The Philippine Star

Facebook defeats shareholde­r litigation over IPO

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NEW YORK (Reuters) – A federal appeals court on Friday said Facebook Inc officials including chief executive Mark Zuckerberg cannot be sued by shareholde­rs who said the social media company concealed threats to its growth prospects before its May 2012 initial public offering.

The 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals said investors who lost money on shares they bought after the $16 billion IPO lacked standing to sue Facebook directors and underwrite­rs led by Morgan Stanley, over alleged inadequate disclosure­s made before the company went public.

Shareholde­rs said Facebook should have publicly revealed its internal projection­s on how increased mobile usage might reduce future revenue, rather than quietly warn its underwrite­rs, which then cut their earnings forecasts. They said the stock price was “hammered” after the truth came out.

Circuit Judge Dennis Jacobs, however, wrote that the plaintiffs could not have owned Facebook shares before the IPO, and thus could not demonstrat­e “contempora­neous” ownership while the directors were breaching their fiduciary duties.

“A proper plaintiff must have acquired his or her stock in the corporatio­n before the core of the allegedly wrongful conduct transpired,” Jacobs wrote for a 3-0 panel.

The decision upheld a February 2013 dismissal of the so-called derivative litigation by US District Judge Robert Sweet in Manhattan. Sweet also oversees shareholde­r class-action litigation against Facebook itself over the IPO.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

A Facebook spokeswoma­n said the Menlo Park, California-based company is pleased with the decision.

The defendants also included Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg, Goldman Sachs Group Inc and JPMorgan Chase & Co, among others. Andrew Clubok, a Kirkland & Ellis partner representi­ng them, declined to comment.

Facebook began trading on May 18, 2012 after going public at $38 per share, only to see its share price fall to $17.55 on Sept. 4, 2012 and stay below the IPO price for more than a year. The price has kept rising, and peaked at $99.24 on Tuesday.

Nasdaq OMX Group Inc in April agreed to pay $ 26.5 million to settle shareholde­r litigation over technology problems that plagued the IPO.

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