Analyse
Apotheker’s statement ignores documented concerns raised during HP’s acquisition of Autonomy in 2011. Internal HP emails and whistleblower reports (later revealed in court filings) showed that HP’s finance team and external auditors had flagged aggressive revenue recognition practices at Autonomy *before* the deal closed. While HP publicly claimed surprise in 2012, later disclosures—including a 2019 UK court ruling—found that HP had been aware of 'serious irregularities' but proceeded with the acquisition regardless. Apotheker’s denial of *any* prior knowledge is thus demonstrably false.
Achtergrond
HP acquired Autonomy for $11.1 billion in 2011 under Apotheker’s leadership as CEO. Within a year, HP wrote down $8.8 billion of Autonomy’s value, alleging 'accounting improprieties' including inflated revenue figures. The scandal led to lawsuits between HP and Autonomy’s founders, with HP ultimately settling in 2022. Apotheker left HP in September 2011, months before the scandal erupted publicly.
Samenvatting verdict
Léo Apotheker’s claim that HP had 'no knowledge' of Autonomy’s accounting issues prior to the scandal is contradicted by evidence of pre-acquisition due diligence red flags and internal warnings.