Atmel to file delayed SEC forms in June
By Colleen Taylor -- 3/7/2007
Atmel Corp. has set the date for filing several forms to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) that have been delayed for months by an ongoing internal stock options investigation.
The San Jose-based company said today in a statement that it anticipates filing its annual report on form 10-K for the year ended Dec. 31, 2006 to the SEC by early June. The company added that it expects to file its quarterly reports on form 10-Q for the quarters ended June 30 and Sept. 30 2006, as well as March 31, 2007 "as soon as practicable" after filing its 2006 annual report on form 10-K.
The filings will likely be bad news for the company's bottom line. In October, Atmel said its pending investigation had indeed uncovered evidence of illegal backdating that will likely necessitate an as-yet-undisclosed amount of monetary charges in its upcoming restatements.
Atmel may have already begun bracing itself for hefty fines. In December, the company announced plans to implement a set of "strategic restructuring initiatives" that include selling two fabs and axing 1,300 jobs that is expected to eventually save the company as much as $95 million annually. Indeed, recent history shows that the backdating charge could be quite sizable. In January, Broadcom Corp.'s restatements to the SEC cost the company a whopping $2.2 billion in backdating-related charges.
For more news on the industry-wide stock option backdating investigation, see "Taking Stock: The Unfolding Stock Option Investigation."
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