a hacker's dream. If it wasn't for Red Hat and the rest, Linux would have never cause Redmond any headaches at all.
Good Luck, RHAT.
"Why I Ph33r The IPO" (Score:4)
inherited, to a degree, from the Linux movement itself, will be an interesting soap opera to observe.
To be sure, I have a certain hesitancy towards Redhat's public offering; I don't desire to see Redhat become the de facto standard within the marketplace, which certainly appears to be the case, as of late. Regardless of whether or not software is being written that is designed
solely for a Redhat system (we all know the answer to this), the fact nonetheless remains that the public itself is equating the two as one in
the same.
Thus comes the issue of the IPO. Shareholders mean control, it's as simple as that. My fears aren't of an imminent Micro$oftabsorption, either; I'm concerned about Joe Q. Stockholder.
I had a conversation with an acquaintance of mine recently, who incidentally, does not use Linux. I told him that I was worried about the Redhat IPO; Should Redhat become a psuedo-standard, coupled with public control, the likelihood is that Redhat would head down the path of proprietary OSes.
His response: "Well, if that's what it would take to see Linux succeed, why are you against it?"
I tried to explain that such would not be a success, in fact it'd be a complete departure from the whole philosophy. If Redhat were to become a
standard, what, then has been gained? If I can't run the same application on my debian system at home, if the company can't guarantee that it will
work outside a Redhat environment, how is that any better than the current situation?
"But you need a standard of some sort," he replied.
When I told him that the standard exists within the Linux community,development team, and ultimately with Linus, he shook his head.
"Corporations don't work that way, though."
- * -
And thus, there you have it, from the other side... and many others future stockholders like him share the same opinion. And while I
don't agree with their goals, I couldn't help but feel he was right. Corporate control eventually becomes proprietary by nature.
It's as simple as this:
1. People will use Redhat
2. Redhat will bow to the whim of its stockholders
3. Redhat won't be Linux, it will be whatever stockholders want it to be.
It boils down to Joe Q. Stockholder again. He will invest in Redhat for the money, not for any Linux philosophy. He'll do whatever he can to
make Redhat profitable. If that means making exclusivity deals with companies to have them only offer support for Redhat, he'll do it. If
that means striking deals to have software packaged exclusively in RPM format, he'll do it. Nevermind that Redhat code can stay freely
distributable; If Redhat is can rest assured that third party software/support is available for their distribution, only, how is the end
user any better off? In the end, Redhat would end up being Linux by architecture only, not by philosophy.
Come the day of the IPO, you can bet I'd like to get in on it. But you can also bet that money won't be my main objective.
Re:Red Hat IPO Not going to be available to most.. (Score:1)
Re:What are you talking about? (Score:1)
Ummm... no! The whole point is that once they IPO at $12, the amount of money that RedHat gets is locked in. After that, demand for the stock will dictate the price that it trades at on the market, but NONE of that money goes to RedHat (unless they decide to dilute the stock further by selling more shares which the company holds). Yes, people on Wall Street stand to make a killing on this IPO, especially considering the additional demand for the stock generated by Linux-folk like myself who want a piece of the action, just to say that we own it.
However, my overall sentiment is much like many of the other respondents to the original posting. SO WHAT IF WALL STREET MAKES MONEY! That's their job, and if you wanted to badly enough you could too... Buy stock in the brokerages that stand to make the killing, or get a job an Wall Street.
Besides, don't feel sorry for the programmers at RedHat. If you read the article, the company has reserved shares for founders, employees, and even "friends". They stand to make a killing as well...
Re:Too Bad For You (Score:2)
Those that earned it and those who stole it.
The people who steal the money are attaining wealth at the expense of others. Fortunately, these people are in the minority.
The people who earn it are doing so because they are adding value someplace, and are being compensated for it. (They could, of course, inherit money from a person like this too) Most importantly, people who have money generally know how to make it work for them. They save, invest and grow their assets. There are people who do not know how to handle their money, and consequently they have less than they would otherwise have. People who do not know how to handle their money, and insist on remaining ignorant of this skill have no one to blame but themselves.
The average Joe you speak of, could easily learn how to invest and grow their savings. However, I wonder how many of these folks have even thought about how to manage their money.
I find it fascinating that people bash investors for being wealthy. Would an investor that didn't have much money be able to get a lot of clients ? Doubt it. Would you hire an attorney doing time? Doubt it.
Investors know how to manage their assets and how to take advantage of every opportunity they have. No, kidding they will use these skills to maximize their holdings. If these skills are used in a situation that is illegal--well that's another issue entirely.
