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By Canaccord Genuity Morning Coffee |
May 25, 2012
Facebook is in talks with the New York Stock Exchange to move its stock from the NASDAQ Stock Market after a botched initial public offering on Friday.
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By Serena Saitto, Lee Spears and Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
May 22, 2012
After one of the most anticipated initial public offerings in history, Facebook’s 11 percent drop yesterday prompted investors to fault everything from Morgan Stanley’s role as lead underwriter, to the company’s greed and the Nasdaq Stock Market.
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By Lee Spears and Sarah Frier, Bloomberg |
May 18, 2012
Facebook Inc. is set to start trading today after a record initial public offering that made the social network more costly than almost every company in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index.
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By Nina Mehta and Joseph Ciolli, Bloomberg |
May 17, 2012
Facebook Inc.’s initial public offering will be the biggest test of a rule introduced in 2011 to protect investors and curb volatility on the first day a company trades.
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By Brian Womack, Bloomberg |
May 15, 2012
Facebook Inc. raised the price range in its initial public offering, increasing the amount it is seeking in the record sale for an Internet company to as much as $12.8 billion.
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By Nina Mehta and Lu Wang, Bloomberg |
April 26, 2012
Nasdaq OMX Group Inc.’s waiting period for entry into one of its best-known stock indexes was a negotiating point with Facebook Inc. as the company weighed where to list its shares.
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By Nina Mehta, Bloomberg |
April 12, 2012
Nasdaq has asked the SEC if companies issuing exchange-traded funds can pay market makers about $200 per day to push their shares.
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By Joshua Gallu and Nina Mehta, Bloomberg |
April 5, 2012
More than five months before a software error ruined Bats Global Markets Inc.’s initial public offering, U.S. regulators put exchanges on notice that they need to do more to protect investors from technology gone awry.
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By Nina Mehta, Whitney Kisling and Inyoung Hwang, Bloomberg |
March 26, 2012
The software error that derailed the initial public offering of Bats Global Markets Inc., where 11% of all U.S. stock trading occurs, rattled investors concerned about the growing complexity of financial markets.
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By Nina Mehta, Nick Baker and Nikolaj Gammeltoft, Bloomberg |
March 23, 2012
Bats Global Markets Inc., the six- year-old equity exchange, canceled its initial public offering, stunning Wall Street after errors on its own computer systems derailed trading in the stock and forced a halt in Apple Inc.