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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony, -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Anthony@Pacific who wrote (67530)2/28/2001 2:49:21 PM
From: Anthony@Pacific  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 122087
 
GSTRF <----------- Go to ZERO says A@P !!!

Globalstar, Loral Accused in Shareholder Suit of Stock Fraud

New York, Feb. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Globalstar
Telecommunications Ltd. and the satellite-telephone company's
largest owner and managing general partner, Loral Space &
Communications Ltd., have been accused in a lawsuit of deceiving
investors.
A complaint filed today in U.S. District Court in Manhattan
says Globalstar, Loral, and Bernard Schwartz, chairman of both
companies, misled shareholders in interviews and regulatory
filings by withholding critical information. Loral owned about 39
percent of Globalstar equity and 27 percent of its debt at the end
of December, according to a U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission filing.
Globalstar didn't release figures indicating the company's
``total failure in the market'' until Oct. 27, after previously
making encouraging statements throughout 2000, the complaint says.
Telephone calls to Globalstar and Loral for comment were not
immediately returned.
The suit comes two days after Globalstar's bondholders sued
the San Jose, California-based company for halting payments on the debt last month. The complaint seeks class-action status on behalf
of other investors and undetermined damages.
Globalstar, operating since 1999, has a $4 billion system of
48 low-earth-orbit satellites designed to allow mobile phone users
to make calls from virtually anywhere in the world.
Like rivals Iridium LLC and ICO Global Communications, which
filed for bankruptcy in 1999, Globalstar lured far fewer customers
than expected, leaving the company struggling to survive. Analysts
said hardware problems and expensive service charges made users
leery about signing up with Globalstar.
Globalstar shares rose 1/32 to 21/32 in midafternoon trading
on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange. The shares, which reached a 52-week
high of $31.50 last Feb. 29, have fallen more than 97 percent in
the past 12 months and 27 percent so far this year. Loral shares,
which have fallen more than 75 percent in the past 12 months, fell
13 cents to $3.83 in midafternoon trading.
Schwartz, one of the Democratic Party's largest donors, gave
personally contributed more than $1 million to party committees in
1999-2000.

--David Glovin in federal district court in New York (212) 732-