RPT-IPO VIEW-Penthouse's planned IPO may be a damp squib
(Repeating item that initially moved on Friday)
By Anupreeta Das and Robert MacMillan
SAN FRANCISCO, March 30 (Reuters) - A bearish market and investors looking for safe bets may dampen the planned public debut of Penthouse Media Group Inc, publisher of the racy men's magazine, as the company tries to win Wall Street's support of its switch of focus from print to online.
Penthouse said earlier this month it plans to raise $250 million in a public offering and expects to file a registration statement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in the second quarter.
The Boca Raton, Florida-based company, formerly known as General Media Inc and reorganized in 2004 under current Chief Executive Marc Bell, plans to use the IPO proceeds to pay down debt so it can focus on making money off the huge Internet audience for adult entertainment.
Bell earlier told Reuters the company has tamed its flagship, once known for its hard-core brand of porn, to appeal to a wider audience, along the lines of popular "lad" magazines such as Maxim.
Penthouse has also bought related Web businesses, including the adult social networking site Adultfriendfinder.com, as part of Bell's efforts to refocus the company's strategy.
"We're not a publishing company. We're an Internet company," Bell said in a later interview.
But investors currently have a poor appetite for new stocks of companies with unproven technologies or revenue streams, whether it's a biotechnology start-up or a publisher of adult entertainment, IPO Boutique analyst Scott Sweet said.
"Regardless of (Penthouse's) new concept, it's likely to be a tough sell in this environment," Sweet said.
"You need a speculative marketplace for individuals and institutions to want to participate in IPOs," he said. Right now, investors are struggling to maintain profitable positions in core holdings such as Google Inc (GOOG.O) or Apple Inc (AAPL.O) stocks, he added.
Even these tech darlings -- which withstood the initial market volatility brought on by the credit and housing market crises -- have taken a beating since January as the economy teeters on the edge of recession.
This year, leery underwriters have withdrawn 26 IPOs and postponed five, according to IPO research firm IPOHome, as everyone waits for the markets to stabilize.
The only splashy debut has been Visa Inc's (V.N) record $17.9 billion IPO, which bucked the trend because investors felt safe -- Visa has an established business model and global brand recognition, and credit card usage is expected to surge, especially in emerging economies.
Investors may also be seeking a return to Finance 101 when looking at IPOs, said IPO Desktop analyst Francis Gaskins.
He said investors -- who tend to be more lenient about financial data during during good times -- are going to be looking closely at income statements and whether Penthouse has sustainable sources of cash. Continued...
Citadel enters the fray
Kenneth Griffin's powerful hedge fund has waded into the case of Goldman Sachs' purloined computer code, suing three of its former employees for setting up Teza Technologies. Full Article | Full Coverage


