Mattress Unicorn Casper Accused of Misleading Investors With IPO

Mattress Unicorn Casper Accused of Misleading Investors With IPO

Casper Sleep Inc. duped investors into pouring $100 million into its IPO, knowing its financial prospects were far dimmer than it promised, according to a lawsuit seeking class action status.

It’s the latest in a series of blows to the online mattress retailer, which went public at $12 a share in February. The stock closed at $13.50 on its first day out, for a market capitalization of less than half the $1.1 billion Casper was d at in a private funding round last year. The bed-in-a-box startup ended Friday with a share price of $8.50 and a market of $337.2 million.

In registering for the initial public offering, Casper failed to disclose that its profit margins were narrowing and that it was selling “a glut of old and outdated mattress inventory” at clearance prices, according to the lawsuit, which was filed last week in federal court in New York and demands unspecified damages.

Then, in April, Casper said it was working to “improve its cash position and business model,” the suit continues, “notwithstanding the fact that the company had raised more than $100 million in gross offering proceeds from the IPO” less than three months earlier.

“The claims in this lawsuit are without merit, and we will defend against them,” a Casper spokesperson said.

Read More: Casper Has a Plan to Avoid Fate of Other Money-Burning Unicorns

Casper’s IPO followed the stock market debuts of much bigger “unicorns” -- private startups d at more than $1 billion -- such as Uber Technologies Inc. and Peloton Interactive Inc., whose shares have taken investors on their own roller-coaster rides but which are still d at billions of dollars.

To read the lawsuit, that’s not in the cards for Casper.

In the complaint, Robert Lematta, the individual investor seeking to represent others who bought the stock, notes that the New York retailer has retrenched its global operations and announced a 21% reduction in its workforce. He cites its “ballooning losses and deteriorating cash position” as responsible for these “drastic measures” and calls the departure of Chief Financial Officer Gregory Macfarlane “an extraordinary move so soon after the IPO.”

Casper’s troubles could color investors’ view of other brands that cut out the middleman and entice consumers with the savings. The category’s heavy reliance on social media advertising lowered barriers to entry, spurring the arrival of competitors and making it costlier to get new customers. A raft of online brands started opening stores and adding ancillary products.

Founded in 2014, Casper popularized the practice of buying a mattress online that arrived bundled in a box. It won acclaim through marketing campaigns featuring YouTube stars and other celebrities, expanding rapidly. Casper attracted a series of famous investors, including the rapper Nas and the actor Ashton Kutcher. Kylie Jenner posted about the brand on Instagram in 2015.

As the IPO approached, the company “claimed to have significantly improved its profit margins, placing it on a path to profitability,” according to the suit. Still, it slashed its offering price, to a range of $12 to $13 a share from $17 to $19, just before it listed.

Read More: Casper Ends Public Debut Worth Less Than Half Private Valuation

During its expansion, Casper incurred net losses of $73.4 million in 2017 and $92.1 million in 2018, according to the suit, and in its first quarter as a public company posted a net loss of $34.5 million on net revenue of $113 million. It spent $423 million on marketing from 2016 to September, Casper said in a January securities filing.

In the run-up to the stock offering, the retailer reassured investors that its fortunes would be driven by revenue growth and profit margin improvements, according to the suit. Shortly after the IPO, Lematta said in the suit, it announced a downward trend in its gross margin and “substantially impaired operations as a result of an increasingly dire cash flow situation.”

The case is Lematta v. Casper Sleep Inc., 20-cv-02744, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York (Brooklyn).

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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