Twitter’s IPO will spawn millions of dollars for shareholding employees—and loads and loads of tax obligations.
Assuming Twitter’s projected share price of $26 holds down the line, non-executive employees could be on the …
Twitter’s IPO will spawn millions of dollars for shareholding employees—and loads and loads of tax obligations.
Assuming Twitter’s projected share price of $26 holds down the line, non-executive employees could be on the …
Above even the highest-end predictions
Also see the surprising ones who are getting nothing.
On Friday, August 2, two very surprising things happened on Twitter. At 7:21 PM Pacific Time, users sent 143,199 tweets in a single second, a new record for Twitter activity. Most of the posts came from Japan, where TV viewers
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Increased to $23-25 a share
Twitter just got a visual makeover. The social media company today announced that photos and Vine videos will begin showing up automatically in users’ timelines. It may seem like a small change, but the sprinkling of photos and
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Generating profit is for tech dinosaurs like Apple and Google. Today it’s all about growth potential
Twitter’s initial public stock will sell at $17 – $20 per share, and the company could raise as much as $1.6 billion from the offering, Twitter Inc. announced Thursday. The IPO will be the largest in the technology sector since …
Funds could be used for acquisitions, analysts say
The letter to shareholders has long been a staple of the IPO prospectus, although it’s usually been a pro forma affair. Leave it to a few cocky Internet companies to put their own twist on the tradition, starting in 2004 with Google’s “Letter from the Founders,” which it boldly subtitled “An Owner’s Manual for Google …
Twitter’s quickly growing (but still unprofitable) advertising business has gained lots of attention recently as the company prepares for an initial public offering. But selling promoted tweets is not the only way the social
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Twitter’s planned initial public offering is among the most anticipated in recent years. Millions of people worldwide use the service to vent about politics, check news headlines and follow Miley Cyrus.
But in a regulatory …