Enterprise

The SEC revealed today that it charged VMware with fraud . . . and then settled for next to nothing

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VMware sign in front of VMware office in Palo Alto on February 16, 2018, Palo Alto, California. (Photo by Yichuan Cao/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
Image Credits: NurPhoto / Getty Images

The world of enterprise software is often a little staid. Not today, however. The Securities and Exchange Commission today said it has charged the cloud computing giant VMware for “misleading investors about its order backlog management practices, which enabled the Palo Alto, California-based technology company to push revenue into future quarters by delaying product deliveries to customers, concealing the company’s slowing performance relative to its projections.”

An investigation by the agency found that, “beginning in fiscal year 2019, VMware began delaying the delivery of license keys on some sales orders until just after quarter-end so that it could recognize revenue from the corresponding license sales in the following quarter.” More, said the SEC in a news release, “VMware shifted tens of millions of dollars in revenue into future quarters, building a buffer in those periods and obscuring the company’s financial performance as its business slowed relative to projections in fiscal year 2020. Although VMware publicly disclosed that its backlog was ‘managed based upon multiple considerations,’ it did not reveal to investors that it used the backlog to manage the timing of the company’s revenue recognition.”

The full order is pretty damning. According to the SEC, VMware fudged the numbers, by a lot, during the aforementioned time period. Meanwhile, analysts who inquired about the continued trend in backlog reduction — with VMware’s investor relations staff or with VMware executives at organized IR events — were kept in the dark, suggested the SEC.

Before you jump to any conclusions about what can happen when a company the size of VMware is charged with fraud, the matter, adds the SEC, has already been settled. Indeed, without admitting or denying the findings in the SEC’s order, VMware has already consented to a cease-and-desist order and will pay an $8 million penalty, said the SEC.

Just $8 million! VMware, which boasts a $52 billion market cap right now, probably paid its lawyers the same amount.

VMware confirmed in a statement of its own that it reached a settlement with the SEC, adding that it “believes this settlement is the right course of action for the Company and continues to be committed to operating at the highest level of integrity, including with respect to its public filings and communications with investors.”

We’re still trying to make sense of what just happened here, but one obvious question is how chip giant Broadcom feels about this now-public development. In late May, Broadcom announced that it is buying VMware in a blockbuster $61 billion cash-and-stock deal that has yet to close. Presumably, it knew about these charges and moved ahead anyway, but the company hasn’t yet responded to our request for more information. (We also reached out to VMware and have yet to receive a response.)

It’s official: Broadcom to acquire VMware in massive $61B deal

We also wonder how these allegations and the settlement news will impact the reputation of Pat Gelsinger, who spent eight years as VMware CEO, leaving in February of 2021 to become CEO of Intel.

Gelsinger was previously an executive at EMC, a storage company that acquired VMware in 2004 and which was itself acquired in 2015 by Dell (which last year spun out VMware).

As he was leaving VMware early last year, he said in a farewell video to employees that when he took the top job at VMware in 2012, “I had never been a CEO, wasn’t a software person and didn’t really know the products or strategy,” he said.

“How little I knew,” he added in his video address.

Now, VMware shareholders might like to know how much Gelsinger knew in 2019 and 2020, as well.

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