Andreessen Horowitz’s AI Crusader Emerges as a Confidant of the FoundersRead more

Art by Mike Sullivan
March 4, 2021 6:00 AM PST

Not much was going right early last year at SoftBank-backed construction startup Katerra. Money was drying up, and board meetings sometimes erupted into shouting matches. Anxious about missing financial forecasts while the company was trying to raise more money from investors, at least one Katerra employee told others in its relatively small but profitable apartment renovations division to find a way to boost revenue.

Heeding the suggestion, the division prepared exaggerated updates on how much renovations work had been completed so far on certain building projects. Katerra employees then used the misleading project updates to front-load revenue by millions of dollars in financial reports submitted to investors, the company found in an investigation last summer, said four people familiar with the matter, including two with direct knowledge of the probe. Last August, a law firm hired by Katerra sent a letter to then-CEO Michael Marks saying that an investigation into the matter found that the company’s financial statements likely had been “intentionally misstated” during Marks’ tenure, according to a copy of the letter viewed by The Information.

A month before launching the accounting probe, Katerra’s board fired Marks on the grounds that under his watch Katerra had perennially missed financial goals and burned through the more than $2 billion the company had raised. There is no indication that Marks knew of the misleading financial reports. But according to interviews with 30 former employees and investors, Marks presided over a company that repeatedly stumbled on construction projects and failed to address warning signs that the business was failing.

Access on the go
View stories on our mobile app and tune into our weekly podcast.
Join live video Q&A’s
Deep-dive into topics like startups and autonomous vehicles with our top reporters and other executives.
Enjoy a clutter-free experience
Read without any banner ads.
Coatue co-founder Thomas Laffont. Photo by Juan Pinnel
Exclusive startups venture capital
‘Pressures Remain’: Coatue Prepares Tech Founders for the Road Ahead
Earlier this month, I had the opportunity to attend a founder and investor conference hosted by Coatue, called East Meets West.
Orlando Bravo, founder and managing partner of Thoma Bravo. Photo by Getty.
Exclusive enterprise Finance
Inside Thoma Bravo’s Software Playbook
Until two weeks ago, Thoma Bravo had sold just one company worth more than $10 billion in the past three years, when it offloaded Ellie Mae to Intercontinental Exchange for $11 billion in 2020.
Art by Mike Sullivan.
Exclusive enterprise ai
OpenAI Plans ChatGPT ‘Personal Assistant for Work,’ Setting Up Microsoft Rivalry
In the span of half a year, ChatGPT has become one of the world’s best-known internet brands. Now its creator, OpenAI, has bigger plans for the chatbot: CEO Sam Altman privately told some developers OpenAI wants to turn it into a “supersmart personal assistant for work.” With built-in knowledge about an individual and their workplace, such an assistant could carry out tasks such as drafting emails or documents in that person’s style and with up-to-date information about their business.
Microsoft CEO, Satya Nadella, arriving at federal court in San Francisco on June 28. Photo by Getty.
Exclusive microsoft cloud
Microsoft’s Cloud Server Business in 2022 Was Less Than Half of AWS, New Document Reveals
For years Microsoft has kept a lid on details about the true size of its Azure cloud server rental business, making it impossible for investors to know how Microsoft’s cloud operations unit stacked up against industry leader Amazon Web Services.
Jason Auerbach. Photo via Silicon Valley Bank, Getty and Foursquare.
markets enterprise
The Software Banker With Private Equity on Speed Dial
When Josh Rogers, CEO of data integrity firm Precisely, was looking for a buyer in 2021, he tapped Jason Auerbach, then a top investment banker at UBS.
Several mining companies are seeking to produce lithium from the Salton Sea in California. Photo: Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP
The Electric electric vehicles
The Electric: Inside the White House Plan to Speed Battery Metals Mining
U.S. auto and battery makers are racing to build battery assembly plants for the transition to electric vehicles.
Cookies on The Information
We use cookies for a number of reasons, such as keeping The Information reliable and secure, personalizing content and ads, providing social media features and to analyze how our sites are used.