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Facebook investors sued for 'defrauding investors'

Thursday 24 May 2012 10:31 BST
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Mark Zuckerberg and the other directors of Facebook have been slapped with a lawsuit claiming they defrauded investors in the company's $104bn (£66.29bn) stock market float last week.

The suit – which also names Morgan Stanley, Barclays, Goldman Sachs and other banks who underwrote the flotation as defendants – follows allegations that at least one Facebook executive gave secret guidance to select analysts, thereby leading them to cut their forecasts for advertising revenues at the social network.

The secret guidance came in the final days of the investor roadshow, when Facebook and Morgan Stanley were seeking buyers for the $19bn of shares being sold by the company and its early investors, including Mr Zuckerberg himself, pictured.

The resultant reduced forecasts were only made available to a small number of large institutional investors; other buyers in the flotation were kept in the dark, it is alleged.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of three investors who bought shares at the initial public offering (IPO) price of $38, and the law firm behind the complaint expects it to become a class action on behalf of every investor who signed up to the float.

Facebook's prospectus failed to reveal full details about the speed with which advertising revenues were falling behind expectations, the complaint says.

"The true facts at the time of the IPO were that Facebook was then experiencing a severe reduction in revenue growth due to an increase of users of its Facebook app or website through mobile devices rather than a traditional PC, such that the company told the underwriter defendants to materially lower their revenue forecasts for 2012," it alleges.

Facebook shares have slumped by around 15 per cent since they began trading on the Nasdaq stock market on Friday morning, as news of the analysts' downgrades spread.

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