The Palm Beach Post

Shareholde­r sues after Facebook stock dives

Company misled about user numbers, operations, suit says.

- By Hamza Shaban Washington Post

Days after Facebook’s stock suffered the largest drop in Wall Street history, a shareholde­r sued the company accusing the social media network of making misleading statements about its user numbers and operations.

The plaintiff, James Kacouris, filed the lawsuit Friday seeking class action status and to recover damages.

Kacouris alleged that Facebook and its chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, violated federal securities laws by misleading shareholde­rs about the company’s number of active users and the slowing growth of the social network’s revenue.

Kacouris also named Facebook chief financial officer David Wehner in the lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

Facebook said in its earnings report last week that it anticipate­d slower revenue growth and slimmer margins in the future, in part to improve the safety and privacy of the platform.

That forecast ignited a massive Wall Street sell off that dragged the company’s market value down by more than $100 billion.

That was the largest single-day drop in Wall Street history.

“Facebook’s announceme­nts shocked the marketplac­e,” Kacouris said in the complaint.

He alleges that Facebook’s “wrongful acts and omissions, and the precipitou­s decline in the market value of the Company’s common shares,” have resulted in significan­t losses and damages for him and other shareholde­rs.

Facebook did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Zuckerberg reiterated in an earnings call last week that the company’s major investment­s in security will lower its profitabil­ity.

“We’re starting to see that this quarter,” he said, adding that “we run this company for the long term, not for the next quarter.”

Facebook faces another investor lawsuit filed earlier this year.

Investors sued Facebook accusing the company of misleading shareholde­rs over a data privacy scandal involving political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica, which improperly accessed informatio­n from 87 million people.

Twitter, another prominent social media company grappling with safety issues, saw its stock plummet last week.

The company said it lost 1 million monthly active users in the earnings call Friday, a signal that efforts to rid its platform of fake and suspicious accounts will come at a cost.

 ?? NOAH BERGER / AP ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg reiterated in an earnings call last week that the company’s major investment­s in security will lower its profitabil­ity.
NOAH BERGER / AP Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg reiterated in an earnings call last week that the company’s major investment­s in security will lower its profitabil­ity.

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