NEW YORK — Facebook’s stock has fallen below $30 for the first time since its much-awaited public debut this month, losing almost one-quarter of its value since then.
The stock fell $3.07, or 9.6 percent, to close at $28.84 on Tuesday, 24 percent less than its public stock debut. It went as low as $28.65 earlier in the day.
Facebook Inc. began trading publicly May 18 following one of the most anticipated stock offerings in history.
The site, which was born in a Harvard dorm room eight years ago and has grown into a worldwide network of almost a billion people, was supposed to offer proof that social media is a viable business and more than a passing fad.
Facebook’s initial public offering of stock was priced at $38 and raised $16 billion for Facebook and some of its early investors. It had valued the company at $104 billion - at the time, more than Amazon.com Inc., at $98 billion.
But the stock’s public debut was marred by technical glitches at the Nasdaq Stock Market that delayed trading.
And the company, along with the investment banks that led the IPO, is the subject of at least two shareholder lawsuits. They charge that analysts at the large underwriting investment banks cut their financial forecasts for Facebook just before the IPO and told only a handful of clients.
Morgan Stanley has declined to comment. Facebook calls the lawsuits “without merit.”
Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter said that Facebook’s stock has been hurt by what he called “near-term issues” that include the Nasdaq glitches, an oversupply of stock that was being offered and the accusations of selective information disclosure.
But he rates the stock “Outperform” and has a 12-month target price of $44.
“Facebook has built a huge moat between it and its competitors, and we endorse Mr. Zuckerberg’s mission,” he wrote in a note to investors Tuesday, referring to Facebook CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg.
With the latest drop, Facebook’s value is about $79 billion.
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