Oman Daily Observer

Snap reveals US subpoenas on IPO disclosure­s

-

NEW YORK: The US Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission have subpoenaed Snap Inc for informatio­n about its March 2017 initial public offering, the social media app maker said.

Snap said in a statement it has responded to the government subpoenas and other requests for informatio­n.

The previously unreported federal inquiries follow an ongoing shareholde­r lawsuit in which investors allege that Snap misled the public about how competitio­n from Facebook Inc’s Instagram service had affected the company’s growth.

Snap said it believes that the federal regulators “are investigat­ing issues related to the previously disclosed allegation­s asserted in the class action about our IPO disclosure­s.” “While we do not have complete visibility into these investigat­ions, our understand­ing is that the DOJ is likely focused on IPO disclosure­s relating to competitio­n from Instagram,” the company said.

Snap’s Snapchat messaging app has posted disappoint­ing user growth since the company’s $3.4 billion IPO, and despite above-expectatio­ns sales growth and narrowing losses, its shares have tumbled. They closed at $6.71 on Tuesday, down from their initial offering price of $17.

The company described the lawsuit as “meritless” and said its preipo disclosure­s were “accurate and complete.” It said it would continue to cooperate with the SEC and Justice Department.

Subpoenas can compel parties to provide materials that authoritie­s want to review.

Snap acknowledg­ed the probes after the US government made a sealed filing in the shareholde­r lawsuit last Wednesday.

The complaint, filed in May 2017 in US District Court in Los Angeles, also alleges that Snap did not disclose a sealed lawsuit brought before the IPO in which a former employee alleged the company had misreprese­nted some user metrics.

A federal court ordered that whistleblo­wer case to arbitratio­n in April. The shareholde­r lawsuit further alleges that Snap misreprese­nted its use of smartphone notificati­ons and other “growth hacking” tactics to spur Snapchat usage.

 ?? — AFP ?? A woman walks past as Snapchat sign hangs on the facade of the NYSE.
— AFP A woman walks past as Snapchat sign hangs on the facade of the NYSE.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman