A "one quarter" problem:
nytimes.com
March 5, 2001
Critical Path Says Problems Were Limited to One Quarter
By CHRIS GAITHER
AN FRANCISCO, March 4 — The new management of Critical Path, an Internet software company, said late last week that the questionable accounting practices that left its reputation in tatters were largely confined to its fourth-quarter sales in the United States.
Three top executives broke their silence on Friday for the first time since improper accounting forced the company, once a Wall Street darling, to revise last quarter's revenues at least $6.5 million lower.
"We're now extremely comfortable that that's the extent of the problem, that we know where it is and why it happened," said David Hayden, the founder and executive chairman. He resumed control of daily operations after three top executives left the company in February. "Even though the investigation is ongoing and it will continue for some time, the company is moving forward," Mr. Hayden added.
Critical Path's stock closed at $2.66 on Friday, down from a peak of $119.50 in March 2000. Investors have initiated dozens of class-action lawsuits against the company, which provides corporate e-mail and messaging software, accusing executives of manipulating its books to inflate the stock price.
On Jan. 18, after promising for months that the fourth quarter would be the company's first profitable period, Critical Path stunned Wall Street by announcing a loss, excluding special charges, of 16 cents a share. Executives said they and their auditors had decided to spread $7 million from software licensing deal over several quarters, instead of recognizing it as revenue all at once.
"We had a bottom-line miss regardless of that," Lawrence Reinhold, the chief financial officer, said in an interview on Friday. "That just made it worse."
While distancing himself from the previous team's bullish views, Mr. Hayden said the overly ambitious forecasts had been a response to Wall Street's increasing demand to see profits at Internet companies.
"There was a lot of internal pressure on the company to fulfill its promises," he said. "However, in hindsight, it looks like we were unnecessarily and unduly aggressive in forecasting profitability for the fourth quarter."
Analysts had said they were willing to forgive Critical Path for missing its earnings targets. But on Feb. 2, the company dropped a bigger bombshell: Its board had suspended two top executives and started an internal investigation into its financial practices.
The whistle-blower, the company said last week, was Larry Reinhold, the new chief financial officer. On Jan. 29, Mr. Reinhold said, he received worrisome information about some contracts that had been executed in December. In an interview, he would not describe the "questionable transactions" other than to say that they concerned sales of the software line Critical Path acquired when it purchased Isocor in January 2000.
For the next two days, Mr. Reinhold discussed his findings with the company's lawyers. On Feb. 1, he called an emergency board meeting that began in the early afternoon and ran into the early hours of Feb. 2. Later that day, Critical Path placed David A. Thatcher, the president, and William Rinehart, the vice president for worldwide sales, on administrative leave and announced an internal inquiry. Nasdaq officials, asking for more information, halted trading in the stock.
On Feb. 8, Critical Path said that Doug Hickey, its chief executive officer, had resigned, and that Mr. Thatcher and Mr. Rinehart "are no longer employed by the company." Diana Whitehead, a senior vice president, replaced Mr. Thatcher, and Mr. Hayden returned from a year-long hiatus to fill the duties of Mr. Hickey while the company searches for a new chief executive.
The next week, Critical Path said its investigation had determined that the prior quarter's financial figures were inaccurate. The company will lower its reported revenues by $6.5 million, to $8 million. Its net loss will increase to between $19 million and $21.5 million, compared with the $11.5 million previously reported.
Several members of Critical Path's sales team resigned or were dismissed following the shake-up. Despite the recent troubles, Mr. Hayden said, no customers have left. |