- Related Stories
-
SEC opens new inquiry into issued Google stock
August 16, 2004 -
Google IPO trading imminent
August 16, 2004 -
Google says Playboy article could be costly
August 13, 2004
"We have not declared the registration statement effective," John Heine, a spokesman for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, said after Google's requested deadline of 1 p.m. PDT.
Although Heine would not say when it would authorize the documents, its clearance is necessary before Google can price its 24.6 million shares for sale to the public. Bidding for the shares began Friday and was set to close this afternoon, when Google had asked the SEC to declare its registration effective.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Special coverage
Clouds over Google's IPO![]()
Problems add up as market
debut draws near.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Google has stumbled many times on the way to its much-ballyhooed IPO, which is expected to raise between $2.7 billion and $3.3 billion.
On Monday, the company notified investors that the SEC and state regulators have begun investigating the issuance of 28 million shares to employees and consultants that weren't registered under law.
Last Friday, Google filed an amendment to its prospectus cautioning investors that a recent Playboy magazine article featuring company co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin could violate SEC rules governing its "quiet period." The company said it would vigorously fight any such determination on the part of SEC regulators, however.
Google has placed a price range of $108 to $135 for the shares, but many industry watchers expect the deal to price below that range.
See more CNET content tagged:
IPO,
regulator,
Google Inc.




Does CNET see Google as a threat? Well Froogle does compete with shopper.com.
news.google.com does in some ways compete with news.com.
What if with the extra money from the IPO google designes a software repository system with better rating system to prevent spyware type applications?
I am willing to bet the folks at CNET are wondering this very same thing.
And in fact, Froogle is dead last in terms of unique viewers to shopping comparison sites. It ranks behind the number one ranked Shopping.com, BizRate, NexTag, PriceGrabber, Kelkoo, and mySimon, according to data by market researchers.
Cheers,
Doug