To read this content please select one of the options below:

Microstrategy Incorporated: PIPE

Publication date: 20 January 2017

Abstract

In mid-June 2000, MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor is considering an investment of $125 million of convertible preferred stock in his firm by a group of private investors including Citadel Investment Group LLC. The offer comes at a difficult time for the company, because only three months earlier, its stock had reached a record price of $300 per share. At that point, the company had registered a $1 billion seasoned equity offering. Shortly thereafter, the company was forced to restate its earnings after running afoul of the SEC for its revenue-recognition practices. Although the restatement did not change the company's cash-flow position, it did result in an SEC investigation and the cancellation of the stock offering. In order to meet Saylor's ambitious plans for MicroStrategy, additional funding must be obtained. With public-market funding sources shut off, students must evaluate what the best course of action is for the firm at this moment. Students are asked to evaluate a new form of venture financing called private investments in public enterprises (PIPE). PIPEs differ from conventional floating-rate convertibles in that the conversion price in most cases can only be adjusted downward. The case considers both the pros and cons of these investments.

Keywords

Citation

Crawford, R.D. and Chaplinsky, S. (2017), "Microstrategy Incorporated: PIPE", . https://doi.org/10.1108/case.darden.2016.000202

Publisher

:

University of Virginia Darden School Foundation

Copyright © 2003 by the University of Virginia Darden School Foundation, Charlottesville, VA. All rights reserved.

Related articles