Subject category:
Finance, Accounting and Control
Published by:
Stanford Business School
Version: April 2000
Length: 16 pages
Data source: Published sources
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Abstract
In the spring of 1999, Marta Fontanez, a new analyst with Capital Appreciation, needed to make a recommendation to the investment council concerning the value of Microsoft's stock. She was concerned with announcements the company made between 1997 and 1999. In the quarter ended June 30, 1997, Microsoft announced that it did not buy back any shares because its stock 'price was a little too high'. Not only did Microsoft's stock price fall on the news, but the Dow Jones swooned 130 points. In subsequent corporate releases, Microsoft's Steve Ballmer repeatedly cautioned investors of the risks inherent in Microsoft stock and the possibility that the security was overvalued in 1998 and 1999. Microsoft was publicly talking down its stock, purchasing fewer shares in the open market than before, and experiencing heavy levels of insider selling. Fontanez was also concerned with the value of the firm, given the effects of options issuance, and wondered whether the market was not accurately calculating their costs. She needed to determine whether these actions reflected Microsoft insiders' superior information regarding the value of the firm - and, thus, there would be an eventual correction in the stock price - or whether the stock price would continue to climb. Fontanez wondered whether Ballmer was correct that Microsoft had become simply too expensive to buy. Was Microsoft finally at a loss as to how to invest its profits? Or, was the stock a good buy?
Other setting(s):
2001
About
Abstract
In the spring of 1999, Marta Fontanez, a new analyst with Capital Appreciation, needed to make a recommendation to the investment council concerning the value of Microsoft's stock. She was concerned with announcements the company made between 1997 and 1999. In the quarter ended June 30, 1997, Microsoft announced that it did not buy back any shares because its stock 'price was a little too high'. Not only did Microsoft's stock price fall on the news, but the Dow Jones swooned 130 points. In subsequent corporate releases, Microsoft's Steve Ballmer repeatedly cautioned investors of the risks inherent in Microsoft stock and the possibility that the security was overvalued in 1998 and 1999. Microsoft was publicly talking down its stock, purchasing fewer shares in the open market than before, and experiencing heavy levels of insider selling. Fontanez was also concerned with the value of the firm, given the effects of options issuance, and wondered whether the market was not accurately calculating their costs. She needed to determine whether these actions reflected Microsoft insiders' superior information regarding the value of the firm - and, thus, there would be an eventual correction in the stock price - or whether the stock price would continue to climb. Fontanez wondered whether Ballmer was correct that Microsoft had become simply too expensive to buy. Was Microsoft finally at a loss as to how to invest its profits? Or, was the stock a good buy?
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Other setting(s):
2001