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given2invest

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  1. And the follow up!  Are these guys in Junior High?

     

    Another Whopper from Autonomy CEO Mike Lynch

    REDWOOD SHORES, Calif., September 28, 2011

    Oracle issued the following statement:

     

    “Autonomy CEO Mike Lynch continues to insist that Autonomy was never ‘shopped’ to Oracle.  But now at least he remembers and admits to meeting with Oracle President Mark Hurd and Doug Kehring, Oracle’s head of M&A, this past April.  But CEO Lynch insists that it was a purely technical meeting, limited to a ‘lively discussion of database technologies.’  Interesting, but not true.  The slides Lynch showed Oracle’s Mark Hurd and Doug Kehring were all about Autonomy’s financial results, Autonomy’s stock price history, Autonomy’s Price/Earnings history and Autonomy’s stock market valuation.  Ably assisting Mike Lynch’s attempt to sell Autonomy to Oracle was Silicon Valley’s most famous shopper/seller of companies, the legendary investment banker Frank Quattrone.  After the sales pitch was over, Oracle refused to make an offer because Autonomy’s current market value of $6 billion was way too high.

     

    We have put Mike Lynch’s PowerPoint slide sales-pitch up on the Oracle website – Oracle.com/PleaseBuyAutonomy – with the hope Mike Lynch will recognize his slides, his memory will be restored, and he will recall what he and Frank Quattrone discussed during their visit to Oracle last April. Yesterday, the Autonomy CEO did not remember having any meeting with Oracle.  Today, he remembers the April meeting and inaccurately describes how it came about and what was discussed (see next paragraph). Tomorrow, he will need to explain his slides.

     

    Mike Lynch describes his meeting with Oracle: “On one of my trips to SF (April 2011), Frank Quattrone whom I have known for a long time offered to introduce me to Mark  hurd. Oracle was a customer and I have never met him, so it was a good opportunity. Frank does this from time to time on my visits, he has introduced me to many people. . NOTE: Frank was not engaged by Autonomy and there was no process running. The company was not for sale. I recall meeting with mark and someone else I believe called Doug. At the start of the meeting they joked that frank was there to sell them something. Frank and I made it clear that was not the case. We then met and had a lively discussion about database technologies. The meeting lasted approximately 30 mins. Frank is happy to confirm this.”

  2. I lol'd:

     

    Oracle Issues Statement

     

    Press Release Source: Oracle Corporation On Wednesday September 28, 2011, 7:20 pm EDT

    REDWOOD SHORES, CA--(Marketwire -09/28/11)- Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL - News) issued the following statement:

     

    "After HP agreed to acquire Autonomy for over $11.7 billion dollars, Oracle commented that Autonomy had been 'shopped' to Oracle as well, but Oracle wasn't interested because the price was way too high. Mike Lynch, Autonomy CEO, then publically denied that his company had been shopped to Oracle. Specifically, Mr. Lynch said, "If some bank happened to come with us on a list, that is nothing to do with us." Mr. Lynch then accused of Oracle of being 'inaccurate.' Either Mr. Lynch has a very poor memory or he's lying. 'Some bank' did not just happen to come to Oracle with Autonomy 'on a list.' The truth is that Mr. Lynch came to Oracle, along with his investment banker, Frank Quattrone, and met with Oracle's head of M&A, Douglas Kehring and Oracle President Mark Hurd at 11 am on April 1, 2011. After listening to Mr. Lynch's PowerPoint slide sales pitch to sell Autonomy to Oracle, Mr. Kehring and Mr. Hurd told Mr. Lynch that with a current market value of $6 billion, Autonomy was already extremely over-priced. The Lynch shopping visit to Oracle is easy to verify. We still have his PowerPoint slides."

     

    About Oracle

    Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL - News) is the world's most complete, open, and integrated business software and hardware systems company. For more information about Oracle, please visit our Web site at http://www.oracle.com.

  3. You're not alone.  The SEC is asleep at the wheel and usually takes a few years before they act on something.  They add nothing to the market and are basically glorified front runners.  They have huge lobbyists though as the trade so much everyone in the system (except investors) gains from them being in business.

  4. Call me crazy but I am quite happy. Happy as can be. I only have 8% cash, but am quite tired of this. Europe needs to do something, and it seems as though the can has been kicked into a wall.

     

    When offered a fork in the road you cant keep going straight. I would prefer a down 20% blood bath to 6 more months of this BS.

     

    Yah I agree.  Let's just crash and get it over with.

  5. Looks like a run on the bank. How come we allow banks to do it but not poker site is just a matter of perception...

     

    BeerBaron

     

    Run on the bank is when a banks assets are illiquid and they can't convert them to cash fast enough to pay out depositors.  Full Tilt had negative book value due to the fact that they stole customer money.  There were no tangible assets when the music stopped.  The whole thing is nuts.

  6.  

    It says it right in Reed's blog post:

     

     

    My bad. You are right. I had, particularly, missed this line.

     

    Similarly, if you rate or review a movie on Qwikster, it doesn’t show up on Netflix, and vice-versa.

     

    That parts the funniest (saddest) bit of the day. 

  7. I know why they had to increase prices and (at some point) deemphasize DVDs, what puzzles me is the execution. They've been pretty savvy so far, so it's surprising that they seem to have lost their touch recently and everything they do seems to be digging a bigger hole.. Maybe it'll turn out to be just a temporary problem, but even if that's solved, it doesn't solve the lack of a moat.

     

    There's some interesting discussion here:

     

    http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3012214

     

    Yah, I think this is exactly why they did it.  Reed is way too good of a CEO/business man to have fucked this up unless he was basically forced to do it, which is what I think happened.

  8. Come on Hester.  They are all OK with shorts, it's the naked shorts that are putting companies out of business that otherwise are healthy and profitable.  People selling and selling (naked shorting and naked shorting) without a borrow with just not enough demand to counter the selling, thus sending the stock to 0.  Don't you get it?  If only there was a way to stop the naked shorts from destroying healthy companies, what a world we'd live in.

     

    To be clear, this post was 100% sarcastic.    Amazing I have to point that out.  haha

     

     

  9. Come on Hester.  They are all OK with shorts, it's the naked shorts that are putting companies out of business that otherwise are healthy and profitable.  People selling and selling (naked shorting and naked shorting) without a borrow with just not enough demand to counter the selling, thus sending the stock to 0.  Don't you get it?  If only there was a way to stop the naked shorts from destroying healthy companies, what a world we'd live in.

     

     

     

     

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