I guess I don't know why you have a leg to stand on when you whine about people who are wealthy.
I wish I Had the money (Score:1)
But I don't have the money.
What time? (Score:1)
does it go on the market? Its probably going to go up pretty quick in the first hour or so... wouldn't mind riding that wave...
66.6 million shares? (Score:1)
67.6 million wouldn't have given
anyone an opportunity to find anything
wrong with it
What a name... (Score:1)
Chuck
Buy W2k now! Quanities Limited!!
Re: (Score:1)
I can just see it at LinuxWorld... (Score:1)
But seriously, I wonder how much of that stock will just be snapped up by the bigger companies like IBM, Intel, and, unfortunately, M$?
I'd love to get some, but I doubt it'll be possible in the frenzy.
Watch out e-stock brokers, here comes the world.
Re:I can just see it at LinuxWorld... (Score:1)
>the bigger companies like IBM, Intel, and, unfortunately, M$?
I think that RedHat would be really foolish to sell more than 50% of their stock... I'm sure that they'll be retaining control.
I'm sure everyone will be buying this stock... and that's probably a Good Thing(tm) if the people from Microsoft want to buy stock, then good! More money for Redhat which means more money for Linux devlopment.
I'm pretty sure that the e-brokers will experience a slashdot effect like none other... Everyone will want in on this... I guess we test how well they hold up then!
Red Hat worth 60Mil? (Score:1)
I think we should play a game called 'guess the 10 day price' where we guess the price per share after 10 trading days.
I'll go for $25
Re:What time? (Score:1)
If only they had quality control.... (Score:1)
If they had stronger quality testing before stuff goes out the door, then RH _might_ be worth it. Any RedHat x.0 release sucks, and bad stuff still happens on a x.1 (like 'man' segfaulting). Their erratum list is just flat too long to trust the system as a whole.
The RedHat 6.0 for Alpha stunk horribly. I did 5 installs before I got everything right. If you tell the installer not to init X windows on boot, it won't work properly, set a default WM, and I couldn't open an xterm to save my life...
Can you say "hostile take over" (Score:1)
that's only 10% (Score:1)
"After the offering, outstanding common will total 66.6 million shares."
In other words, the IPO is only selling about 10% of the
company. That puts their valuation at >$600m, 90% in the
hands of their current investors.
IPO investment stragety article (Score:3)
Check out the article at:
http://cnnfn.com/1999/07/13/investing
~afniv
"Man könnte froh sein, wenn die Luft so rein wäre wie das Bier"
Re:RHAT is PHAT.... (Score:1)
Re:I can just see it at LinuxWorld... (Score:1)
Right.. as long as Redhat owns >50% of the stock, then Microsoft wouldn't be able to do anything anyway... They wouldn't have a controlling interest.
I doubt RedHat would let someone hostile to the company on the board of directors... Something about rival companies.. who knows... I rest assured that any attempt by MS will be thwarted.
Re:Two words: (Score:2)
Re:If only they had quality control.... (Score:1)
(Granted, there's nobody there to hold your hand and the config is done by editing real textfiles. Scary, eh?)
Re:"Why I Ph33r The IPO" (Score:1)
Re:investors are not dumb...i hope (Score:1)
Personally I plan on buying as much RedHat stock as I can over time with the sole intent of just holding on to it. If the Linux community buys up the stock then we can make sure we keep control of the stock. RedHat giving first chance to big businesses kind of pisses me off although I'm certain it's just doing things in the usual manner. They should only offer the stock options to Linux friendly companies to begin. Would be good to see Caldera and others buy up a large chunk.
Re:Red Hat gets no money from trades (Score:1)
Re:Can you say "hostile take over" (Score:1)
Regardless, even if M$ could only buy 10% of the stock - they would have a seat on the board and they could make life hell for Red Hat.
I think the open source
Mandatory waiting period (Score:1)
Most people would be better off, if they can't get IPO shares, to wait for a few days/months until there is a dip. Probably a multiple of the IPO price (e.g. if $12, then figure $20-$30 range), but cheaper than end of first day ($40?).
If you do make a first day offer, make it a round lot (100 share multiple), and market order, as a limit probably won't exercise in time.
Anything other than a market order probably won't work.
Will in Seattle
who bought some Salon.com at less than the IPO (9 1/2, IPO was 10, but that was a dutch auction)
Of course... (Score:1)
Penalty for selling less than a year (Score:1)
Will in Seattle
When you filled out your app, how many trades? (Score:1)
Me, I actually make that many in all the accounts.
