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GOOG Falls Below $350 (first time since late Oct 2005)

Barron's article says shares could fall as much as 50% over the next year

         

christopher w

5:17 pm on Feb 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Google (GOOG) shares last fell 4.6% to $345.20, trading below the $350 mark for the first time since late October. The Barron's article argued shares could fall further due in part to growing competition from heavyweights Microsoft Corp. and Yahoo Inc.

MarketWatch article [marketwatch.com]

The Barron's article called Google Gets the Gong [online.barrons.com]

poster_boy

7:21 pm on Feb 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The analysts who claim Yahoo is a threat to Google's Paid Search market share anywhere in the near or distant future are not paying attention. Buy GOOG.

Brett_Tabke

12:01 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Reuters [today.reuters.com]

Shares of Google Inc. (GOOG.O: Quote, Profile, Research) fell nearly 5 percent on Monday and have lost a quarter of their value this month as the Web search company that once could do no wrong faces up to the realities of a business that must face the bad with the good.

But despite several bouts of negative news that have knocked a stock once thought headed to $500 back below $350, the vast majority of Wall Street analysts remain sanguine over Google's prospects and advise investors to buy the stock.

oldpro

12:09 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



It is interesting that the non geek world was become aware of the glaring flaw in PPC advertising...click fraud. We have to deal with it all the time. Everyday we will get user sessions were clicks are spaced 1 to 2 seconds apart with as many as 20 to 30 clicks costing us at minimum $1.00 per. Sometimes it will be from different IP addresses and it is hard to identify whether it is a concerted effort of one of our competitors or surfers with some kind of obsessive/compulsive disorder. This is the case with both Adwords and YSM.

It would seem it would be simple for google set a onclick cookie and not count subsequent clicks until a timeout period expired...but there seems to be little incentive for google to do so.

As this is relative to google's current market value...adwords advertisers are now having to discount bids to offset the unnessecary added cost of click fraud...whether the fraud is perpetuated intentionally by a competitor or unintentionally by an ignorant surfer.

Therefore the value of googles one main commodity is worth much less than it could be if they would simply use their unlimited technological firepower to protect its value.

Aside from this...google's market valuation is inflated somewhat (P/E ratio). Investors have been banking on continued rate of earnings growth. Now that it has slowed below expectations...the speculative potential is less appealing.

Google needs to pay more attention to protecting and adding value to adwords instead of venturing off into niches were competition already exists (ie; itunes, gbuy, etc.)

As an adwords advertiser that spends a substantial amount...I would be more than willing to increase my budget and bids if I was assured my money would not be wasted on worthless clicks. The cumulative net effect for google would be a continued high rate of earnings growth.

[edited by: oldpro at 12:14 am (utc) on Feb. 14, 2006]

emodo

12:11 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Good, if it falls I will be able to purchase some shares. :)

Kufu

12:15 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



At this point Google is more concerned with shutting out Y! and MSN rather than preventing click-fraud. G is also trying to enter into as many niche markets as possible as spending their resources on these types of ventures will generate more revenue rather than trying to keep the advertisers who are victims of click-fraud happy, and keeping them as clients.

There will always be time to go back and deal with click-fraud, but if G falls behind in any area then they will have to spend considerably more resources to catch up.

skibum

12:20 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



This is still a one-trick pony as far as revenue goes. If click fraud is as high as some estimates project, they better work it out or it seems rather likly that advertisers will adjust bids accordingly. If the stock dropped to $175.00 over the next year, it would probably be a good buy at that point.

walkman

12:30 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)



>> the vast majority of Wall Street analysts remain sanguine over Google's prospects and advise investors to buy the stock.

To me this carries ZERO weight, actually even less, it's a negative. How many of these "analysts" pushed net stocks in the late 90's even as they reached $400 levels?

oldpro

12:42 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



If click fraud is as high as some estimates project, they better work it out or it seems rather likly that advertisers will adjust bids accordingly.

I classify "click fraud" as both malicious intent and for instance a bored surfer clicking back and forth. Both have the same consequences. 50% of our clicks are unnessecary...no matter the argument that a surfer may be comparision shoppping...it doesn't usually take a person 10 visits in a matter of minutes to make up their mind.

We obviously need PPC to remain competitive in our niche...as does any serious online business. But when our profits remain the same by lowering our budget and adjusting our bids to compensate for click fraud...google loses and we win. If google would protect its advertisers interests better we would spend more...profit more...and it would be a win/win situation for both google and the advertiser.

Adwords was the horse that got google to $450.00 per share. They need to ride that horse till it drops.

At this point Google is more concerned with shutting out Y! and MSN

If this is the case...think of the competitive google would have if they could assure advertisers protection from click fraud and unnecessary clicks. Overture would soon be in shock from revenue bleeding.

[edited by: oldpro at 12:51 am (utc) on Feb. 14, 2006]

Kufu

12:48 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



>> They need to ride that horse till it drops.

Not before they have a few other foals running around ready to take the main horses spot right after it 'drops'. No? :)

oldpro

12:59 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



As a horse breeder and one that can ride the hide off a horse...you can't even mount a horse until it is 3 years old...then another 2 years before it reaches its full potential. Same goes for most business ventures.

