Senate, House Committees Eye Facebook IPO Flap

The Senate Banking and House Financial Services committees on Wednesday both announced probes into how Facebook and bank analysts handled the social network’s initial public offering.

“The Financial Services Committee is gathering information and facts about the issues surrounding Facebook’s IPO. Our staff is receiving briefings,” House committee spokeswoman Marisol Garibay said in a statement.

Garibay said no hearings are currently planned, but noted that “the committee will have hearings over the coming weeks where this topic is likely to be raised.”

Analysts at Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, other underwriters lowered earnings estimates, Reuters reported, weeks before Facebook went public on Friday. Those estimates, however, were not made publicly available, and the social network’s stocks have tumbled since public trading began.

The issue has attracted the attention of Massachusetts officials, who have subpoenaed Morgan Stanley; of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority; and of Securities and Exchange Commission Chairwoman Mary Schapiro, who said on Tuesday that her agency is probing the Facebook IPO.

“I think there’s a lot of reasons to have confidence in our markets and the integrity of how they operate,” Schapiro told reporters outside a Banking Committee hearing on Tuesday. “There are issues that we have to look at specifically with respect to Facebook.”

Several investors have sued Facebook and Morgan Stanley, claiming they hid the earnings forcasts, according to Reuters.

Now the actions by Facebook and the banks have caught attention in Congress. Senate Banking Committee staffers will be questioning Facebook, regulators, and others, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Johnson, D-S.D., said in a statement.

“Once these briefings have concluded and the staff reports back to me, I will determine if a Senate Banking Committee hearing is necessary,” he said.

Morgan Stanley  says it followed the “same procedures for the Facebook offering that it follows for all IPOs.” Facebook, which Reuters reports encouraged analysts to revise their earnings forecasts, has not responded publicly.

Facebook’s IPO was one of the most hotly anticipated public offerings, and the stock sale initially generated $16 billlion. Doubts over Facebook’s revenue, however, have sent the stock down from its offering price of $38 to around $31 on Wednesday.

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