Will in Seattle
Buy it for what it stands for... (Score:3)
Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream is a similar corporation. They donate 7.5% of their profits to what they consider worthy causes. Does this piss off the stockholders? No, it's an understood that Ben and Jerry's stock is more of a movement than a way to get rich. The stockholders believe in B&J and what they are doing. They show their support for this company by buying stock.
So show your support for opensource and Linux and dump a few bucks into the Stock.
Redhat releases their code under GPL, the onlyreal way to keep investors happy is to have investors that believe in the GPL/Opensource.
Maybe they will even throw a cool annual party for stockholders.
Except for those of Scottish ancestry (Score:1)
I never fly first class (use my miles for more trips), hate to pay for parking, take the bus, have never bought a watch worth more than $30, only buy clothes on sale, and my only major expense is charitable donations (and some non-tax-exempt political ones).
Which is typical for the majority of millionaires.
Yes, the system is biased in favor of those with wealth. And I don't agree with cutting the estate tax rate, even though it has cost everyone in my family a lot of money, because someone has to pay taxes!
And, in case you wonder, some of us have been very poor in our life as well. Which helps one keep one's moorings. I still have a hard time spending money, unless it's for education.
Will in Seattle
P.S.: Read "The Millionaire Next Door"
Re:Red Hat IPO Not going to be available to most.. (Score:1)
Re:When you filled out your app, how many trades? (Score:1)
think it was something like: 0-9 trades/year, 10-24 trades/year, 25-74 trades/year, 75+ trades/year.
Will in Seattle
don't you hate it when there's a trick to filling out the forms
Good analysis (Score:2)
Probably won't kick in for a month or so, but still a good investment.
Will in Seattle
Re:Buy at IPO or wait? (Score:1)
I checked out a few Witcapital.com offerings that have been very good to me, and they had lukewarm ratings on Quote (STMP and MLTX if you are curious). They also gave their highest rating to BNBN, which has been a bit of a dog.
Thanks for sharing though, I like to evaluate all the tools I can find out there.
Re:Can you say "hostile take over" (Score:1)
I doubt it...like someone said, it would be easier to make their own distro (or possibly even a *BSD, as the licensing would be a little more favorable in their point of view) than to buy a significant amount of Red Hat stock (why not spend the money on subsidizing their own distro?).
It looks dodgy to me... (Score:1)
Total common is 66.6M (6M being sold). IPO at $10-12. That's a capitalization of $700M or so. $20 would be approx $1.3B
Last years revenues were $10M or so (earnings around zilch), which would put the price/sales at 100. Or looking at it another way, even at a pretty high P/E of 50 they'd have to be earning $20M to justify a $1B market cap...
Bear in mind too that they only dominate in the US. SuSe (which has higher sales than RedHat) dominates in Europe. Pacific HiTech in Japan.. They're also not getting many takers for their service contracts (revenue was practically all sales), and their product can be bought for $1.99 from www.cheapbytes.com (vs $70 or so from RedHat)....
Looks scary to me as anything other than a short term gamble.
Re:"Why I Ph33r The IPO" (Score:1)
I think your insights would be more correct if RedHat was relying on its distribution as their main source of revenue. They claim to make their money off services(support and whatnot). This is a model Wall Street understands (look at IBM, for instance). If RedHat poo-poos the distribution as a clever advertising tool, I believe Wall Street will be more inclined to let it go.
That's my point though. If RedHat makes deals with software companies who in turn only offer support or guarantee their installation will work with a RedHat distribution (we've all seen the evidence of this), Redhat will indeed make their money off of support -- support for the RedHat brand only, thus at the expense of the rest of the Linux community.
Again, who really cares if RedHat allows their distro to be freely released? RedHat won't, if they can still sleep comfortably knowing that they'll get their millions, if theirs is the only distro for which the myriad of software suites will be guaranteed... and what good, then, does that do for the Linux movement -- or users -- in the end?
Re:But is it a good investment? (Score:1)
Now I know hype isn't everything in the IPO game, but look at amazon. Their stock soared without the company making a profit. Why? Because the idea was cool. Red Hat may fall in just the same boat. If it can maintain financial stability, not necessarily success, then the hype factor may increase its value alone.
My personal prediction is this: opens at $12 peaks at $45-$60 and after a little while (3 months) drops to $20
Me, I have a couple other trendy stocks I'm watching out for.
