Starboard Value has accumulated a position in Autodesk worth several hundred million dollars and opened conversations with the board over governance failures that delayed disclosure of an internal accounting investigation by more than eight months. The firm, led by Jeff Smith, is weighing legal action if the board does not provide satisfactory explanations for why shareholders learned of the probe only after pressure from filing deadlines forced the company's hand in late 2024.
Autodesk announced in March 2024 that it had initiated an internal review of certain accounting practices related to free cash flow reporting. The company did not disclose when the review began. Regulatory filings suggest the investigation was underway by mid-2023, yet investors heard nothing until Autodesk faced a delayed 10-K filing in early December. The stock traded at $267 in June 2024. It closed Friday at $289, meaning allocators who might have repositioned on governance risk were denied that opportunity for the better part of a year. Starboard's stake, accumulated in recent months, reflects a bet that the market has not yet priced the full governance discount this silence merits.
The issue is not whether Autodesk will restate financials—early indications suggest adjustments will be immaterial. The issue is whether a board allowed management to sit on a material investigation while insiders executed pre-scheduled stock sales under 10b5-1 plans. Autodesk executives sold roughly $48 million in stock between July and November 2024, all under plans filed before the investigation's start. Starboard wants to know what the board knew, when it knew it, and why disclosure controls permitted eight months of silence. The firm has indicated that if satisfactory answers are not forthcoming, it may file suit in Delaware Chancery Court alleging breach of fiduciary duty, with a focus on the board's Audit Committee.
Starboard has a record of extracting board seats and operational overhauls without protracted proxy fights. The firm took a stake in Salesforce in 2022, negotiated commitments to margin expansion and capital allocation discipline, and exited with returns north of 40% within eighteen months. At Autodesk, the vector is governance first, but the operational subtext is clear: Autodesk trades at 9.2x forward EBITDA, a discount to peers like Adobe at 11.1x and Cadence at 12.3x, despite owning the dominant position in architecture and engineering CAD software. If Starboard can force board turnover and credibly signal that management accountability has been restored, the multiple re-rates. If the board stonewalls, Smith has shown willingness to run a full slate.
Allocators should watch for three events. First, any announcement of a special committee or third-party governance review, likely by end of Q1 2025, would signal the board is taking Starboard seriously. Second, Autodesk's delayed 10-K is expected by late January; any additional disclosures about the investigation's timeline or findings will set the tone for Starboard's next move. Third, Starboard typically files a 13D within sixty days of crossing the 5% threshold, and that filing will clarify stake size and whether the firm is seeking board representation or a sale process.
The fundamental bet is simple: Autodesk's enterprise value is $82 billion, and the company generates $1.8 billion in annual free cash flow with 94% gross margins. That business does not deserve a governance discount. Starboard believes the market will pay for clarity, and the board now has roughly ninety days to provide it.
The takeaway
Starboard is betting **$82 billion** Autodesk deserves no governance discount; board has ninety days to restore credibility or face proxy fight.
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