Facebook (FB) Decides Against The Creation Of Class C Shares

 | Sep 24, 2017 10:30PM ET

Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB) has decided to drop the proposed creation of Class C shares, which could have helped CEO Mark Zuckerberg to hold his sway over the company. Facebook’s sudden plan to discard the creation of Class C shares reportedly comes under tremendous investor pressure.

Last year, during its first-quarter 2016 results, Facebook had proposed the creation of publicly listed but non-voting new Class C shares. Facebook, at present, has a double class structure. The Class C shares will have the same economic rights as Class A and Class B shares. Notably, Class B shares have 10 times the voting rights of Class A shares. Class B shares aren’t traded and are held mostly by Facebook executives.

The idea behind the creation of this new class of shares was to allow Zuckerberg to have control over the company while continuing his charitable work. In December 2015, following the birth of their first daughter, Zuckerberg had said that he and his wife plan to give 99% of their Facebook shares, valued at $45 billion then, over their entire lifetime, to the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative LLC, a limited liability company for betterment of the society.