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Google passes $500 on the back of a wave of speculative interest, is this
the start of another run up in Google or are we near a potential slump in the
Google share price?

Since Google floated some 2 years ago at $85, it has had strong run higher
to the current price of $505, up 600% since IPO, and up over 50% on the 330
lows seen barely 3 months ago. Now we look at where Google actually stands
and probability that it can achieve an even higher price or if Google has run
ahead of its fundamentals.
Googles primary, and you could say only source of revenue is the Google search
engine, where the current market share of searches amongst the five main search
index players is approximately as follows.
Google 45%
Yahoo 30%
Microsoft 15%
AOL 5%
Ask. 5%
Despite Yahoo being 2nd, the main competitor to Google is Microsoft, for Microsoft
has the means and the financial muscle to overtake Google, it may not happen
in 2007. But the risks given the amount of resources that Microsoft can throw
at the Search Engine is highly probable. Despite Google's several recent purchases
of companies such as Youtube, and providing free services such as blogging,
they are future possible money earners, not current, if Microsoft is able to
put a dent into Google's primary revenue source searching, then the Google stock
price could be headed for a sharp drop of more than 50% from the current price
of $505.
A financial comparison between Google, Microsoft and Yahoo.
| |
Google |
Microsoft |
Yahoo |
| Share Price |
$505 |
$30 |
$27.5 |
| Earnings per Share |
$9 |
$1.2 |
$1.3 |
| Price / Earnings Ratio |
56 |
25 |
22 |
| Turnover |
$9.5bn |
$45bn |
6$.2bn |
| Profit |
$2.5bn |
$13bn |
$1.1bn |
| Search Market Share |
45% |
15% |
30% |
| Market Capital |
$154bn |
$292bn |
$38bn |
The key item to stand out on the comparison between the 3 major search engine
providers are that Google is valued at near 3 times either Microsoft or Yahoo.
Which suggests extra speculative interest on future growth comprising more
than 50% of its current valuation.
Google has a market share of 45%, can that market share grow further when
it has Microsoft and Yahoo coming up behind it? My opinion is that it may
well be able to maintain market share, but will find it difficult to grow market
sure much above the current 45%. Which suggest profits will have to come from
other business and growth in advertising revenues from searching. Advertising
is a cyclical business and there are little significant barriers to entry for
this type of business. Google's revenue growth (as strong as it is), is slowing
down on a quarterly basis and this is yet to be reflected in the price. Google
additionally has benefited from the ongoing problems at Yahoo, which has suffered
from a downturn in financial and car advertising, both of which contributed
to a 38% fall in its most recent quarterly profits.
The market valuation of Google at $154bn on earnings of $2.5bn seems excessive,
much as the value of Microsoft was during the dot com bubble of 1999. The stock
does appear to have got ahead of its future revenue growth rate when the only
revenue stream that Google has is ads revenues generated by the search index.
Google is overly expensive at $154bn, not when you can pick up a stock in Microsoft
and Yahoo for near 1/3rd the cost.
Technical Analysis
- Immediate support is along the uptrendline since Google floated in 2004,
presently at $405, which would mark the initial target for any decline.
- Secondary support exists along the intermediary lows along $365.
- Major support and the main target for any down trend are the lows along
$330. Which would represent a near 35% drop in price, which would still leave
Google overvalued, relative to its main competitor search engines as once
a decline begins both Microsoft, Yahoo and other tech stocks would also
be declining, but both being outpaced by the slump in Google.
Conclusion:
It is a risky time to be holding Google and the safest strategy for stock holders
would be to take some profits. In the long-term Google may go higher even
above $1000, but when I say the long-term I mean 5 to 10 years, coupled with
steady year on year earnings growth, and a price earnings valuation nearer
20 rather then the present 60! That would be the best case scenerio, the
worst case scenerio is that either Yahoo or Microsoft or someone else comes
along with an better search engine, It has happened before!
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