HPQ-Autonomy saga continues....  
  HPQ 2011 $29, 2012 $11, this year $41.10 high
  Would think some of this crew would have borne some blame/culpability/jail time.....
  "Barclays Capital and Perella Weinberg are advising HP, while Qatalyst Partners, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, UBS and JPMorgan Chase are advising Autonomy"
  Not to mention, the accounting firms for BOTH parties...
  What a world we inhabit.    ==============================                  |            H-P            Clears Hurdle in Shareholder Lawsuit Over Autonomy Deal          |                           By Shira Ovide
  A        U.S. District Judge agreed Friday to approve preliminarily a settlement        in a lawsuit by Hewlett-Packard Co. shareholders over the company's        acquisition of U.K. software firm Autonomy.
  H-P has been trying        for nearly a year to settle the litigation filed by a handful of its        shareholders, who said H-P's now chief executive, Meg Whitman, and other        current and former company officials failed to heed warning signs about        problems with Autonomy's business. Ms. Whitman was a board member at the        time of the deal. H-P acquired the software firm in 2011 for more than        $11 billion, and a year later it took an $8.8 billion write-down on the        deal.
  In a court filing Friday, U.S. District Judge Charles        Breyer in San Francisco said he would consider final approval of the        settlement in a July hearing. Reuters reported the preliminary approval        earlier Friday.
  If approved, the settlement would bolster H-P's        effort to move past a deal that has caused major headaches for the        company. Ms. Whitman in 2012 said H-P was duped into overpaying for        Autonomy by what she characterized as apparently willfully inflated        financial statements at the U.K. software firm. Autonomy's former CEO        has repeatedly denied accusations of improper accounting.
  H-P had        tried previously to put to rest the litigation first filed in 2012.        Judge Breyer balked last year at one potential settlement, in part over        what could have been a large financial windfall for attorneys        representing the shareholder plaintiffs. In December, the judge said a        revised settlement improperly protected H-P directors, officials and        professional firms from a wide swath of potential future shareholder        litigation.
  This time, Judge Breyer gave the green light to a        revised settlement that would limit prohibitions on future shareholder        litigation and extend policy changes in how H-P considers future        acquisitions.
  The settlement terms don't call for the defendants        to pay any money.
  "We are pleased with the Court's decision to        grant preliminary approval and look forward to the final hearing on July        24," an H-P spokeswoman said.
  "The parties were able to        negotiate a resolution that will benefit H-P and its shareholders now        and in the future, as H-P implements the reforms to its acquisition        policies," said an attorney representing the lead shareholder plaintiff        in the case.
  ========== PS, Sure it's not over, will be follow-on suits, most likely. As per usual, the law dogs will make out like bandits.       |