SCO Group Fourth Quarter and Year-End Fiscal 2005 Webcast and Conference Call 22 Dec 2005 05:00 PM EST
Announcer: Good day everyone, and welcome to The SCO Group's fourth quarter 2005 conference call. Today's call is being recorded. At this time for opening remarks and introductions, I will turn the call over to Mr Blake Stowell, public relations director.
Go ahead, Sir.
Blake Stowell: Thanks and good day everyone, and welcome to The SCO Group's fiscal fourth quarter and fiscal 2005 year end financial results conference call. At this time everyone is in listen-only mode. Later in the call we will have a question and answer session. During that question and answer session, the company will only be taking questions on the company's core Unix business. Today's call is being recorded.
Participating on the call today are Darl McBride, president and chief executive officer, and Burt Young, chief financial officer. Each of you should have a copy of the press release issued this afternoon containing our results, which we will be discussing further in this call. The information provided during this call will contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the private securities litigation reform act of 1995. These forward looking statements are made only as of the date of this conference call and we undertake no obligation to update or revise the forward looking information, whether as a result of new information, future developments, or otherwise. Our performance is subject to significant risks and uncertainties, known and unknown, that could cause our actual results to differ materially from those that may be anticipated by the forward looking statements. These risks and uncertainties may cause our actual results, level of activity, performance or achievement to be materially different from any projections or future results implied by these forward looking statements. Accordingly, you should not place undue reliance on these forward looking statements. For a full discussion of these and other risks and uncertainties, please see our annual report on form 10K for the fiscal year ended October 31, 2004 [sic] and other reports we have filed with the SEC all available at www.sco.com.
I will now turn the call over to Darl McBride, president and chief executive officer of The SCO Group Inc.
Darl McBride: Thanks Blake, and thanks everyone for joining us on today's call. The fourth quarter was a productive quarter for SCO with positive developments in many areas of our business. The company's Unix division generated cash during Q4, and the company closed sales of SCO OpenServer and UnixWare to many of our marquee customers. In September, the company successfully introduced SCO's network digital services technology, called Me Inc. and many customers have already begun using the pre-release version of this new technology for smart, hand-held devices.
[2:40]
Overall for 2005 our core Unix business operated profitably and generated cash and we recently received a $10,000,000 private equity investment that will give us additional capital to assure that the company can continue to achieve our business goals. Lastly, we recently completed our final $2,000,000 quarterly payment in attorney fees to our lawyers in protecting the company's intellectual property. We'll go into more detail on each of these items shortly but first I want to turn the call over to Burt Young, our CFO for an overview of the company's financial results. Burt...
[3:16]
Burt Young: Thanks Darl. The company reported revenues of $8,500,000 for the fourth quarter, fiscal year 2005 as compared to revenue of $10,100,000 for the comparable quarter the prior year. The decrease in revenue is primarily attributable to increased competitive pressure on the company's Unix products and services. The net loss applicable to common stockholders for the fourth quarter was $3,400,000 or $.19 per share compared to a net loss attributable to common shareholders of $6,500,000 or $.37 per common share reported the comparable quarter the prior year. Included in the net loss attributable to common stockholders for the fourth quarter fiscal year 2004 were restructuring charges and dispositions of long-lived assets totaling $2,700,000. Revenue for the fiscal year 2005 was $36,000,000 compared to revenue of $42,800,000 for fiscal year 2004. The net loss attributable to common stockholders for fiscal year 2005 was $10,700,000 or $.60 per diluted common share, compared to a net loss of $16,200,000 or $1.07 per diluted common share for the 2004 fiscal year.
Turning to the Unix business, revenue generated from our Unix business was $35,800,000 for fiscal year 2005 as compared to revenues of $42,000,000 for fiscal year 2004. Even though revenue was down year over year, we accomplished one of our goals for fiscal year 2005 which was to generate profitability and positive cash flows from the Unix business. Revenue for the Unix business for the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2005 was $8,500,000 as compared to $10,000,000 for the comparable quarter the prior year. For the fourth quarter of 2005, the cost of revenue for the Unix business was $1,400,000 resulting in gross margins of $7,100,000 or 84%. Cost and expenses for the Unix business were $7,200,000 which were in line with our expectations. We expect costs and expenses excluding stock compensation for the Unix business to decrease slightly for the first quarter of 2006.
To reiterate, as a management team we are pleased that our Unix business was profitable and generated positive cash flow in 2005 given the extremely competitive landscape we operate in. We plan for the Unix business to continue to create positive cash flows going into fiscal year 2006.
