NEW YORK – Wall Street investors aren’t the only ones feeling the sting of Facebook Inc.’s falling stock: So are some of the country’s troubled government pension funds.

Public employee retirement funds nationwide took part in the Menlo Park, Calif., social networking juggernaut’s May 18 initial public offering, plowing millions of dollars into Facebook stock before its value plunged.

Facebook shares continued their decline Friday, falling $1.03, or 5.4 percent, to a record low of $18.06, or less than half their $38 offering price. (U.S. markets were closed Monday in observance of the Labor Day holiday.)

FUNDS JOIN LAWSUIT

Although public pension funds staked only tiny portions of their multibillion-dollar portfolios on Facebook’s fortunes, the stock’s poor performance has added to the funds’ woes. Chronic underfunding and poor returns could lead pension funds to pursue riskier investments such as hedge funds, private equity, commodities and real estate, or even cut benefits for retirees.

Three pension funds have joined a class-action lawsuit against Facebook and its underwriters. The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, alleges that lead underwriters led by Morgan Stanley gave only some select investors a heads-up that Facebook’s revenue forecast had soured.

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“We expect Facebook and the people who benefited from that sale to pay up,” said George Hopkins, executive director of the Arkansas Teacher Retirement System, which has lost about $2.9 million on about 142,500 Facebook shares it has kept from the IPO.

The Arkansas teacher pension fund is part of a group of institutional investors that includes the Fresno County Employees’ Retirement Association (estimated Facebook losses: $1 million) and the North Carolina Retirement Systems (estimated losses: $12.4 million). The group has filed papers seeking to become lead plaintiffs in the case.

THINKING LONG-TERM

Two major California pension funds also bet big on Facebook.

The California Public Employees’ Retirement System, the country’s largest public pension fund, refused to reveal how many shares it bought in the IPO. CalPERS had 557,140 Facebook shares May 23 and more than doubled its stake to 1.3 million shares as of last week, according to a spokeswoman.

The California State Teachers’ Retirement System bought about 500,000 shares in the IPO — worth about $19 million — and sold them when the price briefly popped on the first day. CalSTRS made about $250,000 on the sale, a spokesman said.

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CalSTRS has since loaded up on 1.2 million Facebook shares, a stake that has cost the pension fund about $17 million in paper losses, a spokesman said.

“As a patient, long-term investor with a 30-year investment horizon, we believe that over time, the stock and the company should perform well,” CalSTRS spokesman Michael Sicilia said in an email.

Facebook’s IPO was fraught with problems. There was trouble with Nasdaq’s trading system, which delayed the offering and then botched early trading, costing Wall Street brokerages an estimated $500 million. Then came revelations of selective disclosure about Facebook’s declining fortunes.

The stock has since languished and could see more pressure as company insiders become eligible to sell more than 1.2 billion shares later this year.

Facebook did not respond to a request for comment.

IPOs STILL PART OF MIX

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Still, pension funds don’t plan to eschew future IPOs because of their experience with Facebook.

“We can’t swear off of them entirely — we’d be missing out on a big piece of the equity market,” said Phil Kapler, head of the Fresno County Employees’ Retirement Association, who noted that every public company at some point came to the market in an IPO.

Research by Jay Ritter, a professor of finance at the University of Florida who has studied initial public offerings, shows that average three-year returns of IPOs from 1980 until 2010 have underperformed the broader stock market by 19.7 percent.

But companies with more than $500 million in sales before their IPOs had average three-year returns that beat the market by 2.6 percent, according to Ritter’s research.

“I would not recommend excluding all IPOs as part of a diversified portfolio,” Ritter said.

 

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