Data center provider Equinix ‘selling an AI pipe dream,’ Hindenburg Research says in short report

Technology

In this article

Charles J. Meyers, president and CEO of Equinix, poses in his office in Redwood City, Calif., Dec. 18, 2018.
Nhat V. Meyer | Bay Digital First Media | The Mercury News via Getty Images

Hindenburg Research on Wednesday took aim at Equinix, the $80 billion data center provider, and accused the company’s management of selling shareholders an “AI pipe dream” while manipulating key metrics to boost the appearance of profitability.

Hindenburg said it had taken a short position against Equinix, meaning it was betting that shares of the real estate investment trust, or REIT, would fall.

Equinix shares plunged as much as 7% in pre-market trading on the report. The company’s customers include the cloud divisions of Amazon, Google and Microsoft, according to Equinix’s website.

The short seller said that Equinix reported maintenance expenses — a major cost center for REITs — as spending on growth, making it appear that “that the company’s cost to maintain its revenue base is lower than it actually is.”

Former Equinix employees and executives allegedly told Hindenburg that the pressure to misclassify capex as growth rather than maintenance came “from top management.”

Hindenburg said that the “questionable” accounting allowed Equinix to boost its adjusted funds from operations, a metric the company also used to determine executive stock grants.

Equinix was founded in 1998 and became a REIT in 2015. It had more than 13,000 employees as of December 2023, according to a regulatory filing.

In its more recent earnings reports, the company has touted its “crucial” role “in an AI-driven world.”

Hindenburg has taken short positions against other big names, including Nikola, Icahn Enterprises and Gautam Adani’s conglomerate.

Equinix did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Articles You May Like

Hyundai EV drivers can score a free NACS adapter for Tesla Superchargers: Here’s how
Tesla wants to kill EV incentives in US because of Musk, but it is lobbying for them elsewhere
Church ‘needs to be changed’, Archbishop of York to say in Christmas Day sermon after sex scandals
Iowa QB Sullivan (ankle) to return for bowl game
AI and crypto drove gains in this year’s top 5 tech stocks