[6:20]
Turning to the SCOSource line of business, our revenue from SCOSource licensing was $34,000. As we have stated in prior quarters, we've cautioned that predicting this revenue stream will be difficult to predict. However, we believe that as we progress in the courtroom, and in the courtroom we are validating our intellectual property claims, we may begin to see additional SCOSource revenues over time. As in previous quarters, we are continuing to classify legal and professional fees and other costs and expenses that relate directly to the enforcement of our intellectual property rights as costs of revenue. For the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2005 these costs were $3,400,000 which was in line with our expectations and includes the fifth of six total payments of $2,000,000 to Boies, Shiller, and Flexner. The remaining $1,400,000 of costs were escrow related expenses and internal costs associated with the litigation. We expect that in Q1 of 2006 these escrow related expenses will be similar to or slightly higher than those incurred during Q4. In addition, in December we made our final $2,000,000 payment to Boise, Shiller, and Flexner and beginning in Q2 2006 we expect that our SCOSource costs of revenue will decrease significantly from prior quarters as we will no longer make this quarterly payment to the attorneys. This an important point that I'd like to emphasize and make clear regarding these legal and professional fees. During the past year, the company has incurred the following legal expenses on a quarter by quarter basis. In Q1 for this cost of revenue in the SCOSource business, $3,500,000. Q2 $2,900,000. Q3 $3,100,000. Q4 $3,400,000. Total of $12,900,000 during the year on these legal expenses. The company's losses in total for the year were $10,700,000. Now, included in each of these quarterly payments were a $2,000,000 payment for our legal expenses for our legal teams. Following the end of the company's Q1 2006 at the end of January, the company will have fulfilled its financial obligations to its legal teams in payments for the defense of the company's intellectual property. In other words, the only costs the company will incur from a legal standpoint will be from the company's escrow account for the payment of expert witness fees and other minor internal expenses.
Now, before turning to our cash balances, I'd like to spend a moment on a new accounting rule that will impact the company beginning in Q1 2006. As most of you know, companies including SCO will now be required to expense the fair value of stock options in accordance with SFAS No. 123R. The adoption of this accounting rule will have a material impact on our quarterly income statement for the next quarter as we will record compensation expense for options granted in the company.
[9:55]
So, to conclude our cash and cash equivalents and available-for-sale securities were approximately $10,400,000 at October 31, 2005. In addition, approximately $2,900,000 remains in an escrow account and is classified as a component of restricted cash as of October 31, 2005 leaving the company with $13,100,000 in cash. If you deduct the final $2,000,000 payment to made to Boies, and the escrow cash of $2,900,000, the business is left with a cash balance of $8,400,000 which is down slightly from a balance of $8,600,000 we recorded in Q3. And of course at the end of November the company announced that a group of existing investors and a company board member participated in a $10,000,000 private equity investment in the company. When you combine this invested cash with the company's ending cash balance, we believe that the company has adequate funding to pursue its existing business strategies including the resolution of the company's existing legal proceedings. With that, I'll turn things back to you, Darl.
[11:13]
Darl McBride: OK, Burt, thanks for that detailed description of where we are with our financials. Now, I'd like to shift gears and move over to the business side of things, and spend the remainder of the call addressing the business performance and future opportunities that we have there.
[11:29]
During Q4 the company's Unix business generated positive cash flow despite a competitive business environment. We gained sales with a number of marquee customers including Siemens, McDonald's, Walgreen's, CSK Auto, Kroger, Thompson Financial, WebMD, Taiwan Land Bank, Converse, Marconi, The UK Ministry of Defense, Croatian Telecom, and many large European retailers. Indonesia's tax agency, one of the largest electrical utilities in Japan, and we also closed significant deals in China, and India, including many large Indian banking institutions. We also had deals with the Indian government's tax agency and the China Post. So, the teams are very active out there in the field and with the new products that we have.
Let's talk a minute about OpenServer 6. We continue to see an increase in sales of SCO OpenServer 6 and while the majority of our OpenServer sales still come from OpenServer 5.0.7 and previous versions it should be noted that the sales product cycle for application server operating systems is a relatively long-cycle and we expect that OpenServer 6 sales will continue increasing quarter over quarter going into our 2006 fiscal year.
[12:48]
During the fourth quarter we announced our partnership with MySQL and we anticipate that our partnership will soon begin adding value to SCO sales efforts with the native version of MySQL 5.0 Network Edition for SCO OpenServer 6 being made available in the second quarter of 2006. Some customers are already experiencing the benefits of using MySQL and SCO Unix together across their environments.
[13:16]
Let's shift now and talk about Me Inc. During the quarter the company introduced a new set of digital services branded under the name Me Inc., at the computer industry's annual demo fall conference. Through Me Inc. digital services, the company successfully attracted companies and organizations that have participated in trial tests of the technology. Me Inc. helps organizations and users connect and communicate with small groups or extremely large audiences through an innovative mobile environment.
