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HP agrees to settle backdating suit for US$117.5M

Hewlett-Packard Co. on Monday agreed in principle to resolve the stock-options back-dating suit facing Mercury Interactive Corp., a company it acquired in 2006, for US$117.5 million.

The settlement is pending and needs to be approved by the judge presiding over the case at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, HP said in a statement. The case was filed by the Mercury Pension Fund Group, a group of pension funds that hold Mercury stock, which alleged former Mercury Interactive executives improperly backdated stock options.

The settlement was six times higher than any previous backdating settlement, according to a statement from Labaton Sucharow LLP, the law firm representing Mercury Pension Fund Group.

HP acquired Mercury Interactive for US$4.5 billion in July 2006. That year, Mercury was forced to restate its earnings for fiscal years 2002 to 2004 as previous statements failed to recognize compensation from internal stock-option grants.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission probed Mercury’s accounting in 2005 and questioned the company’s handling of compensation based on backdated stock-option grants. A probe by a committee of Mercury’s board revealed that over the past decade Mercury had incorrectly reported the dates of at least 49 stock-option grants, picking a date on which the stock price was lower than when the option was actually granted.

The investigation led to the resignation of then-CEO Amnon Landan, CFO Douglas Smith and general counsel Susan Skaer.