Best place to trade stocks? (Score:1)
Also I hope to see more investment software coming out as free software now. Anybody here tried software by Omega Research? I'd like to duplicate and extend that. Possibly give it a web interface. Would be awesome IMO.
Re:Best place to trade stocks? (Score:1)
For example, ETrade charges $15 a trade - if you were to invest $250, and buy into RH and MP3, you'd have put 12% of your investment into fees. You'd also spend that again getting out, which means that your investment of $220 would have to grow by 27% for you to break even. Even without considering risk, the economics don't make sense.
However, as an AC pointed out, the minimums are usually waved if you open an IRA (Individual Retirement Account). An IRA might seem like a bad idea, since you only have a little money to spare, and you are so far away from retirement, but it isn't necessarily. A Roth IRA, in which you invest after-tax dollars, is a great idea, and $250 would be enough to get started. It has the following advantages:
Assuming an average ROI of 13% (a reasonable average), that $250 sitting for 40 years would be worth $33K. Assuming 4% inflation (a high avg), this would be a 1900% ROI.
Also, you won't get an initial issue, so none of your money will get into RH's hands. You'll buy it from some wealthly investor who got into the IPO for a quick buck - your buck. Always invest with a plan - listen to your heart, but invest with your head.
And no, I don't do this for a living - I'm just bored at work.
-Josh
Re:Then there are those who inherit... (Score:1)
Re:When you filled out your app, how many trades? (Score:1)
Red Hat IPO on E*TRADE only for the Chosen Ones (Score:1)
Anyway, after frustration with their IPO web pages, I poked around and discovered this web page [etrade.com]. You need to be a E*TRADE customer to see it. I quote "Red Hat has set aside a certain number of shares in its initial public offering for purchase online through E*TRADE by certain members of the open source community." Another quote, "Red Hat has chosen certain people that the company feels have contributed much to the growth of the company to date. Red Hat wishes to provide these people with the opportunity to purchase shares of stock in the company at the public offering price, should they wish."
Will any of the Chosen Ones speak up? Should the rest of us forget about it?
Re:How will Redhat make money? (Score:1)
Buisiness will buy it. And, even though they only have to buy one copy, and use that one copy on each of 1000 computers, businesses will still buy 1000 copies, one for each computer.
Why? You got me. But they will, and do. I guess it helps them sleep better at night or something.
And Red Hat is supposed to be targeting business, right?
Also, I was in the bookstore the other day, and ran into a guy that had RedHat6.0 in his hand, for $80, and I said, "You know you can get that for $1.99 at cheapbytes.com. It's the same exact thing" and he said "Yeah, but I need the documentation and phone support"
Come on. Is the support and docs really worth $78?
I bought my first Linux distro at the store, too (but my boss paid for it), so I guess I can't really talk.
People new to Open SOurce are trained to BUY STUFF and PAY FULL PRICE. They like to have the box. Go figure.
-geekd
I don't think you understand. (Score:1)
counterpoint: It is worth noteing that G.S. has the 2nd highest profit margin of any company in the world after Nintendo.
10%'s enough (Score:1)
e.g., Internet Explorer bundled to the MacOS
Red Hat IPO Not going to be available to most... (Score:3)
IPOs of this nature (meaning incredibly hot, as I predict Red Hat's will be) just don't get sold to individual investors, at least not at the IPO price. Typically, large firms like Fidelity get a certain number of shares immediately, and allocate them to their biggest clients. I'd be very surprised if any individual investor (especially a linux user, we don't tend to rake in the big bucks, at least yet) gets any shares at the IPO price.
Keep in mind that the price will shoot up in the first few days and then cool off. After that I see Red Hat as a very viable investment.
Be careful, though.
Re:What time? (Score:1)
There might be a whole lot of rich Slashdotters around by the end of that week.
Short Term || Long Term (Score:3)
If Redhat makes a decision that's "Good" for the community but may be "Bad" for profit, stock prices will fall period, that's the way of life. Will RHAT be pressured by investors? I see no reason why they wouldn't be. Who would you listen to if you had millions at steak?
A good idea and a great product help out with things a lot, but take a look at AMD from the long term perspective. They released the K7 (better than sex, P3 killer) and their stock barely moved a couple of dollars. AMD has a great product but has been plagued by business and production problems keeping investors scared.
IMHO RHAT has a kick-ass product (better than sex, Win killer). But their business model must be rock solid inorder to suceed. They've got a tough balancing act to perform here and I really hope they pull it off. But the bottom line is, I'll be buying my shares - long or short I do not know.
