Charlie McCall 1, Pre-HBOC McKesson Shareholders 0
posted 02/06/2008
HIStalk
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I didn’t even know Charlie McCall was on trial. The former
HBOC chairman was acquitted of one securities fraud charge last week
and got a mistrial on six more as a lone juror’s holdout
deadlocked the jury. I feel deprived that I missed a blow-by-blow
report of his being grilled and then left to await his fate.
Federal prosecutors had worked their way up through the HBOC food chain
over the years, leading everyone to speculate: wonder when
they’ll get Charlie?
In case you’re a newbie, HBO and Company was the pre-Enron
corporate malfeasance poster child, a prodromal symptom of dot-coms in
waiting that used its optimistically valued stock to buy everything in
its path. The frenzied transacting caught the attention of drug
wholesaler McKesson like the mating dance of a spider, which paid a
mind-boggling $14 billion for the company in January 1999.
Industry long-timers chuckling knowingly, having watched similar
companies take it in the shorts for the same expensive, ill-advised
healthcare IT dabbling. Investors scratched their heads after running
their calculators and finding no possible way that HBOC was worth that
kind of money. The general consensus of all interested parties: what
the hell was McKesson thinking? Three months later,
McKesson’s stock tanked on charges of book-cooking by
Charlie’s crowd. Shareholders lost $9 billion of value in a
single day, thereby forcefully proving the true value of HBOC.
McKesson’s executives were perhaps the only people on the
planet who weren’t suspicious about the Atlanta high-flyers.
Everyone was swapping insider stories. I sent two anecdotes to a
healthcare IT publication in 1998 (who missed out on the scoop of the
century by ignoring them.) First: I’d heard from an HBOC
employee that he was ordered to mail out empty tape boxes to customers
for not-ready enhancements so revenue could be recognized anyway.
Second: programmers were griping about the HBOC revenue quotas each was
assigned (!) since all the Y2K remediation revenue had already been
booked by late 1998, leaving the programmers to scramble for new
bookings while doing the already-committed work. Recognizing revenue on
the basis of a shipping receipt? Oh, my.
You know how it ended. HBOC’s brass were indicted,
McKesson’s were fired. Charlie went off sailing (so the story
goes.) The reeling McKesson lost many employees, came up with strange
ideas like co-CEOs, jumped on the dot-com era right as it imploded
(taking with it hastily conceived names like i-this and e-that), and
retired the stench-ridden Pathways name. Throw in the nearly $1 billion
they eventually paid to settle shareholder lawsuits and the grand total
for those few weeks of consensual coupling is $10 billion. What they
got for their trouble was a mongrel pack of products that Charlie had
hastily snapped up without having any real plan except to keep the
printing presses running off stock certificates.
Among those involved were certainly some crooks and some fools, but
let’s not forget those who suffered most, those McKesson
lifers who had stashed away years’ worth of shares of their
unexciting company’s stock instead of risking it on flaky
enterprises like Microsoft and Dell. When lonely old conservative
widower Dad McKesson brought home a sexy young step-mom named HBOC, she
stole the kids’ piggybank. The stock went from the mid-80s to
the mid-teens. People I knew glumly tried to estimate how many more
years they’d have to work until retirement, with 80% of their
investments gone. Even today, after eight years and with good company
management, McKesson’s stock has recovered only by about half.
Only the jury can decide whether Charlie McCall and his associates are
guilty or innocent, but I can say one thing: if they are found guilty,
then I hope the pain they receive is commensurate with the pain they
caused.
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