Autodesk sued by Starboard to allow for changes to board that 'misled' investors

Dow Jones06-17

MW Autodesk sued by Starboard to allow for changes to board that 'misled' investors

By Mike Murphy and Tomi Kilgore

Starboard seeks delay of shareholder meeting and reopening of window to nominate board members

Activist investor Starboard Value, which currently has a $500 million stake in Autodesk Inc., said Monday that it is filing a lawsuit against the design-software company in order to nominate new directors to the board, which Starboard alleges "misled" shareholders.

Starboard said it issued a letter to fellow shareholders regarding its belief that Autodesk's board of directors "manipulated the corporate machinery and perpetuated an entrenchment scheme by failing to disclose material malfeasance regarding the company's accounting and disclosure practices prior to the deadline to nominate director candidates for election at the 2024 Annual Meeting of Shareholders."

Autodesk did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Starboard's actions to make changes at Autodesk were first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

Shares of San Francisco-based Autodesk $(ADSK)$ rallied 4.5% in premarket trading. The stock had tumbled 12.9% since April 1 through Friday, after the company disclosed it had launched an accounting probe.

The activist investor said it was filing a lawsuit in Delaware to force Autodesk to delay the shareholder meeting, currently scheduled for July 16, and to reopen the window to nominate board members.

Starboard said in its letter that Autodesk started its investigation into accounting of free cash flow at the beginning of March. That was "well ahead" of the deadline to nominate board members, but Starboard said the company "misled" investors by waiting to disclose the investigation to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission until April 1.

In late May, Autodesk said the internal investigation had found no fault in its practices and that there was no need to restate or adjust any financial statements.

In its annual report filed earlier this month, Autodesk said it was cooperating with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the U.S. Attorney's Office following its internal probe.

Starboard's stake in Autodesk represents about 1% of Autodesk's market capitalization of $48.8 billion as of Friday's close.

The investor said it believes Autodesk has "an opportunity to create significant shareholder value by meaningfully improving its combination of growth and profitability," as well as adopting more friendly shareholder-return policies.

Starboard said it believed Autodesk can "significantly" cut costs in a number of its cost centers and should refrain from material acquisitions. And given the stock's current valuation, Starboard believes repurchasing shares would be the "best use of capital" for the company.

Autodesk said in a quarterly filing last week that for the quarter ending April 30, it had repurchased 33,000 shares for about $8.4 million. That left $4.7 billion remaining in its share-repurchase program.

Autodesk's stock has lost 7.2% year to date through Friday, while the SPDR S&P Software & Services exchange-traded fund XSW has slipped 3.4% and the S&P 500 index SPX has rallied 13.9%.

-Mike Murphy -Tomi Kilgore

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June 17, 2024 09:27 ET (13:27 GMT)

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