image info@hathamec.vn
image Tầng 18 Tòa nhà văn phòng Viwaseen, Số 48 Phố Tố Hữu, P. Trung Văn, Q. Nam Từ Liêm, TP. Hà Nội

Chi tiết bài viết

Facebook Falls To Half-Price From IPO After Lock-Up Ends

18/Sep/2024
Shares in the world’s largest social-networking service fell 4.1 percent to $19.05 at the close in New York yesterday. Facebook had dropped to as low as $19, after the number of shares available for trading increased 60 percent two days ago.

The decline reflects concern that more sales will follow in the coming months as additional lock-ups expire and as the company struggles to wring sales from a growing customer base, said Rory Maher, an analyst at Capstone Investments Inc.

“Anytime you have a lot of shares come out on the market like that, it’s going to put some pressure on the stock,” he said. “They’re still figuring out the best way to optimize their core business. And they haven’t quite done that yet.”

Facebook’s decline of 6.3 percent on the first day insiders could start selling their stakes was the second-largest post- lock-up drop among companies that have gone public since January 2011.

Only social-game maker Zynga Inc. (ZNGA) tumbled more, losing 7.9 percent on the same basis, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That was the largest one-day post-lock-up descent among the 20 biggest initial public offerings since Jan. 1, 2011.
Under restrictions worked out with IPO underwriters, early investors agree not to sell their holdings for a preset period after a market debut to keep from flooding the market.

Lock-Ups End

The shares freed up yesterday represent 14 percent of the 1.91 billion that will become available for sale in the coming nine months. The next expiration date comes between Oct. 15 and Nov. 13, when restraints are removed on about 243 million shares. Lock-up expires on about 1.2 billion shares on Nov. 14, and for 149.4 million shares a month later. A final round comes May 18, 2013, with 47.3 million shares becoming available.

Early Facebook investors such as DST Global Ltd., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS), Elevation Partners and Accel Partners could start selling part of their holdings yesterday, Menlo Park, California-based Facebook has said in filings. The restriction was lifted for early investors, excluding Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg, who sold part of their holdings in the IPO.

Facebook shares have lost 50 percent since the May 17 IPO. Even so, some investors probably aren’t convinced that the stock won’t fall further, said Erik Gordon, a professor at the Stephen M. Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan.

Yelling ’Fire’

“It might not be rational for the shareholders to sell all at once, but when someone in a theater yells ‘fire,’ people don’t act rationally, they stampede to the exits,” Gordon said. “It might be fatal to your career to be viewed as the last chump to get out.”
Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), based in Redmond, Washington, will probably hang on to its stake after the lock-up ban lifts, a person with knowledge of the matter said on Aug. 10.

Microsoft views Facebook as a strategic partner in the combat against Google Inc. (GOOG), rather than as a near-term moneymaker, said the person, who requested anonymity because the plans are private.

Other investors have been preparing for potential sales. Director Peter Thiel, who sold in the IPO, has given himself added flexibility to unload more holdings, according to a regulatory filing. Thiel, one of Facebook’s earliest investors, converted more than 9 million shares to Class A from Class B. Class A shares are easier to sell on the public markets.

Sales Slowdown

Facebook has grappled with concerns about its valuation after reporting sales growth of 32 percent in the second quarter from the year-ago period, down from 45 percent in the first quarter and 55 percent in the fourth quarter. The second-quarter gain was dwarfed by a surge in spending on marketing and sales, which ballooned to $392 million.

Part of Facebook’s challenge is making money from the growing slice of users who access the social network over mobile devices. During the second quarter, the number of ads delivered in the U.S. dropped 2 percent from a year earlier even amid an increase in total daily users.

Editors: Reed Stevenson, Stephen West