QUOTE AND NEWS
New York Times  May 17  Comment 
Andrew Mason, the co-founder of Groupon, will be a part-time partner at Y Combinator, the Silicon Valley start-up incubator. He also plans to start a company.
New York Times  May 17  Comment 
It wasn't until dawn on Thursday that the Hess Corporation settled a proxy fight waged by Elliott Management. | Laurene Powell Jobs is tiptoeing into the public sphere to push her philanthropic agenda. | Fred Eckert, a onetime Goldman Sachs...
MarketWatch  May 17  Comment 
Consumers looking for a bargain on concerts and sporting events may find it pays to procrastinate. With more e-tickets in play, there are often steep price drops at the last minute.
Reuters  May 17  Comment 
Former Groupon Inc. Chief Executive Andrew Mason is moving to San Francisco to start a company after recently recording an album of "motivational business music," according to an update on his blog on Thursday.
TechCrunch  May 16  Comment 
Andrew Mason must be some kind of spirit animal of optimism. We assumed he was kidding when today he wrote that he had recorded "a seven song album of motivational business music". Just three months ago the founder and CEO got booted from Groupon....
TechCrunch  May 16  Comment 
Y Combinator's Paul Graham revealed a bunch of personnel news in a just-published blog post. Let's see if I've got everything: The incubator has added one full-time partner (Wufoo's Kevin Hale) and four part-time partners (Socialcam's Michel...
Benzinga  May 16  Comment 
During an interview with CNBC, Groupon (NASDAQ: GRPN) co-founder and co-CEO Eric Lefkofsky said that he does not regret his company's decision to go public. "I don't think it was a mistake to go public," Lefkofsky told the network, adding...
Clusterstock  May 16  Comment 
The co-CEOs of Groupon, Eric Lefkofsky and Ted Leonsis, stopped by our offices this afternoon, along with CFO Jason Child and other senior Groupon executives. They had some interesting things to say. Groupon, you may recall, is a four year-old...
Wall Street Journal  May 15  Comment 
Groupon isn't likely to name a permanent new chief executive until next year, the daily-deal company's interim chiefs said Wednesday.




 
TOP CONTRIBUTORS

Groupon (NASDAQ:GRPN) is a group buying site which allows merchants to sell deals or discounted offers on their goods or services. The merchant can require that a minimum number of customers must purchase the deal before it becomes valid, or the merchant may limit the number of deals that can be sold. Individuals can subscribe to Groupon, and they receive targeted deals based on their location. Groupon makes money by charging customers for each offer, but the company pays merchants a negotiated percentage of each sale.[1]

Business Overview

For the full year 2010, Groupon's total revenue was $312.9M. This was substantial increase over the total revenue of $14.5M in 2009. The company had not achieved a net income however, as of 2010. In 2009, its net loss was $1.3M and in 2010 it was $413.4M. The largest cost the company incurred in 2010 was marketing, which was $290.6M in 2010. [2] This $20 IPO placed the value of the company at $12.7B.[3]

New Updates

The company's initial public offering of stock on the NASDAQ occurred on November 3, 2011. The company offered 35M shares each for $20. This was above the $16-$18 price range. The company sold 35M shares. This deal raised $7B. The lead bookrunners of the deal were Morgan Stanley, Goldman, and Credit Suisse.[4]


Trends & Forces

High Marketing Expense

Groupon's marketing in 2010 was nearly as large as its total revenue. The company uses marketing to encourage individual to subscribe to Groupon and to purchase live offers. Groupon believes that while it has faced a high marketing costs, such costs will be lower in the future as the company will have created a customer base. However, if such costs remain elevated, Groupon's profits will be directly lowered.[5]

Highly Competitive Industry

While Groupon is a large player in the daily-deal market, the market is very competitive. Groupon does not have any significant way to differentiate itself aside from the type of offers and the level of the discount. This means that defending its market share is relatively hard.[6]

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