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Nasdaq Fined $10M Over Facebook IPO Failures

twoheadedboy writes "Nasdaq has been fined $10 million by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over 'poor systems and decision-making' during the Facebook initial public offering. When Facebook went public on 18 May 2012, it was hoping for a major success, but technical glitches and poor decision making at Nasdaq caused real problems. The SEC said 'a design limitation' in the system to match IPO buy and sell orders was at the root of the disruption, thought to have cost investors $500 million. Orders failed to register properly, leaving banks like Citigroup and UBS in the lurch and making additional, unnecessary bids. They may still win money back from Nasdaq if legal challenges go their way."

2 of 91 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Lemme get this straight by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 4, Informative

    Wrong.

    The problem is that Nasdaq wasn't able to deliver trade confirmations to brokerage houses and institutional buyers. This caused these organizations to try to place multiple orders that they didn't actually want, and it contributed to price uncertainty in the market.

  2. Re:Note the discrepancy by Score+Whore · · Score: 5, Informative

    The more fundamental problem was NASDAQs inability to carry the trades so that people who were interested in trading FB stock were entirely unable to receive market indicators of the value of the stock nor were they able to modify trades. It's known that trades were cancelled shortly after FB began trading yet due to the exchanges issues the trades were settled hours later regardless of the cancellation.