By Keith Regan E-Commerce Times
03/19/01 10:22 AM PT
Investors are filing more shareholder lawsuits in
the wake of the Nasdaq collapse, during which many tech stocks have lost more than 90 percent
of their value.
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A group of investors filed a lawsuit against
Priceline.com
(Nasdaq: PCLN) Friday, alleging that the
name-your-price e-tailer conspired to drive
up the price of its shares after its initial public offering (IPO).
The suit alleges that Priceline's
underwriters exchanged
shares at the offering price of US$16
in exchange for guarantees from buyers to purchase
additional shares at progressively
higher prices after the offering, a technique commonly known as "laddering."
The lawsuit was filed by two New York City
law firms, Sirota & Sirota, LLP and Lovell & Stewart, LLP, and in the
name of individual investor Richard Hirsch.
The firms
did not say how many investors have come
forward to date. However, the lawyers are seeking to
represent all investors who bought stock in
Priceline between March 29, 1999 and March 14, 2001.
In addition to suing the company, the complaint specifically
names three Priceline executives as defendants:
chairman Richard Braddock,
company founder Jay Walker and former chief financial officer Paul E. Francis.
Price Driving?
According to the complaint, the officers did not
disclose the fact that some underwriters -- a group that
included Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, Merrill
Lynch and others -- had received "excessive and
undisclosed commissions from certain investors" in
exchange for locked-in share prices.
Those same
investors also pledged to buy the stock as
it went up in price, the suit claims.
"The requirement that customers make
additional purchases at progressively higher
prices as the price of Priceline.com stock rocketed
upward ... was intended to (and did) drive
Priceline.com's share price up to artificially
high levels," the complaint alleges.
Skyrocket Shares
Shares of Priceline hit $86.25 during the first day of
trading in March 1999. The issue peaked at
about $162.38 in April 1999, but now, amid the Nasdaq downturn, is
trading just above $2.
The lawsuit says that the failure to
disclose the higher commissions violates U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulations.
Although it came nearly a year before the Nasdaq
peaked, Priceline's IPO did arrive at a time when
investor interest in dot-com stocks was approaching fever pace.
Attempts to reach a spokesperson for Priceline.com
for comment were unsuccessful.
Shareholder Fury
Investors are filing more shareholder lawsuits in
the wake of the Nasdaq Composite Index collapse, during which many tech stocks have lost more than 90 percent
of their value.
In February, Nortel (NYSE: NT) Networks was hit with three
separate lawsuits alleging the company
misrepresented its earnings
and that executives benefited from insider trading.
Earlier this month, Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL) was tagged with
a class action lawsuit of its own, a complaint
that charged the company with making
misleading statements
to investors.
Layoffs Lawsuit
Priceline and Walker, meanwhile, has other legal worries. In January,
the Connecticut Attorney General sued Priceline's patent
holding company, Walker Digital, for violating state laws
regulating layoff procedures.
The Connecticut lawsuit
claims that Walker Digital owes 106 workers as much as 60 days
of additional pay each, or as much as $1 million, in connection
with a massive layoff in November.
The complaint alleges that Walker Digital failed to provide a 60-day
notice, as required by law when layoffs involve 100 or more workers.
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Related Stories
Connecticut Sues Walker Digital January 12, 2001
The case against Walker Digital should ring a warning bell for other companies.
Priceline Founder Exits Board December 29, 2000
The departure of Jay Walker was yet another development in a rocky year for
Priceline and CEO Dan Schulman.
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