Lawsuits mount over Facebook IPO debacle, billions at stake

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WASHINGTON: Trial lawyers smell blood as furious investors have begun filing suits over losses on Facebook’s disastrous US$16 billion initial public offering (IPO), with billions of dollars possibly at stake in coming litigation.

More than a half-dozen law firms specialising in investor complaints said they were launching class action suits against the social networking giant and its underwriters.

The suits alleged that Facebook, and Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and other big Wall Street banks that distributed the shares withheld from smaller investors crucial forecasts that pointed to weaker growth for Facebook, while sharing the information with big institutional clients.

A separate lawsuit against the Nasdaq exchange said its massive technical problems on the first day of Facebook trade on Friday also resulted in losses to investors.

All told the claims could come to billions – more than US$15 dollars had been wiped from the company’s value since the IPO gave it a market capitalisation of US$104 billion.

Facebook vehemently defended itself in its first public comment since the IPO, as the first suit, from the Brian Roffe Profit Sharing Plan and two other investors, was lodged in the New York District Court.

“We believe the lawsuit is without merit and will defend ourselves vigorously,” a Facebook spokesperson said.

The class-action suits all said that US securities laws were violated when the company and its main IPO bankers allegedly provided information to large clients but not others.

They “failed to disclose that during the IPO roadshow, the lead underwriters…cut their earnings forecasts and that news of the estimate cut was passed on only to a handful of large investor clients, not to the public,” said law firm Glancy Binkow & Goldberg.

On the same grounds the Massachusetts state government issued a subpoena for the lead underwriter, Morgan Stanley, over how it shared information ahead of the massive share sale.

Morgan Stanley was being blamed for cutting its own internal Facebook earnings forecasts even while supporting the company in increased the size of the IPO by 25 per cent to 421 million shares, and raising the issue price sharply to US$38 a share.

Investors had hoped to turn quick and easy profits on the shares when they hit the market, given the lengthy buildup and how previous IPOs by tech giants like Google and LinkedIn rocketed upward.

But the launch flopped, the price barely staying up above the US$38 level in the first day of trade and then plunging 18 per cent over the next two sessions.

The price rebounded slightly in trade, climbing 3.2 per cent to US$32, but remained well below the US$38 that the initial IPO investors paid.

The episode cast a dark cloud over what was supposed to be the brightest market opportunity for investors in years and over a company with nearly one billion users but which still faced questions on whether it cares what investors think.

“The Facebook debacle is coming off as an insult to individual investors.

“It looks like the worst of Wall Street hype with a dose of chicanery to boot,” said Dick Green at Briefing.com.

“Insiders certainly look like the winners and individual investors the losers.”

On Tuesday Morgan Stanley insisted it followed all appropriate procedures in the IPO, including disseminating the update Facebook filing, the ‘S1’, to all of the company’s institutional and retail investors. — AFP