Earlier this week, a judge ruled (PDF)
that Zynga would have to face a revised lawsuit over allegations that
it defrauded investors by offering overly-zealous news about the
company’s future at the time of its Initial Public Offering (IPO). The
investors allege that Zynga knew that an upcoming platform change
at Facebook would decrease the company's ability to rake in revenue,
but executives concealed that information. After the successful IPO, the
complaint says, the executives sold off their Zynga shares before the stock price collapsed.
The investors applied for a class-action lawsuit in July 2012,
just after Zynga shares tumbled to $3 per share from a price peak of
$15.91 per share. US District Judge Jeffrey White dismissed an earlier
version of the lawsuit a year ago, but ruled that the game company would
have to face a revised complaint from the same investors.
Although Zynga denies the investors’ claims, the plaintiffs say they
have at least six confidential witnesses who had access to daily reports
on Zynga’s bookings before the IPO. Those witnesses say the company was
in decline before the IPO. "Although the company may have reported
large bookings after the fact,” the judge’s order writes, "Plaintiff
contends that the bookings declined significantly during the class
period and yet Defendants continued to represent to the public that the
bookings were strong.”
In 2012, Zynga ultimately lost several billion dollars, millions of monthly average users, and cycled through top executives at lightning speed.
The company’s stock closed on Friday at $2.77, up 1.84 percent from its previous close.
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