The Commercial Appeal

Facebook insiders can sell stock

- By Barbara Ortutay

Associated Press

MENLO PARK, Calif. — Facebook’s early investors and a handful of directors will become eligible on Thursday to sell stock they own in the social networking company. It marks the beginning of a time-honored process for public companies, one that will give many Facebook employees the same right to sell their shares this fall.

It’s conceivabl­e none of them will sell. But if they do, up to 1.91 billion more shares could flood the stock market over the next several months — more than four times the 421 million shares that have been trading since Facebook’s initial public offering in May.

So-called “lock-up” periods, which prevent insiders from unloading shares too close to an IPO, generally start to expire 90 days after a stock makes its public debut.

Lock-ups are designed to prevent a stock from experienci­ng the kind of volatility that might occur if too many shareholde­rs decide to sell a newly traded stock all at once. The progressiv­e phasing-in of various shareholde­rs allows early owners to shed their stock and make way for new investors, says Peter Zaleski, a professor of economics at the Villanova School of Business in Pennsylvan­ia.

But there’s risk involved. If too many people sell, Facebook Inc.’s stock price could decline, a problem the company can’t afford. On Tuesday, the stock closed at $20.38, down 46 percent from its initial public offering of $38.

In all, 271 million shares will become eligible this week.

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