Will probably open at a large premium. (Score:1)
got allocated it at $15 will have a 400% profit the first second. Who says rich people don't work hard?
Better than sex (Score:1)
My friend, you're clearly doing it wrong.
OTOH, what do your comments suggest about running RH Linux on an Athlon? A system that cannot legally be used by someone younger than 17?
Buy at IPO or wait? (Score:3)
I plan to try to get the 100 pre-IPO shares that will be offered to select E*Trade members. I believe E*Offerings is co-underwriting the IPO, and will offer up shares to E*Trade customers on a "lottery" basis.
Chances are though that I can't get that magical "$10-12" price that almost no one get. So do I buy at IPO or wait?
I have been keeping an eye on this in Silicon Investor's site [techstocks.com] (search for Red Hat) and at Quote.com's IPO Edge [quote.com].
The IPO Edge analysis might be interesting to anyone considering this IPO. RHAT is given an "unfavorable" (-4) rating (range from -5 to 5). The rating appears to be a combination of metrics about how well the lead underwriter has performed in the past, and similar deals/IPOs. The overall rating is a guess of how strong your investment performs after a year.
In general, it looks like the people who "flip" a Goldman Sachs IPO get an average return of 53%, but if the hold on a year the average is 1%.
I am left wondering, however, the performance of Goldman Sachs-underwritten Internet IPOs.
How will Redhat make money? (Score:1)
1) They will sell linux
How can you sell a product that is avaliable for free? At least how can you sell it for much more than minimal cost (ala CheapBytes.com). I mean how many people out there are actually gonna go out and spend $50 on RedHat x.x compared to the number who will dl of the net, or get a cheap CD?
2) They will sell advertising on a Portal Site
RedHat.com can't get *that* many hits, and even if RedHat Linux becomes hugely popuoar, that doesn't mean it'll get any more than it does now.
3) Service/Support
This is the most popular answer, but I'm still not sure what it means. Is RedHat goning to try to be like LinuxCare? Maybe, but I just don't see that much of a business in answering phone calls all day to help people get the latest version of Mozilla working.
I think Linux is a great OS, but a bad financial investment.
-Harry
Re:But is it a good investment? (Score:1)
Who's to say if this will be a good long term stock? I certailny don't have the wisdom to make that call. But I think it's as good as anything else out there. If RedHat takes the money and really cranks out some amazing stuff then they will make money, and the stock will be a good long term investment.
OTOH..if Linux burns out..or RedHat falls from grace...then poof...you loose. So buy into the hype...roll the dice and live large
Re:Too Bad (Score:1)
Re:Will probably open at a large premium. (Score:1)
--
Re:But is it a good investment? (Score:1)
Do not make it as complicated as the Wall Street broker-types would like you to believe it is.
If you are in it just for the dough...THEN it gets complicated, because you have no gut feeling to go on, just data presented and the proverbial 'word on da street'
So the question remains: Do you believe or revel in Red Hat enough to make the decision of investment in them a non-issue? Yes? then *DO* it (no matter whether or not you're pissed off about not getting in on the IPO)
In short: Get behind those people who make your life fun.
Re:RHAT is PHAT.... (Score:1)
(or, will it be) AR-HAT, ur-HAT, or (silent "h")
RAT? I prefer the lattermost, mainly because it
is monosyllabic and ends in a hard consonant (like
a lot of "effective" expletives).
Re:But is it a good investment? (Score:2)
Do not make it as complicated as the Wall Street broker-types would like you to believe it is.
If you are in it just for the dough...THEN it gets complicated, because you have no gut feeling to go on, just data presented and the proverbial 'word on da street'
So the question remains: Do you believe or revel in Red Hat enough to make the decision of investment in them a non-issue? Yes? then *DO* it (no matter whether or not you're pissed off about not getting in on the IPO)
In short: Get behind those people who make your life fun.
-Chuck G.
My plan... (Score:1)
Put in a limit order to sell it at double what I pay for it. Goes through in a couple days. Maybe a week.
Rush off to buy a NICE new computer with my $4K profit.
Wait until stock goes back down to about 50% above IPO price. Buy. Hold long term.
E*Trade is one of the underwriters (Score:1)
So, I cut a check for $50,000+ to them a couple of weeks ago. I'll see how much I can get. Might have a chance, as my account size is twice their average and I already trade more than 75 times a year.
Strange as it sounds, I do long-term investments.
