A Microsoft shareholder has filed a class-action lawsuit against the
company, accusing executives of misleading investors about how well the Surface
RT tablets were selling.
The lawsuit, filed Monday in U.S. District Court for the District of
Massachusetts by San Diego-based law firm Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd, was
on behalf of plaintiff Gail Fialkov and others who bought Microsoft stock
between April 18 and July 18.
It alleges Microsoft and some of its officers, including CEO Steve Ballmer,
former Chief Financial Officer Peter Klein, Chief Accounting Officer Frank Brod
and former Windows marketing head Tami Reller, violated federal securities laws
by issuing false and misleading statements regarding the financial performance
of the Surface RT.
Microsoft declined to comment on the suit.
Among other allegations, the suit says Microsoft had already amassed a
large excess of Surface RT inventory by March 31, the end of its fiscal third
quarter, but had not told investors about it.
This violated generally accepted accounting principles and Securities and
Exchange Commission rules and regulations, the lawsuit claims.
“What Defendants knew, but failed to disclose to investors ... was that
Microsoft’s foray into the tablet market was an unmitigated disaster, which left
it with a large accumulation of excess, overvalued Surface RT inventory,” the
lawsuit says.
Then, on July 18, Microsoft announced it was taking a $900 million
writedown for Surface RT inventory adjustments in its fiscal fourth quarter,
ended June 30. That “inventory adjustment” related to a $150 price cut for the
Surface RT that Microsoft had announced just days earlier.
But “in truth ... the value of such inventory was materially impaired by
March 31, 2013,” the lawsuit says.
That July news caused Microsoft stock to plunge 11.4 percent, down $4.04 to
$31.40, erasing about $34 billion of the company’s market value, the lawsuit
says.
Microsoft shares closed Tuesday at $32.23, down 1.3 percent.
The lawsuit also cites several incidents where Microsoft executives,
between April 18 and July 18, had touted customers’ high satisfaction rates with
the Surface, the tablet’s momentum in China, and the Surface’s contribution to
Windows division revenue.
Those and other statements, the lawsuit alleges, misrepresented or failed
to disclose “poor customer demand and lackluster sales.”
Microsoft has never disclosed how many Surface tablets -— both the Surface
RT and the more expensive and powerful Surface Pro — it has sold.
In a document filed in July with the SEC, Microsoft said it made $853
million in the sales of its Surface tablets in the past fiscal year — not even
as much as it had to write down.
Sean O’Connor, a University of Washington law professor, said it wasn’t
surprising that a suit was filed.
“One truism is that when you have a big stock drop in a publicly traded
company, the company gets sued,” he said.
And the law firm filing the suit — Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd — has
brought similar suits against Kohl’s, Lululemon and Medtronic, among others.
In terms of the merits of the case, O’Connor said he wasn’t convinced that,
under generally accepted accounting principles, Microsoft would have been
required to write down the inventory adjustment in the third quarter “if they
reasonably believed that they could still move those units in the next six
months or so.”
What he found more concerning, he said, were the executives’ statements
about the momentum of Surface.
“Based on those kinds of very positive statements, people could say they
bought stock because they thought things were going swimmingly well,” when, in
actuality, Microsoft executives may have known things weren’t going well,
O’Connor said.
“That could be a problem for Microsoft.”
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