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Morgan Stanley said to get subpoena in Facebook IPO

Reuters reported Tuesday that Massachusetts had issued a subpoena to the investment bank leading the initial public offering of shares in social networking website Facebook.

SEC said to be reviewing share offering

Investors were also spooked by trading glitches that delayed the launch of Facebook stock on Friday. (Timur Emek/dapd/Associated Press)

Reuters reported Tuesday that Massachusetts had issued a subpoena to the investment bank leadingthe initial public offering of shares in social networking websiteFacebook.

The Massachusetts Secretary of Commonwealth, William Galvin,issued the order to testifyto Morgan Stanley over allegations that one of the bank'sanalysts helddiscussions with investors in which the analyst lowered his expectations forFacebook's revenues this year.

Securities law prohibits employees of the firms underwriting an IPO from selectively disclosing information to investors.

Facebook shares fell again today after the chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission,Mary Schapiro,said the regulatorwill also look atissues related to the IPO on Friday.

"I think there is a lot of reason to have confidence in our markets and in the integrity of how they operate but there are issues that we need to look at specifically with respect to Facebook," she said to journalists afterleaving a senate banking committee hearing.

Shares fall for a second day

Facebook shares closeddown $3.03, or almost nine per cent, at $31.00.

Thatadded totheir 11 per cent drop on Mondayand was almost$7 below its initial offering price on Friday. Earlier in the session, ithad droppedas much as nine per cent.

The drop came asthe Nasdaq, theexchange where Facebook shares trade, held its annual shareholders'meeting, a session that lasted less than half an hour.

Media werenot allowed to attend and no Nasdaq investors asked any questions about Facebook's IPO on Friday.

Glitches marredthe launch, with some investors unsure if their trades had been executed and trading of the stock delayed by a half-hour.

As well, Reuters reported that in the run-up to the launch, the investment bank leading the effort to sell the shares, Morgan Stanley, cut its prediction for Facebooks revenue this year.

That will only add to the perception that Facebooks shares are overpriced.

They are trading at more than 70 times its earnings in the past year, according to FactSet, a research firm. That compares with Apple at 13.7 times and Google at 18.6 times. The Nasdaq index of technology stocks trades at 20.8 times.

With files from The Associated Press