Bodri v. GoPro, Inc.

252 F. Supp. 3d 912, 2017 WL 1732022, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66188
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedMay 1, 2017
DocketCase No. 16-cv-00232-JST
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 252 F. Supp. 3d 912 (Bodri v. GoPro, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bodri v. GoPro, Inc., 252 F. Supp. 3d 912, 2017 WL 1732022, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66188 (N.D. Cal. 2017).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS

Re: ECF No. 94

JON S. TIGAR, United States District Judge

Lead Plaintiff Camia Investment LLC (“Plaintiff’) brings this putative class action complaint alleging violations of the federal securities laws by defendants Go-Pro, Inc. (“GoPro,” or “the Company”), its Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”), Nicholas Woodman, its former Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”), Jack Lazar, and the President and Director of its Board, Anthony Bates (collectively, “Defendants”). Plaintiff alleges in the Amended Consolidated Complaint (“the Complaint”) that Defendants made material misrepresentations about the strength of GoPro’s HER04 Session (“Session”) camera sales, and that when the truth was revealed about those sales, GoPro’s stock fell substantially in value. Defendants move to dismiss the Complaint for failure to state a claim pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 9(b) and 12(b)(6), as well as the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (“PSLRA”). ECF No. 94. Because the Complaint fails adequately to plead either a false or misleading statement or scienter the Court will grant the motion to dismiss with leave to amend.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Allegations of the Complaint

GoPro, founded in 2004, is a consumer electronics company that “develops mountable and wearable cameras, which it calls ‘capture devices,’ and related accessories designed to enable consumers to capture content while engaged in a wide range of activities.” ECF No. 90 ¶ 3. The Company’s “core products are [its] HERO line of capture devices[,]” accounting for “nearly [918]*918all of the Company’s revenue.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).

On July 12, 2015, GoPro introduced the Hero4 Session camera. Id. ¶44. GoPro “touted the Hero4 Session as ‘the smallest, lightest, most convenient GoPro possible,’ and boasted that “the Hero4 Session’s one-button design ‘drastically improves the speed and convenience of capturing life moments as they happen.’” Id. The Session was “GoPro’s only new camera and key new product offering for FY15.” Id. ¶ 4. Plaintiff alleges that by the Session’s introduction date, “Defendants [already] knew that the launch would not meet their expectations” because “GoPro had revised downward its internal forecast for Hero4 Session sales ... before the camera became publicly available due to weak retailer demand.” Id. Plaintiff contends that Defendants built and shipped cameras to meet the earlier, higher sales forecast anyway. Id.

Plaintiff alleges the misrepresentations began when “GoPro announced its 2Q151 financial results on July 21, 2015.” Id. During an investor conference call held that day, Defendants “made false and misleading statements about the contribution that [Session’s] sales made to the quarter’s results and denied risks associated with the failure of [Session] to sell-through2 to consumers.” Id. Plaintiff takes issue with the following statements made during the conference call: (1) CEO Woodman stated “the momentum that [GoPro] [is] seeing with Session out of the gates ... is a testament to the strength of GoPro’s brand[,]” “we don’t have to fortunately wait for a fourth quarter holiday season to launch a product and get a strong positive response from the marketplace,” and “it seems that we are capable of launching a product at any time of year. We’re happy with what we are seeing.” Id. ¶ 50; ECF No. 96-6 at 9; (2) CFO Lazar stated Go-Pro “did not experience any noticeable pricing pressure during th[e] quarter!,]” Id. ¶ 49; ECF No. 96-6 at 8; and (3) CFO Lazar stated “[c]hannel inventory levels both in the US and abroad look healthy[,]” Id.; ECF No. 96-6 at 8. Analysts reacted positively to Defendants’ statements regarding the HERO Session. Id. ¶ 52. J.P. Morgan, for example, noted, “3Q15 guidance beat, driven by management’s confidence in the 50% smaller Hero Session and new initiatives....” ECF No. 90 ¶52. “Analysts celebrated the key role” Session played “in GoPro’s 2Q15 results and 3Q15 expectations.” ECF No. 96-6 at 4; ECF No. 90 ¶ 51-52.

Plaintiff argues each of these statements was materially misleading because, at the time they were made, “GoPro had already reduced its internal sales forecast for ... Session due to weak retail demand for the camera” and “Defendants had already begun cancelling and reducing purchase orders placed with suppliers of ... Session’s parts.” ECF No. 96-6 at 4; ECF No. 90 ¶ 54, Plaintiff contends that investors — unaware of what was really going on inside the company — relied on these representations and cause the stock to trade at inflated values. Ld. Plaintiff also contends that “the Company’s purported risk disclosures, which remained fixed even as the sales risks changed for the worse, described mere possibilities while failing to acknowledge that they had already begun to tran[919]*919spire, [and] were therefore themselves false, misleading, and inadequate.”-Id.

As Session’s sales continued to lag, Plaintiff alleges Defendants continued to mislead investors during a series of investor presentations and media interviews in September 2015. Plaintiff takes issue with the following statements: (1) during one investor conference on September 9, 2015, CFO Lazar stated GoPro does not discount its prices, id. at 5; ECF No. 90 ¶ 55, (2) during another investor conference, CFO Lazar asserted GoPro was “in the right price points,” id. at 5; ECF No. 90 ¶ 56; and (3) during an interview with CNBC’s “Fast Money Halftime Report”'on September 22, 2015, CEO Woodman said Session’s sales were “going really well” and “sales [were] improving as we move towards the holiday season.” ECF No. 90 ¶57. During the September 22 'call with CNBC, the interviewer also asked Defendant Woodman about a disclosure by Am-barella, GoPro’s sole supplier of chips for its Session camera, on September 1, -2015, that “its wearable camera business segment would be down both sequentially and year-over-year.” ECF No.- 90 ¶ 58., Woodman rejected the interviewer’s understanding that “GoPro must not be ordering as many chips from Ambarella,” stating, “That’s not accurate.” Id.

Plaintiff alleges each of these statements was materially misleading because,' on September 28, 2015, GoPro reduced Session’s retail price from $399 to $299 in response to Session’s “sluggish sales.” ECF No. 90 ¶ 9.

On October 28, 2015, after GoPro announced its 3Q15 financial results “missed the Company’s previously issued guidance and analyst consensus by wide margins” and provided a “disappointing financial guidance for 4Q15,” Defendants acknowledged in an investor conference call that “[t]he financial results reflected weak initial sell-through of the Hero4 Session,” that Defendants “were aware of poor initial sell-through of the Hero4 Session in late July 2015,” that “Hero4‘'Session channel inventory exceeded the Company’s target levels,” and finally that the “Hero4 Session’s initial price of $399 was too high.” ECF No. 90 ¶ 66. Nevertheless, during the same investor conference call, CEO Woodman stated that, after Session’s price reduction, “Session is now selling in line with what we would typically expect for a product at this price point[,]” id ¶ 11, and CFO Lazar stated “Q3 ASPs were relatively flat and overall we did not experience any noticeable pricing pressure during the quarter[,]” id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 F. Supp. 3d 912, 2017 WL 1732022, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 66188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bodri-v-gopro-inc-cand-2017.