Is Zipcar planning an IPO? Depends who you ask

A bit of a kerfluffle has sprung up around car-sharing service Zipcar, and whether Bloomberg misquoted chief executive Scott Griffith that he’s planning an initial public offering for 2010. You’d think it would be a relatively easy dispute to settle, but there’s no clear answer yet.

The Bloomberg article in question was published yesterday, and while it provides a wide-ranging view of the car-sharing service’s success (for those of who don’t know what Zipcar is, think of it as a car rental service for everyday life, with shorter rental times, online reservations and a more distributed fleet), the article’s very first sentence is about the IPO: “Zipcar Inc., the world’s largest car-sharing company, is gearing up to publicly sell shares in 2010 as it fends off rivals such as Hertz Global Holdings Inc.”

The Deal published a response today, quoting Zipcar spokeswoman Nancy Scott Lyon: “We did not announce an IPO and have no immediate plans to go public.” The article then takes a dig of its own: “Bloomberg’s attempt to wring a bit of news out of an apparently boring interview with Zipcar CEO Scott Griffith makes it clear the traditional news outlets are often just as guilty of churning out nonsense as the user-generated content, blogs and tweets they fear.”

That’s it, right? Someone was misquoted, happens all the time, whatever. Actually, no! There’s a new twist — Bloomberg told Clusterstock: “We have the Zipcar CEO ON TAPE saying that IPO is absolutely ‘the right outcome for us.’ When asked when, he said ‘2010.’”

So, uh, what the heck is going on? I’ve emailed both Zipcar and Bloomberg for comment and haven’t heard back yet, and it’s quite likely they’d just repeat what they’ve said already. I did ask Bloomberg if it plans to release the tape recording or transcript, so we can get some broader context for what Griffith said. For now, we only have isolated quotes, and Griffith’s only IPO-related quote in the Bloomberg article is that an IPO would be “a way for our shareholders to get an exit.” Not exactly revelatory.

Hopefully this will be straightened out soon. For now, it’s hard to tell what’s true — Bloomberg may have built an inaccurate story around a few noncommittal quotes, or Griffith may have said something he shouldn’t and is trying to backtrack.

[photo:flickr/wwfcanada]

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About the Author, Anthony Ha

Anthony is VentureBeat's assistant editor, as well as its reporter on enterprise technology, cloud computing, and tech policy. Before joining VentureBeat in 2008, Anthony worked at the Hollister Free Lance, where he won awards from the California Newspaper Publishers Association for breaking news coverage and writing. He attended Stanford University and now lives in San Francisco. Reach him at anthony@venturebeat.com. You can also follow Anthony on Twitter.

  • Gun Jumper
    Sounds like Zipcar is trying to un-jump the gun to avoid a delay in that hypothetical IPO. Surprising he wasn't better coached if they are in fact discussing an IPO.
  • My rabbit has been customarily tight-lipped regarding his IPO. There have been rumors hopping around, yes. Easter 2010 perhaps - at least, that is my hutch.
  • Hmm, sounds like he let the inner corporate IPO talks slip off his tongue. It's rather amusing how much stir is being created out of this. It's simple, all they have to do to correct this is issue a public statement. Sounds like they are unsure whether they want us to know about Zipcar going public just yet and they are dillydallying over what they should say.
  • Yes ... it's just silly to deny that a slip of the tongue happened if it was during a tape-recorded interview.
  • jd
    A profitable company with $150m in sales would obviously be contemplating an IPO and just as obviously issuing a vague denial.
  • Well, I think what's interesting about the story is the fact that the CEO may have let it slip in the first place.
  • ZipCar is such an awesome idea, I wonder how profitable they are. The WSJ has a comparison last week of the different car sharing services. Who knew they had some competition. ZipCars are all over Boston, I need to take the leap. My clunker just refuses to quit.

    Chris
    http://worstiphoneapps.blogspot.com