Analyse
Leo Apotheker’s August 2011 statement was promotional and projected future performance that never materialized. Within two years HP wrote down $8.8 billion of the Autonomy acquisition, admitted to significant over‑valuation, and the combined unit failed to deliver the promised profitable, diversified software business. The discrepancy between the promised outcomes and actual results makes the statement misleading.
Achtergrond
In August 2011 HP announced a $10.3 billion acquisition of UK‑based software company Autonomy, with CEO Leo Apotheker touting transformative benefits. By 2013 HP disclosed massive accounting irregularities at Autonomy, leading to a large write‑down and legal disputes, and the software division struggled to achieve the projected growth and profitability.
Samenvatting verdict
The claim that the HP‑Autonomy deal would create a scale to define the next generation of high‑value enterprise solutions and a highly profitable, diversified software business proved inaccurate.