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One Guy's Investments

The story of Travis Johnson's investment portfolio, with analysis and thoughts on the stocks and funds I've considered, bought and sold. I don't claim to have brilliant picks that will make you money, and I'm not an investment advisor, registered or otherwise, so don't follow my moves unless you're happy to lose money without suing someone. I'm just one guy. My articles get republished in several places, but always appear here first -- subscribe now(totally free via RSS) to see them before they're on Yahoo Finance.

Friday, August 25, 2006 -- Subscribe free

Tight Fisted Googlers (GOOG)

I find it remarkable that it was over a year ago when I questioned Google's decision to do a secondary offering to raise $4 billion dollars ... and they still haven't spent that money.

This comes to my attention again because Google has now crossed the line and has so much in cash and short term investments that they risk being regulated as a mutual fund.

Now, I assume that they'll get their exemption or otherwise find a reasonable way around this -- but it begs the question, what are they going to do with our money?

Google now has about $14 billion in cash -- that's more than 10% of their market cap. [Correction -- it's actually $10 billlion as of the end of June, sorry -- see comments] They have excellent profit margins and still more than 100% earning growth, and they're continuing to pile up the cash.

So what are they going to use it for? I think we're many years away from a Google dividend, and it would be foolish to buy back shares at this point since just last year you issued those shares at a much lower price (around $300) -- you'd just be paying investment bankers to waste money for you.

I'd still be happy to see Google make some good acquisitions that fit nicely into their wheelhouse -- Akamai's still under $6 billion, for example, a high traffic publisher like CNET would only set them back a bit over a billion (and CNET is much more nicely priced today than it was when I sold a year ago) or some of the advertising competitors like Valueclick at a billion and a half, or even a more traditional advertising agency -- Interpublic, Omnicom, Publicis or WPP Group are all in a price range where Google could buy them with cash, though Omnicom and WPP would be tight at close to $15 billion.

Do any of those really make sense for Google? I don't know -- they have clearly shown no interest in large acquisitions in the past, with the exception of the AOL investment that I believe was designed more to keep their market share than to proactively build the business. They want to grow with their own technology, and make small acquisitions to build services and capabilities -- but they're hiring as fast as they can and expanding with more server farms around the world ... and they still can't spend their money fast enough.

I don't have the solution, but I hope someone at Google does -- the business is great, but use the tremendous opportunity of this extra pile of cash to grow as aggressively as you can ... one needs only to look up the coast to Redmond, WA to see how easily an insular company with a cash hoard and a reluctance to spend it can become stagnant.

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Comments:
GOOG has $4 BB in cash, not $14 BB as you state.
 
Thanks for noting my error -- Sorry, I goofed and included $4 billion of their long term investments (mostly property, plant and equipment) when I did the math -- but their "same as cash" investments, which is cash and short term securities, mostly t-bills, is $10 billion).

Apologies for the overstatement ... but $10 billion is still way too much cash to carry without a plan ... hopefully, they have such a plan (maybe today's business software announcement is part of that plan, though I'm underwhelmed so far).
 
They have money, so spend it?
Buy this or that dotcom, just b/c ?

Dude, you're an idiot.

You know nothing about valuation or fundamentals.

Buy an index fund, and stick to programming or biology, or whatever your dayjob is.
 
That's not how I would characterize my remarks -- but it's certainly possible that I'm an idiot.

Perhaps it's clearer to put it this way: "You raised money, so use it." Google's industry is changing quickly, I'd rather see them spend money now to maintain their leadership position than have them sit on a large pile of cash "just in case." Their cash continues to build faster than they can spend it, thanks partly to options exercises and partly to rapid earnings growth.

I agree that it's silly to say "buy something, just because" -- but I don't think it's silly to say, "continue building the business as fast as you can, because your opponents will never again be this weak."
 
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