I'd like to give you a few examples of how we've done this.
[13:50]
Following in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in September, Utah State University used Me Inc. Shout service to alert thousands of their football fans and season ticket holders to a game cancellation against Louisiana-based Nichols State University. In November, the NBA's Utah Jazz basketball team used Me Inc. to notify their registered season ticket holders and fans to the return of one of their star players, Andre Karolynko was returning to the lineup and sent out a 30 second Me Inc. Shout message to nearly 40,000 fans before the media could report it on the news broadcast. In December BYU's head football coach used the Me Inc. service to announce the team's invitation to the Las Vegas Bowl to thousands of season ticket holders and school supporters. The power of Me Inc. in communicating with these vast numbers of people comes from SCO's Me Inc. digital services on the smart hand-held device using thin-client technology combined with SCO's new edge processor technology on the back end. SCO's edge-processing capabilities allow smart hand-held user to gain a richer mobile experience because of all the information intensive heavy lifting that is being done using the behind-the-scenes edge processor.
While all of these examples show the power of Me Inc. in communicating to thousands of people through the new means of social networking there is much more to SCO's new set of digital services than we described here. SCO is creating a digital services platform for allowing customers to work in completely new ways. As an example, using our digital services platforms, SCO easily and quickly created a new order entry system for Musco foods Corporation. This week we distributed a premiere Italian foods to the New York area is testing a new use of their sales team and is planning to roll it out across their entire sales organization in the near future. SCO's digital services will help Musco to service more customers with fewer errors and less time than was previously possible. SCO is initially rolling out these digital services on the Palm Treo with plans to make them available on the RIM Blackberry devices as well as smart hand-held devices that run the Microsoft Windows mobile OS as well as the Symbian OS. The company plans to announce a pre-release trial of these services beginning in early January at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Obviously with the large and growing market for smart hand-held devices this is an area of growth for our company that we're very excited about. We look forward to sharing more with you in the near future about SCO's innovative digital services for smart hand-held devices.
[16:34]
OK, now let's move over to the litigation front. We'd like to briefly update you on a couple of the key developments with regard to where we are in protecting our rights inside of the court system. Over the past few months we've made what we believe is good progress in discovery. The Court has denied a few of our requests for discovery that we believe are material but what we have received so far has established a sound basis for claims but there is still more work to be done and more discovery to be finished over the coming next few months. We believe that we will have a compelling case to be presented at trial in early 2007. On October 28th, working with our outside technical consultants, we identified for IBM and the Courts 217 separate and distinct disclosures of material by IBM which we claim violated the Unix license agreement and enhanced Linux for use in the enterprise. Today our team will be filing a final report that expands on the October filing. Discovery will be closing early next year and then both sides will be finishing off expert reports, motions, and getting ready for trial.
[17:46]
With regard to the Novell litigation, the court has issued its scheduling order for the case and the trial date that has been set is June 27, 2007. We look forward to gaining discovery and further preparing that case for trial as well.
To summarize the status of our legal cases, we remain confident of our claims, and our legal team, and look forward to a successful conclusion to the litigation so we can turn our full attention to our business initiatives.
So, with that I'll now turn the call over to the operator to open up the phone lines for questions.
[18:23]
Announcer: Thank you gentlemen. The question and answer session will be conducted electronically. If you'd like to ask a question, please signal us by pressing *1 on your TouchTone telephone. Once again, that's *1 if you have a question. If you are joining us using a speaker phone, please make sure that you pick up your handset to allow your signal to reach us. Also, please make sure that your view function is turned off. Once again, that's *1 if you have a question. We'll pause for just a moment to give everyone a chance to respond.
Once again, that's *1 if you have a question.
[19:02]
We'll take our first question from Steven Vaughn Nichols with Ziff-Davis.
SJVN: Hello Darl, Blake.
Darl McBride: Hey Steve
SJVN: My question concerns what you will be turning in to the courts today. Could you give me any kind of color or characterization if this is just going to be an expansion on the 217 areas or is this going to be digging into new ground?
Darl McBride: Well, it will be out there and when it is fully filed they'll have some official comment that will surround that. I think that as we see this going in its basically taking the 217 that were there before and it will be expanded beyond that and it's going to be deeper and it will be broader but it's basically homing in and polishing the submission that was done in October, so it will be joined in later today and look forward to it, again that information will be put in front of the courts as well as being sent to IBM and I don't know what will be said about that publicly. Obviously the submission itself won't be public but whether anything else will be flavored around that I don't know we'll just have to wait and see how the attorneys deal with that.
