I don't think that there can be any disagreement that Hewlett Packard (HP) had a terrible day on November 20. In a surprise announcement, the company announced that it was taking a write off of $8.8 billion of the $11.1 billion that it paid to acquire Autonomy, a UK based technology company, in October 2011, and that a large portion of this write off ($ 5 billion) could be attributed to accounting improprieties at Autonomy. Even by the standards of acquisition mistakes, which tend to be costly to acquiring company stockholders, this one stood out on three dimensions:It was disproportionately large:...
HP's Deal from Hell: The mark-it-up and write-it-down two-step
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Much ado about liquidity? Lockup expirations and stock prices
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Last week shaped up as a big one for Facebook. On Wednesday (November 14), the company faced the steepest of its lockup expiration cliffs so far, with 777 million shares released for sale by insiders. Its two earlier lockup expirations, of 271 million shares on August 16 and 234 million shares on October 29, did cause stock price pullbacks of about 5% and 3% respectively. Consequently, there was concern that Facebook’s stock price would take a beating on November 14, but the stock price climbed 12.6% on that day.There are a host on intriguing questions that derive from lockups, their expiration...
Storms and Stocks: Dealing with Disruptive Shocks
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Sandy, the super-storm that terrorized New York and its environs is now history, but it left a trail of destruction. As communities around the city and New Jersey dealt with power failures, gas shortage and transportation chaos, I was thinking about the lessons that I learned from the experience and their application to financial markets, which have been buffeted with their own storms for the last five years. Once is an accident, twice is bad luck, but three times is a pattern: For much of the time that I have lived in the United States, power failures were not only unusual but when they did occur,...