The Guardian (USA)

Advice for Darktrace: don’t complain, just explain

- Nils Pratley

Advice for cybersecur­ity firm Darktrace as it finds itself under attack from short-sellers: don’t rely on airy “nothing to see here” statements. If you want to shore up investors’ confidence when a New York hedge fund is questionin­g your accounting in a lengthy report, you usually have to get into the gritty business of point-by-point rebuttal.

Darktrace’s response on Tuesday to an outfit called Quintessen­tial Capital Management fell into the boilerplat­e category. The company said it had “full confidence” in its accounting practices and financial statements, and that its board and management take their fiduciary responsibi­lities “very seriously”. All standard stuff, in other words.

More detail must follow. The reality of stock market life is that it is pointless to complain that you weren’t contacted by the report’s authors, which was another line offered by Darktrace. The market only wants to know what you have to say about the specific allegation­s.

The stakes are high at Darktrace because of the shared corporate roots with Mike Lynch and Autonomy, the London-listed software firm that was sold to Hewlett-Packard in 2011 for $11bn in a deal that led to a six-year civil fraud case in the UK. Lynch, who with his wife is also a big shareholde­r in Darktrace, is fighting extraditio­n to the US to answer criminal fraud charges; he denies the accusation­s.

But the shadow of Autonomy only emphasises the need for a detailed response to Quintessen­tial Capital by Darktrace. The hedge fund may be talking nonsense but the onus falls on the company to demonstrat­e as much – presumably with the assistance of its auditors, Grant Thornton. Chief executive Poppy Gustafsson should consider the upside of a successful and transparen­t defence. She might silence the

persistent City whispering around the cyber firm’s very high sales and marketing expenditur­e, which was one focus of the hedge fund’s report.

One hopes senior figures on Darktrace’s board – chair Gordon Hurst, ex-Capita; Sir Peter Bonfield, former chief executive of BT; David Willetts, former Conservati­ve education minister – take the grown-up approach. Short-sellers aren’t a minor irritant that can easily be swatted away or ignored – or not always. They have to be taken seriously.

Quintessen­tial Capital itself may have a low profile but others in the short-selling game were more prominent around corporate blow-ups such as former FTSE 100 firm NMC Health and, famously, German payments giant Wirecard. Shorters are also legitimate players in a well-functionin­g stock market: the place needs a few sceptics to counter the default setting of ra-ra bullishnes­s.

None of which, to repeat, is to suggest that Quintessen­tial Capital is on the right track at Darktrace. Its “deep investigat­ion” may be deeply flawed. The hedge fund may have misunderst­ood or have piled assumption upon assumption. Short-sellers also miss their intended target sometimes.

Yet the Quintessen­tial Capital report is out there for the world to read and Darktrace’s shares were already sliding. At 210p, they are down a fifth since new year, are below the 2021 float price of 250p and are miles away from the all-time high of almost £10. There is an imperative to try to change the narrative. As stockbroke­r Davy’s analysts argued, Darktrace “operates in the cybersecur­ity arena and trust is everything”.

The best way to respond to a report titled “The dark side of Darktrace” is to turn the lights on. Opt for full exposure and elaborate explanatio­n.

 ?? Photograph: Rafael Henrique/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Darktrace’s response to an outfit called Quintessen­tial Capital Management fell into the boilerplat­e category.
Photograph: Rafael Henrique/Sopa Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Darktrace’s response to an outfit called Quintessen­tial Capital Management fell into the boilerplat­e category.

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