Will in Seattle
Re:Best place to trade stocks? (Score:1)
Having said that, if you really want to invest in stocks, and are looking for a cheap way to do it, I'd suggest DLJ direct [dljdirect.com]. There's no deposit for most people, no opening or monthly fees, and they've got fairly decent information on the site. They have won several awards, they have the free Marketspeed software [dljdirect.com] (which is pretty decent), and I've been using them for a few months now without a problem. I was recommended to the site by a friend, and the quality is definitely high enough to recommend to anyone else.
The only problem is the commision. $20 per trade won't kill you, but it's definitely NOT the cheapest out there. The value of your purchase has to increase by $40 just to break even. For neophytes and day-traders, that can kill any hope of making a profit. I personally hold my stocks a while, and don't trade much, so it doesn't get in my way (I earned about $25k after taxes last year. Not a fortune, but a nice bonus on top of my regular salary).
I'm also making a killing on my MSFT holdings. Before I get flamed: I don't look at it as "supporting" MS, instead it's the ultimate Windows refund
Re:And away we go (Score:1)
Re:Will probably open at a large premium. (Score:1)
Erik
Value of Red Hat. (Score:1)
My previous estimates for what Red Hat would be worth came to an amount of about $20M - $60M for the whole company.
So my opinion is that the stock is highly overrated.
Now the stock value can reflect an "expectation" value, and if the "doubling every year" (which they claim on their website) continues, any price is reasonable on the long run.
Anyway, I don't deal at stock markets. I don't buy stock. I just calculate total-company-value for fun. Just ignore me.
Roger.
At least they're running Solaris (Score:1)
Chuck
Fortune cookie # 847298374
From reading the article (Score:2)
I'm a friend, really I am! Can I get some please?
But is it a good investment? (Score:4)
Sure the share price will rise in the short term amid the traditional hi-tech IPO frenzy, particularly with all the open source media attention. But I wouldn't be surpised to see it dropping down towards the issue price in the medium to long term. Good for those looking to make a quick buck, but I wouldn't view it as a long term investment...
Two words: (Score:1)
I sent my check in to E*TRADE yesterday to open an account, and I'll soon send some additional cash to make sure I get this IPO, even if it prices above the $12 high end of the range (unlikely). Based on past credentials, E*TRADE investors can get 100 shares of an upcoming IPO when it prices.
As for Red Hat being a long-term investment, I firmly believe that they can last. Everyone here is always talking about (1) how fast Linux is growing, and (2) how Red Hat is becoming the Microsoft of Linux. If this second point is true, then as an investor I'm all for it! Microsoft's stock has skyrocketed in a long term view.
I figure, why not profit from Linux's rise to power? I'm putting my money where my mouth is as soon as I get account-opening confirmation from E*TRADE. I just hope I can get my 100 shares.
Re:What a name... (Score:1)
-awc
What are RH gonna do with the $$$ (Score:1)
Free shares for significant Linux contributors would be a Very Good Thing (and no, I'm not one myself - wish I was).
HH
date; talk; touch; unzip; finger; expand; strip; mount; yes; yes; yes; eject; more; sleep
Re:Will probably open at a large premium. (Score:1)
Since when did overvalued mean anything??? (Score:1)
Slaping self over the head,
Micah
Re:When you filled out your app, how many trades? (Score:1)
Yeah, but some of us are buying stock (Score:1)
Will in Seattle
Hope so (Score:1)
Will in Seattle
It's idiots like you that almost bled us dry (Score:1)
Now the current GOP crop wants to "give back" $1 billion, instead of paying off the national debt or funding the programs for all the old fogies.
Sheesh!
Look, try living in another country and you'll NEVER say that we have high taxes. We have one of the lowest tax rates in the world, and you should be darn grateful to pay your taxes.
Will in Seattle
Which is why I'm buying Nintendo (Score:1)
Pikachu, I choose you!
90 million Japanese gameboys can't be wrong.
Will in Seattle
Foolish take on Red Hat IPO (Score:1)
I just happen to think that this is one of those rare IPOs that I can see lasting for a while, in a company I understand, and in an industry I understand.
Caveat Emptor!
Will in Seattle
P.S.: If you don't speak Latin, you must not be Latin
Re:What time? (Score:1)
Stock Trading Online (Score:1)
Re:Will probably open at a large premium. (Score:2)
Re:Buy at IPO or wait? (Score:1)
E*Offering [eoffering.com] doesn't seem to have any info on Redhat in their IPO Calendar. E*Offering does have some other interesting stuff though.
The Red Hat IPO press release [redhat.com] does in fact say that E*Trade is one of the underwriters.
RHAT is PHAT.... (Score:1)