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To: djane who wrote (6745)8/22/1999 11:17:00 PM
From: djane  Respond to of 29987
 
eBay Removes Iridium Shares From Auction Site

Sunday August 22 12:27 AM ET

By Emily Kaiser

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Online auction house eBay Inc. Friday removed a customer's offer to auction
shares in satellite telephone company Iridium LLC, saying it was against company policy to sell stocks
on its site.

Trading in shares of Iridium, which allows customers to make phone calls from anywhere in the world via a system of 66
satellites, has been halted on Nasdaq since last Friday, when Iridium filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

A shareholder had offered to sell a stock certificate for 1,300 Iridium shares through eBay, with an asking price of at least
$6,500. That would value the shares at $5 each. The stock last traded on Nasdaq last Friday at 3-1/16.

The listing, which several legal experts and stock traders said was the first such offering they had heard of, sparked debate
about whether it was legal to offer stock certificates online while exchange trading in the shares was halted.

A spokesman for San Jose, Calif.-based eBay said the company does not allow customers to sell stock on its site because
of possible legal and regulatory issues.

``There are a number of complex sets of regulations that can apply to stock sales,' Kevin Pursglove said in a telephone
interview. ``Because of the complexity, we just decided that we would not allow the sale of stock on our site.'

Pursglove said the ban on stock sales has been in place for several months. The Iridium shares found their way onto the site
because eBay does not pre-screen items listed for auction, but relies on other customers to patrol the site and ensure the
offerings meet its requirements, he said.

``It's a very open system that we have,' he said. ``It relies very heavily on trust and honesty.'

An SEC spokesman declined to comment on whether selling the stock certificates online would be legal. However, he said a
person may sell securities to another person privately, even if trading in the shares has been halted.

Trading in Iridium shares was halted last Friday after the company filed for protection from its creditors under Chapter 11 of
the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.

Iridium has struggled to sign up subscribers to its pricey service and has fallen well short of its revenue targets.

David Ruder, a Northwestern University law professor and former chairman of the SEC, said off-market trading would be
legal as long as the exchange, rather than the SEC, had halted trading.

``The stock market is only a place in which the securities are traded,' Ruder said in a telephone interview. ``Their power and
jurisdiction extends only to the trading on their markets. If trading on one market stops, trading can take place on other
markets or off-market.'

However, he noted that exchanges normally halt trading in shares because of pending news or uncertainty, and he said it may
be unwise for investors to buy shares in that situation.

Copyright ¸ 1996-1999 Reuters Limited.