-Contact Thomas Rasmussen
At a time when the social networking bubble is quickly  deflating, micro-blogging startup Twitter seems to be living in an  alternative universe. We are, of course, referring to the much-publicized $1bn  valuation the San Francisco-based company received in a recent round of funding.  The rich funding dwarfs even the kinds of valuations we saw during the height of  the short-lived social networking bubble last year. And it’s pretty difficult to  justify Twitter’s valuation based on its financial performance, since the  money-burning startup has absolutely no revenue to speak of, nor a clear plan of  how to change that. It seems the entire valuation is predicated on the  impressive user growth it has experienced over the past year, as well as the  charismatic founders’ wild dreams of ‘changing the way the world communicates.’  That’s pretty thin, particularly when compared to LinkedIn’s funding last year  at a similar valuation. That round, which was done at a time when the social  networking fad was near its peak, nonetheless had some financial results to  support it. Reid Hoffman’s startup was profitable on what we understand was  about $100m in revenue and a proven and lucrative business model.
The interesting development from this latest funding is that it makes a sale  of Twitter less likely, we would argue. This may be fine with the founders, who  have drawn in some $150m for the company and will (presumably) look to the  public market to repay those investments at some point in the future. But  without any revenue to speak of at this point, any offering from Twitter is a  long way off. Also, an IPO by Twitter in the future hangs on successful  offerings from Facebook and LinkedIn, which are far more likely to go public  before Twitter. If both of those social media bellwethers enjoy strong  offerings, and Twitter actually starts to make money off its fast-growing base  of users, then a multibillion-dollar exit – in the form of an IPO – might not be  farfetched. But we should add that there are a lot of ‘ifs’ included in that  scenario.
An offering looks all the more likely for Twitter because the field of  potential acquirers has gotten significantly slimmer, since not many would-be  acquirers have deep-enough pockets to pay for a premium on the startups’ already  premium valuation. As we know from Twitter’s own embarrassing leak of some  internal documents, Microsoft, Yahoo, Google and Facebook have all shown an  interest in the startup at one point or another. But we’re not sure any of those  companies would really be ready to do a 10-digit deal for a firm that’s still  promising – rather than posting – financial results. Moreover, we wonder if any  of the four would-be buyers even need Twitter. Yahoo and Microsoft seem focused  on other parts of their business. Meanwhile, Google is hard at work on Google  Wave, and Facebook appears to have moved on already with its much-cheaper  acquisition of Twitter competitor FriendFeed in August.
Recent  high-profile social networking valuations (based on last known valuation event)
| 
| Date | Company | Valuation/exit value | Revenue | Revenue to value  multiple |  
| September 2009 | Twitter | $1bn | $0* | N/A |  
| Summer 2009 | Facebook | $8bn | $500m* | 16x* |  
| June 2008 | LinkedIn | $1bn | $100m* | 10x* |  
| May 2008 | Plaxo | $150m* (acquisition by Comcast) | $10m* | 15x* |  
| March 2008 | Bebo | $850m (acquisition by AOL) | $20m* | 42.5x* |  
| July 2005 | MySpace/Intermix | $580m (acquisition by NewsCorp) | $90m | 6.5x |  
| December 2005 | FriendsReunited | $208m (acquisition by ITV; divested to Brightsolid in $42m fire  sale in August 2009) | $20* | 10x* |  | 
Source: The  451 M&A KnowledgeBase *451 Group estimate