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You say Twitter, I say Tweeter: Investor mix-up?

A smartphone display shows the Twitter logo in Berlin, Germany, Twitter unsealed the documents Thursday, Oct. 3, 2013, for its planned initial public offering of stock and says it hopes to raise up to $1 billion. (AP Photo/dpa, Soeren Stache, File).
A smartphone display shows the Twitter logo in Berlin, Germany, Twitter unsealed the documents Thursday, Oct. 3, 2013, for its planned initial public offering of stock and says it hopes to raise up to $1 billion. (AP Photo/dpa, Soeren Stache, File).

NEW YORK – Shares of Tweeter Home Entertainment Group Inc. rose as high as 15 cents Friday. That’s up 1,400 per cent from Thursday’s closing price of 1 cent. And trading volume skyrocketed to 14.4 million shares. Over the past year, the daily average was about 29,000, according to FactSet.

The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Wall Street’s industry regulator, said the shares were halted Friday afternoon because of a misunderstanding related to the “possible initial public offering of an unrelated security.”

Read more: Twitter’s Evan Williams may be worth $1B after IPO

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What could have gotten investors so confused?

Tweeter trades over the counter, under the “TWTRQ” symbol.

Twitter on Thursday offered investors details about its highly anticipated IPO and proposed the stock symbol “TWTR.”

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But San Francisco-based Twitter’s stock won’t be available for trading until the company actually goes public. That could be before Thanksgiving.

Twitter has about 218 million users, far fewer than Facebook, which has more than 1 billion. But celebrities, from Oprah Winfrey to Britney Spears to President Barack Obama, are on it. And many TV networks and news organizations encourage people to follow their Twitter pages in order to start a conversation with viewers and promote their shows.

Read more: Twitter dishes tantalizing tidbits in IPO treatise

Twitter said that it expects to raise about $1 billion in its IPO.

And Tweeter? The chain was founded in 1972 and had been based in Canton, Mass. It sold TVs, audio equipment and other electronics, but the stores disappeared years ago. The company filed for bankruptcy protection in 2007 and closed the stores in 2008.

Tweeter’s over-the-counter stock was worth 5 cents before trading was halted Friday.

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