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Forums - Sales - Zynga Est. Worth up to $5 billion, Farmville $250 mil per year revenue

EA is worth a little over $6 billion to compare.

Farmville ranks amongst the biggest game franchises in all of gaming today.

http://gigaom.com/2010/04/06/what-is-zynga-worth/

Zynga, the leading social gaming company behind Facebook hits such as Farmville and Mafia Wars, would likely be worth as much as $5 billion if it were publicly traded instead of privately held, according to SecondShares.com, a group of former equity analysts who spend their time researching the value of private online companies such as Zynga, Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. SecondShares based its estimate of Zynga’s value on the number of outstanding shares, estimated revenue per user, growth rate and other metrics, and projected that by 2015 the game maker could have a theoretical market value as high as $10 billion.

Given the pent-up demand that such private companies represent, there’s a lot of interest in valuing them — since there is a chance they could go public someday — and also in trading their shares through secondary markets, although Facebook recently barred its employees from selling their stock through such vehicles.

The authors of the Zynga report — former Merrill Lynch and Goldman Sachs equity analyst Lou Kerner, former Sanford Bernstein research analyst Eli Halliwell and Gamers Media CEO Jay Gould — say Zynga is the leader in the social gaming market with 237 million monthly active users and six of the top seven social games. That gives the company more than four times as many monthly active users as Playfish, which was recently bought by Electronic Arts for $400 million. China’s Tencent Holdings is the only online game company that is larger than Zynga, the report says, with 400 million monthly active users.

Based on an estimate of what Zynga likely makes in revenue from the average user, Second Shares projects that the company will pull in about $500 million in revenue this year, and could be making as much as $1.6 billion per year in five years. The analysts say that shares of the company are currently trading in private, illiquid markets at about $9 a share, but would likely be worth almost twice as much if Zynga were to go public, and that Zynga has a number of strengths that justify a premium valuation, including the fact that it can cross-market games to users of other Zynga games, and that it’s quickly able to duplicate other successful games that competitors come up with. From the report:

As with Facebook, Twitter, and other high profile private companies, you can buy Zynga shares in the (illiquid) private market, where about $6 million worth of shares traded hands last year through marketplaces like SecondMarket.com. Only accredited investors are allowed to participate. Currently, the ask price is about $9/share, implying a market cap for Zynga of $2.8 billion.

Toward the end of its research report, however, Second Shares mentions a number of potential risks for Zynga and its valuation, including:

  • Farmville currently accounts for an estimated 50 percent of the company’s revenue, and “appears to have peaked in terms of popularity.”
  • Facebook blocked applications from providing notifications in newsfeeds last month, removing “a major source of free advertising.”
  • Four of Zynga’s six major game hits “appear to have peaked or to be in decline.”
  • Zynga is dependent on Facebook, and growth at the social network could slow, or the network could harm Zynga somehow.
  • Online gaming is a risky, hit-driven business, and there are a lot of competitors.

In February, a research firm called Next Up estimated that Zynga was worth as much as $3 billion, in a report it did for private share-trading site SharesPost.com, where Zynga is currently valued at $2.6 billion. Russian investment firm Digital Sky Technologies invested $180 million in Zynga in December.

In November, an analyst at Pacific Crest Securities said Zynga could be worth as much as $1 billion, given the $400 million that Electronic Arts paid for Playfish. At that point, Inside Social Games estimated that Zynga would have revenue of $210 million for 2009 and $355 million this year, and a statement from the company said that 1 million of its 200 million active monthly users were buying virtual goods.



Anyone can guess. It takes no effort to throw out lots of predictions and have some of them be correct. You are not and wiser or better for having your guesses be right. Even a blind man can hit the bullseye.

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so basically when farmville goes down the company wont have any thing to back it up

my guess is that zynga will fall toEA in the second part of the year


but still 250 million omg thats pretty amazing counting that the game is free




Not a whole lot different than Activision relying on WoW and CoD/MW or T2 with GTA.



Anyone can guess. It takes no effort to throw out lots of predictions and have some of them be correct. You are not and wiser or better for having your guesses be right. Even a blind man can hit the bullseye.

That's around 25c/month per user (of Farmville). Extreme low-end of gaming (still chinese mobile gaming might be even lower).



Farmville already peaked, Facebooks last update made half my friend list quit. These things never last long, there will be a new social networking site to take over (what ever happened to Myspace being on top? or AIM/AoL chatrooms) There will be always be new casual games to kill time. Still they're making great money for the time being but realistically I don't see the point in guessing how much money they will be worth in 2015 because I highly doubt they will be around then :)



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SickleSigh said:
Farmville already peaked, Facebooks last update made half my friend list quit. These things never last long, there will be a new social networking site to take over (what ever happened to Myspace being on top? or AIM/AoL chatrooms) There will be always be new casual games to kill time. Still they're making great money for the time being but realistically I don't see the point in guessing how much money they will be worth in 2015 because I highly doubt they will be around then :)

the co-op farming thing? its not to bad. Pets update was just released, now they are ripoffs.

 

what im shocked at is Pop Cap's revenue isnt higher.



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I don't think some here understand how these companies work...

25 cents per MAU is decent. On the lower end of things (which could always be boosted with advertisements). Given the size of Zynga's presence, its a very good number, since they have the volume.

Zynga has a lot of other games to back it up if Farmville ever dies off. According to DeveloperAnalytics, of the top 10 Facebook apps, Zynga has 6 of them. The other 4 are mobile connect apps for FB.

@ssj12 - PopCap may have higher revenue, but unless they went public, we wouldn't know. Despite being major players in the casual field, PopCap is significantly smaller than Zynga on Facebook. Bejeweled Blitz has a fraction of the MAU's and DAU's that Farmville, or the other 5 Zynga games have that rank above it in terms of overall revenue.

Farmville has just about crested in terms of popularity, but even if this is the peak, it has another year or two before it fails to make Zynga good amounts of money.



Back from the dead, I'm afraid.

Wow! I can see why there's a gold rush going on in this sector.



"The worst part about these reviews is they are [subjective]--and their scores often depend on how drunk you got the media at a Street Fighter event."  — Mona Hamilton, Capcom Senior VP of Marketing
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I hate those online games. I used to play mafia wars but its such a dumb game. I never played farmville but I don't think it could be that great.

Anybody who pays $5 billion for Zynga is soooo dumb.



Chairman-Mao said:
I hate those online games. I used to play mafia wars but its such a dumb game. I never played farmville but I don't think it could be that great.

Anybody who pays $5 billion for Zynga is soooo dumb.

Yeah! Who the hell would want $500 million in revenue, with God only knows how much growth potential?

Chumps. That's who. Billionaire chumps.



"The worst part about these reviews is they are [subjective]--and their scores often depend on how drunk you got the media at a Street Fighter event."  — Mona Hamilton, Capcom Senior VP of Marketing
*Image indefinitely borrowed from BrainBoxLtd without his consent.