Round 1: The price! Pegged at $38 by Morgan Stanley, the lead underwriter, the stock opened late for trading because the exchange malfunctioned, and then the price bobbed and weaved before slipping over the course of the week. Was this, as most said, a huge black eye for the underwriter Morgan Stanley? It shouldn't be. Because what it reflects is that the company raised as much money as it could, instead of leaving money on the table for those lucky enough to have been given selective access to the initial offering.Read the rest here.
If a company sells 1,000 shares at $15, and they then jump to $20, the company raises and receives $15,000, but the initial purchasers immediately gain $5,000—an easy and unjustified windfall. If the IPO had been priced at $20, the company would have received $20,000—and there would be no windfall for the initial purchasers. The IPO in the second example is better for the company, because it raises more capital while selling the same number of shares. That is, of course, the purpose of the IPO. That is what Facebook did.
Part of the reason underwriters love to see a stock “pop” is that they have used the opportunity to give access to the IPO shares as candy to their favored customers. This helps the underwriter curry favor, can make their favorite customers—often CEOs who can throw them business—even richer, but does not help the company. There has been massive corruption in the stock allocation process over the years, and the fact that Facebook’s stock dropped means that those favored customers didn’t get their unfair profits, which is an improvement on what usually happens.
Round 1 goes to Morgan Stanley for doing a better job pricing than they are being given credit for, and to Facebook for maximizing its raise.
Round 2: The selective disclosure! There are allegations that the underwriters told only certain favored clients about information regarding Facebook’s future declining earnings and about their belief that the company would not hit certain financial benchmarks included in the prospectus. If those allegations are true, small retail investors should never trust Wall Street again.
Given all we have been through over the past decade, from the investigations of analysts back in 2002 to the crisis of 2008, this would be a breach of faith that would be totally without defense. If Morgan Stanley didn’t think Facebook was going to hit certain targets set out in the underwriting documents, they had an obligation to tell everybody. If the underwriting documents were wrong, you have to tell the entire marketplace not just the big guys who throw business to you. If they told only some clients, and let small investors trade on the false impression that the prospectus was accurate, then Morgan Stanley should be held civilly and perhaps criminally liable.
The defenses I have heard proffered so far are about as persuasive as the ones they tried a decade ago: We are not as bad as the competition. They’re hinting that it is common practice to share information selectively. It may have been common practice years ago to trade on inside information, but that doesn’t make it sensible, legal, or moral.
A Correct Way to Correct
17 hours ago
1 comment:
I agree with Spitzer (I can't believe I wrote that) entirely. Facebook got their money; what goes on in the secondary market is of little concern to the company unless and until FB wants to issue more shares. I think the course of their business and the validity of their business model will be much clearer by the time that happens.
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