Anthony, IVIL: I've taken a small short position. First bits of news are not so good. Hope this formats properly. SH
Tuesday, March 09, 1999
Controversy hits Ivillage as stock debut looms
Sandra Rubin Financial Post
A women's Internet firm, poised to go public, has used "marginal" and "inappropriate" financial practices to boost revenues and make itself more attractive to investors, a former chief financial officer says in an affidavit sworn out on the eve of the company's initial public offering.
At the same time, the chorus of former senior executives saying they were seriously wronged by iVillage Inc. has started to swell.
The women's online network, with its demographically prized target audience, is expected to start trading on Nasdaq any day. Backed by lead underwriter Goldman Sachs & Co. and investors such as America Online Inc., the issue is widely seen as one of the hottest IPOs in a sector that's smoking with the investing public.
But the sworn statement signed on Friday by the former CFO, Joanne O'Rourke Hindman, raises troubling questions about iVillage's past financial reporting.
Ms. Hindman says she was fired last year after expressing concern about the New York-based firm's accounting methods.
"I learned that certain financial practices at iVillage were marginal and even inappropriate," said Ms. Hindman, who worked for Washington Post Co. from 1983 to 1995, most recently as vice-president of finance for Newsweek magazine.
"Based on my experience at and my knowledge of iVillage, I would not be comfortable today being the CFO taking this company public."
Her affidavit was filed in Tennessee in support of Todd Kenner, another former senior executive who is suing iVillage for wooing him to New York from Nashville with the promise of options on 100,000 iVillage shares, then allegedly firing him without cause.
The promised options were never delivered, and Mr. Kenner will be in court Friday seeking an injunction to get the shares set aside.
Ms. Hindman says she, too, was aggressively recruited by iVillage's chief executive, Candice Carpenter, and promised 280,000 options at an exercise price of $1.60 (US) once the company was taken public. The shares have been priced at $12 to $14 (US), and could shoot two or three times higher at the start of trading.
She says she took the job in September, 1997, becoming iVillage's fourth CFO in less than two years, but quickly became alarmed at the firm's financial practices.
"In particular, I felt the company was recognizing revenues prematurely -- indeed, in some cases before letters of intent were even signed," said Ms. Hindman, a certified public accountant. "This is extremely important, especially for a startup company about to go public.
"I was unwilling to accept any 'fudging' of the numbers, and I began to express my concerns."
According to Ms. Hindman's sworn statement, Ms. Carpenter, an iVillage co-founder and the public face on the company, was determined to establish trends and "create the appearance of momentum towards an eventual IPO, which she had been planning long before my arrival.
"I recognized that making the changes I suggested would reduce the company's revenue numbers, and that Ms. Carpenter was irritated to hear my views; but I simply assumed . . . she would do the right thing promptly."
Instead, Ms. Hindman says, she was demoted in November after only eight weeks on the job, and fired in January, 1998. She says she was invited to stay on as a consultant on financial matters but refused. She quickly found other employment.
Jason Stell, iVillage vice-president, said he could not comment because the company is in a "quiet period" before its initial public offering.
Meanwhile, a second former senior iVillage executive stepped forward Friday to support Mr. Kenner, saying he too was cheated of promised options.
Steven Carter said in a filed affidavit that he was executive vice-president of NBC Cable Networks, responsible for MSNBC and CNBC, when iVillage "aggressively" recruited him. He says Ms. Carpenter promised him options on 280,000 shares, which would be worth "several million dollars."
He took the job as iVillage's executive vice-president of sales in July, 1997, and found "a highly dysfunctional company" with a sales force in disarray.
He says he lasted 15 months, building up the sales department and initiating an aggressive sponsorship strategy, before discovering by accident on Good Friday last year that Ms. Carpenter had given his job to someone else. His promised options never materialized.
Mr. Carter said several others are in the same boat.
"When Ms. Carpenter tired of someone, her first thought -- which I heard her express on more than one occasion -- was that she needed to 'get their options back.'
"I am aware of this occurring with two different CFOs at iVillage, as well as other top executives. I am also aware Ms. Carpenter terminated two founders of a business unit . . . who were to get substantial equity positions in iVillage.
"I have never seen a CEO and a company which deals with its executives in such a consistently opportunistic, dishonest, and malevolent manner."
Mr. Kenner, Ms. Hindman, and Mr. Carter say between them they are owed 660,000 shares -- over one-sixth of the 3.6 million shares being made available to the public in the IPO. |