Google can still have in other ventures in incubation, but still google will remain a one trick pony for a few more years. In my humble opinion they have temporarily lost sight of their priorities. This is probably because of the tremendous amount of capital generated from the sale of outstanding stock as opposed to retained earnings from ongoing operations.

Adwords is still their cash cow.

BillyS

3:05 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>>If click fraud is as high as some estimates project, they better work it out or it seems rather likely that advertisers will adjust bids accordingly.

That's exactly what advertisers do. Click fraud merely lowers the price that advertisers would be willing to pay otherwise, because it lowers the effective sales conversion rate. Any legitimate publisher should despise parties involved with click fraud because it takes money right out of our pockets.

I’m quite unsympathetic to posters here talking about clicking on their own ads. That’s because I’ve spent thousands of my own money advertising and I know fraud exists. You can see it in you logs when a stream of traffic suddenly appears and your conversion rate plummets.

Google understands this and protects their advertising clients as well as anyone out there.

oldpro

4:30 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Google understands this and protects their advertising clients as well as anyone out there.

Agreed, but...

The point is there is much room for improvement when it comes to protecting advertising clients. This is a pervasive problem throughtout the PPC advertising medium. Protecting clients was well as anyone out there is not saying much...especially when the technology exists to practically make click fraud almost non-existent.

Investors and Wall Street outside "our fishbowl" see this major flaw in the PPC advertising concept. This is because they see PPC as alternative advertising which competes traditional mediums. We webmasters swimming inside our fishbowl are oftentimes quilty of not seeing broader marketing opportunities. Case in point...Our company can take what we spend monthly on adwords and ysm alone and buy full page ads in several national magazines targeted to our industry and drive way more traffic to our website than we could ever hope for with PPC keyword searches. I know this...we do it from time to time and it produces very profitable results.

We webmasters can complain till the cows come home and still nothing will be done about it. When Google loses half its market value, then it will dawn on them that they should correct the problem. I am not just knocking Google alone...YSM is no less quilty of ignoring the problem.

Notwithstanding my frustration with the click fraud problem, I still think PPC is the best idea since sliced bread. However, why not correct this problem when the solution is so simple?

Otherwise, doing nothing now will in the long run ruin the reputation of the PPC concept. If this happens there is a silver lining in the cloud for us webmasters...the days of .05 bids and above the fold positions will be back and google stock will be trading below $10.00 per share.

Junanagoh

5:50 am on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



" Good, if it falls I will be able to purchase some shares. :) "

agreed

Hollywood

9:11 pm on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



GOOG @ 343.32 -$2.38 Today 2-14-06

Almost at my expected 300 share price called it at 450/share.

Stocks just get to excited many times, to bad all my posts were removed, gotta love free speech on Webmasterworld. (Yah right)

I still think 300 is where this company will be healthy again and there is nothing wrong with talking about technical analysis, it is all based on fact and historical norms.

The next thread soon should read
"GOOG Falls Below $300 (first time since late Oct 2005)". But unless you are in bed with the search engines your post will be removed.

ikkyu

9:33 pm on Feb 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I absolutely agree on the click-fraud issue - what is Google without AdWords? Even as their organic SERPs become average at best you can still have the paid advertisements that are relevant. If Google doesn't have its act together when it comes to click-fraud then its only a matter of time before the AdWords model implodes.

We rely alot on AdWords and have had mixed results so far, but in our niche its necessary. I just hope that their click-fraud filter is set up not to charge us for questionable clicks.

LostOne

11:52 am on Feb 15, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



"the vast majority of Wall Street analysts remain sanguine over Google's prospects and advise investors to buy the stock. "

analysts = sales people. Plain, simple, and straight forward. Do you own homework.

BillyS

2:33 pm on Feb 15, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>>analysts = sales people. Plain, simple, and straight forward.

Agree, and in some situations there is even what most businesses would deem a "conflict of interest."

oldpro

2:34 pm on Feb 15, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



the vast majority of Wall Street analysts remain sanguine over Google's prospects and advise investors to buy the stock.

We are without a doubt much more qualified to analyise Google's prospects than Wall Street salesmen. Webmaster World is as close to insider information as you can get besides being a fly on the wall in the Mountain View boardroom.

Whatever the case may be...Google's current stock crisis will have no negative effect on advertisers. However, nothing but good can come from this...improvements benefiting advertisers will take place. For me...I will wait until the stock is trading around $150/share if major changes are not made to correct the flaws in their PPC model.

jomaxx

6:18 am on Feb 17, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



This advertising model is not going away. It works well for publishers, advertisers AND consumers.

And with respect to click fraud, who is the furthest ahead in detecting it algorithmically? Google, probably. Who has the broadest infrastructure for gathering information about web browsing habits, both for generalizing about browsing patterns and for looking at the behaviour of specific sites? Google, unquestionably.

So if Google can keep click fraud at a manageable level, this capability has the potential to become a competitive advantage that helps them defend their territory against Yahoo, MSN and Amazon.

It may prove especially valuable in keeping competitors from expanding beyond the "safe zone" of English-speaking industrialized countries. For example, in their beta testing YPN isn't addressing that issue at all, dealing with US webmasters only and paying for US traffic only.