SAN FRANCISCO:
Facebook will make its stock market debut in May with a record-setting
initial public offering of shares, according to a report Wednesday in
the Wall Street Journal.
The world's leading online social
network has stopped selling shares on the secondary market in order to
get a precise count of investors, the Journal said, citing unnamed
sources.
Facebook on Tuesday modified its filing with the US
Securities and Exchange Commission to warn potential investors that a
patent lawsuit against the company by Internet pioneer Yahoo! could
deliver a significant blow to its business.
"If an unfavorable
outcome were to occur in this litigation, the impact could be material
to our business, financial condition, or results of operations,"
Facebook said in amended paperwork submitted to the SEC.
Yahoo!
filed suit against Facebook in a US district court in California on
March 12, accusing the company of infringing on 10 of its patents in
several areas including advertising, privacy and messaging.
In
the suit, Yahoo! said that Facebook's growth "has been based in large
part on Facebook's use of Yahoo!'s patented technology."
Facebook
in February filed to go public and could raise as much as $10 billion
in the largest flotation ever by an Internet company on Wall Street.
The
paperwork filed for the initial public offering provided the first
glimpse of the financial details of the web giant launched eight years
ago by Mark Zuckerberg from his Harvard University dorm room.
Facebook,
which is shifting operations to a former Sun Microsystems campus in the
California city of Menlo Park, reported net income of $668 million last
year.
Revenue nearly doubled to $3.7 billion in 2011, with most
of it coming from targeted advertising gleaned from personal information
shared by the hundreds of millions of users of the platform.
Facebook
-- the leading social network in all but six countries, notably China
and Russia -- said it has more than 845 million users including 483
million who log in daily.
Facebook's value has been estimated at between $75 billion and $100 billion.
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