Friday, June 15, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: WRAPUP 1-Facebook sketches out IPO-mess defense; CTO departs

Reuters: Regulatory News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
WRAPUP 1-Facebook sketches out IPO-mess defense; CTO departs
Jun 15th 2012, 22:55

Fri Jun 15, 2012 6:55pm EDT

  * Facebook cites trading glitch, oral disclosure reports      * Defends "customary practices" on Wall Street      * Market value has fallen by a quarter since debut      * SEC warned Facebook on mobile - new filings          By Basil Katz and Edwin Chan              NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO, June 15 (Reuters) - Facebook Inc  , facing a raft of lawsuits from investors seeking to  recoup losses from its botched IPO, laid out on Friday how  cascading Nasdaq trading glitches might have stoked the  confusion that marred its May 18 debut.       The No. 1 social network and lead underwriters Morgan  Stanley, Goldman Sachs Group Inc and JPMorgan  Chase & Co have filed a motion requesting that dozens of  shareholder lawsuits over its $16 billion initial public  offering be grouped together in Manhattan federal court.              The filing, while standard in cases with multiple lawsuits,  gives a glimpse at how Facebook may choose to structure its  defense and represents the social networking company's first  public response to the chaos that engulfed its high-profile  debut.        Facebook's stock leapt 6 percent on Friday to end above $30  for the first time since May 25. It also recorded its biggest  single-day gain since it began trading, as a string of recent  improvements to its advertising system raised hopes about its   prospects. But the eight-year-old company founded by Mark  Zuckerberg in his Harvard dorm room has shed a fifth, or $20  billion, of its value from the $38 IPO price.         Despite the downward spiral, many employees made millions  with stock awards. On Friday, chief technology officer Bret  Taylor - overseer of the social network's main platform and  mobile business - announced he was leaving this summer, becoming  the first senior executive to break ranks.            "It's certainly a negative when so soon after the company  has gone public that key people leave," said Pivotal Research  Group analyst Brian Wieser.           But he said such post-IPO departures are not surprising, as  executives whose equity shares in the company have vested, cash  out and move on.              "It's not something that you would take as a vote of  no-confidence" in the company, Wieser said.           He noted that investors are primarily concerned about  Facebook CEO Zuckerberg, Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg  and Chief Financial Officer David Ebersman.           Facebook's IPO was to have been the culmination of years of  breakneck growth for the cultural phenomenon. But it became  mired in controversy as more than a dozen shareholder lawsuits  accused Facebook and its underwriters of obscuring the company's  weakened growth forecasts ahead of the May 18 stock offering.         Nasdaq OMX Group Inc has also been sued by  investors who claimed the exchange operator was negligent in  handling orders for Facebook shares. Nasdaq spokesman Joseph  Christinat declined to comment on Friday.             In the motion filed late Thursday, Facebook - the first U.S.  company to debut with a market value of more than $100 billion -  defended its pre-IPO disclosures on mobile user revenue growth.  The motion cited reports that Facebook had told underwriters  about lowered revenue forecasts but not amended its prospectus.       Plaintiffs "ignore that what Facebook and the underwriter  defendants allegedly did both followed customary practices and  did not violate any rules," according to the motion.                                        PLAYING FAVORITES         Reuters reported on May 22 that analysts at Morgan Stanley  and other top underwriters cut their Facebook estimates just  over a week before the IPO and told some institutional investors  about the unusual step in conference calls.           A series of filings on Friday revealed that the Securities &  Exchange Commission quizzed Facebook about the potential impact  of growth in mobile users in the months leading up to the social  network's initial public offering and asked the company to make  the risks plainer.            "Assuming that the trend towards mobile continues and your  mobile monetization efforts are unsuccessful, ensure that your  disclosure fully addresses the potential consequences to your  revenue and financial results rather than just stating that they  'may be negatively affected,'" the SEC wrote in a Feb. 28 letter  to Facebook Chief Financial Officer David Ebersman.           In court papers filed late on Thursday before the U.S.  Judicial Panel on Multi-District Litigation, Facebook and the  banks said the U.S. District Court in Manhattan was the "most  appropriate and convenient forum to oversee these coordinated  and/or consolidated proceedings."             Consolidating the many lawsuits leveled at Facebook may help  reduce distraction for a company struggling to convince Wall  Street it can maintain its growth rates and persuade marketers  of the benefits of advertising on a platform with 900 million  users.        Internet retailers at a Chicago conference last week voiced  worries about a lack of reliable data on the impact of ads on  Facebook and many said they were reluctant to switch to paid  advertising without that. General Motors upset some investors  when it announced days before Facebook's debut that it saw  little reason to pay for ads on the social network.                In the short term, however, Facebook has to fend off  accusations it played favorites with disclosures and avoid  potentially hefty damages from irate investors who bought into a  company valued at 100 times earnings.         Facebook cited on Friday a series of news reports that  described how trading errors compounded uncertainty on May 18  after the start of trading in its shares was delayed by about  half an hour.         The motion cited lawsuits "alleging that technical problems  and other trading-related errors affecting Facebook's stock -  which Nasdaq subsequently admitted - created market uncertainty  and caused investor losses."          IFR, a Thomson Reuters publication, reported on Friday that  Nasdaq was still testing for the consequences of a significant  change to its IPO procedures the evening before Facebook's  troubled debut.               The change, which made compelling commercial sense for  Nasdaq and was introduced just weeks ahead of Facebook's debut,  allowed the exchange to capture orders for IPO securities from  07:00 EST on the first day of trading. The previous system only  allowed Nasdaq to capture orders in a 15-minute pre-opening  bookbuilding phase.           The fact that the extra time allowed the exchange to gather  a greater number of orders that were then fed into the 15-minute  bookbuild is significant because Nasdaq acknowledges the volume  of trades during that period exposed a software glitch that  gummed up IPO trading, IFR reported.  
  • Link this
  • Share this
  • Digg this
  • Email
  • Reprints

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to this feed at blogtrottr.com.

If you no longer wish to receive these emails, you can unsubscribe from this feed, or manage all your subscriptions

0 comments:

Post a Comment

 
Great HTML Templates from easytemplates.com.