By Lori Enos E-Commerce Times
05/22/01 10:28 AM PT
Despite announcing an alliance with America Online, PurchasePro
has had a rocky few months.
How Much is 'Free' Costing You? Learn how DaveRamsey.com saw a 567% uplift in ROI with Omniture. This complimentary guide and webinar cover the most important factors in selecting an analytics solution. Download Now.
PurchasePro (Nasdaq: PPRO)
announced Tuesday that its net loss for the quarter was US$14.3
million more than originally reported.
The Las Vegas, Nevada-based business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce
company now says that its net loss, including non-cash charges and
amortization of equity-based compensation and goodwill, was $32.4
million for the quarter ended March 31st. It had previously reported
a first quarter loss of $18.1 million.
The revised earnings report came a day after Charles E. Johnson,
Jr., the company's co-founder, chief executive officer and
chairman of the board, left the company.
"In the near term, we will work to develop a strong course of
action to reinvigorate the company and provide it with the best
possible opportunity to achieve its ultimate objective: the
achievement of strong financial returns," Purchase Pro chief
financial officer Richard Clemmer said in announcing Johnson's resignation.
"It is, however, now time to inject that strategy with the fuel that
will accelerate it during this demanding period in our history,
as well as this difficult economic environment," Clemmer added.
PurchasePro said that it has named board member
R. Todd Bradley chairman of the board. A new CEO has not yet been chosen.
No Explanation
PurchasePro offered no explanation for its revised earnings
statement, but the numbers show that the company's revenues
were $12.7 million less than previously reported, dropping
from $29.8 million to $17.1 million. During the fourth
quarter of 2000, the company had revenues of $33.6 million.
Excluding non-cash charges of $16.7 million for strategic
marketing expenses, and amortization of equity-based compensation
and goodwill, PurchasePro reported a cash operating loss for the
first quarter of $15.9 million, or 23 cents per share.
The net loss after including all charges was 47 cents per share.
Time to Say Goodbye
Despite announcing an alliance with America Online (NYSE: AOL),
PurchasePro has had a rocky few months. The company was reportedly
sued in February by convicted money-launderer Russell Pike,
who alleges that Johnson and PurchasePro co-founder Ranel
Erickson launched PurchasePro based on a stolen business plan.
In April, the day before PurchasePro initially released its first
quarter results, a judge denied the company's motion
to dismiss the Pike lawsuit, reports said.
The company has also been hit with a spate of investor
lawsuits, alleging that the company defrauded investors
by making misleading statements.
In morning trading Tuesday, PurchasePro was at $2.74, down
23 cents or 7.7 percent. The stock hit a 52-week low of
$2.10 on May 16th, after having traded at $47.75 in September.
Report: Motor Vehicle Agencies Race To Internet May 22, 2001
The most common service offered online is vehicle registration renewal, with 40 percent of all motor vehicle agencies offering a Web version.
Related Stories
New Dot-Com CEOs - The Cure or Just the Replacements? May 18, 2001
When an e-commerce firm starts replacing high-tech, dot-com
leaders with old-school business people, some conflicts between
the old way and the new way are bound to arise.
Who's Afraid of E-Commerce? April 12, 2001
Whether or not small-business executives are ready for the Web,
a number of high-tech giants are working overtime to
encourage them to adopt e-commerce initiatives.
AOL Rolls Out 10 New E-Commerce Partnerships March 28, 2001
When it launched Netbusiness in September, AOL said it was targeting the 28 million
U.S. businesses that have 10 employees or less.
One Year Ago: E-tail Invades the Real World February 12, 2002
The latest step of the dot-com move toward brick-and-clicks is the Internet kiosk placed
in a real-world store. Surprisingly, in-store Web kiosks have some
advantages over at-home online shopping.