SJVN: Thank you
Darl McBride: Thank you Steven
Announcer: And once again everyone, that's *1 if you have a question.
And once again everyone, please press *1 if you have a question.
[20:50]
And our next question is Tim Rushing, a private investor.
Tim Rushing: Hi, my question is for Burt Young. I'm looking at the S1 that was filed today, the common stock warrant...
Burt Young: Yep
Tim Rushing: In Section 6, Representations and Warrants of the Company, it says that the Representations and Warrants are as follows except as attached Exhibit B but there was no Exhibit B with the filing. I was wondering is that available somewhere or if you can give me some sense of what's in Exhibit B?
Burt Young: Well, I haven't got that right in front of me, but if you could send me an email I'll follow up with that, we must have just had a typo there.
Tim Rushing: OK, I can certainly do that. One other question too, I was wondering what the status of the stock rescission offer is and what kind of effect that is going to have on the company?
Burt Young: Yeah, the stock rescission was made effective by the SEC. We've now mailed to our affected employees the offer. They have thirty days to respond to that so it will be the middle, 20th of January, something like that, that will conclude. We expect that the impact will not be significant from a cash point-of-view. We probably will put in our 10K filing at the end of January, we'll put include in that filing the results of the offer, so once that 10K is filed that'll be the place to look because we'll give it whatever the latest information is before we make that filing.
Tim Rushing: OK, thank you very much.
Burt Young: OK, and if you email me I'll get you that, I'll clarify what you see in the S1.
Tim Rushing: Thanks.
[22:38]
It looks like our next question will come from from Al Petrofsky, a private investor.
Al Petrofsky: Hello
Darl McBride: How you doing, Al?
Al Petrofsky: Good thanks. I had a question for Burt Young. I was just wondering about that $5,700,000 in restricted cash. Could you talk about what's in that? I mean I understand that half of it is that legal escrow account, but what's the other half?
Burt Young: OK Al, you'll recall that every quarter we collect royalties for Novell from the Novell Purchase Agreement. We collect for them, we get a a little small percentage for doing that and then pass it on to them for the next quarter. So, that's what that is, mostly collecting royalties, SVRX royalties from Japan.
Al Petrofsky: Oh, OK.
Burt Young: So, you see that there's $5,600,000 there, $2,900,000 of it is our escrow, so the remaining amount is collections on behalf of Novell.
Al Petrofsky: OK. Thank you.
Burt Young: You bet.
Announcer: Once again everyone, please press *1 if you have a question or a comment today. Our next question will come from Steven Vaughn Nichols of Ziff-Davis.
SJVN: Actually, I hadn't expected to get back in again. OK...
Darl McBride: Welcome back.
SJVN: Just to clarify, it sounds to me that once the litigation costs are out not only would the Unix cash flow would make the cash flow positive in that area but the company itself, independent of the litigation, would actually except for the litigation costs would have been profitable this quarter. Is that correct?
Burt Young: Yes, this is Burt. It is correct and not only this quarter but throughout the year.
SJVN: OK
Burt Young: If there was no litigation here, the operating company would have shown an operating profit and generated positive cash flow.
SJVN: OK -- go ahead
Burt Young: No, that's just it.
Darl McBride: That's the key point you picked up there Steve...
Burt Young: Our strategy is that obviously the revenue is being impacted by our IP being in Linux and the competition that is out there, but we want to run a good business, trying to run a good business, grow our revenues, put good products out there until the claims are finalized in the courtroom. So, we think we've got a good little core piece of business here.
SJVN: Clearly so. That being the case, with the expectation...do you have any information that you can share with the audience on the future of the Linux business, rather the Unix business, in regards to the MySQL partnership? Do you have any expectation that you can share at this time about how this will actually affect the Unix business? Or, is that too forward looking?
Darl McBride: I'll take a shot at that, Steven. Obviously, when you're in an operating system business, the surrounding certifications that go with that, especially the database level, are crucial to the health of your OS business. Because we have suffered this competition from Linux and there's obviously a lot more people interested in doing Linux because of the free nature of it and a variety of other reasons, that has put a damper in some of the certification ability we've had -- by having MySQL in there and the popularity of MySQL, we believe that going forward we're going to have some solidifying and strengthening of our core business. Being able to dial that into a level of what percent uptick or being able to give you some guidance as to what that means from a quantitative standpoint is a bit premature; but there's not doubt that from a gut feel that this is a good move for us, and quite frankly a good move for MySQL and at the end of the day the reason it's good for both of us is that it's good for customers.
[26:56]
Announcer: Our next question is from private investor Cal Thompson
Cal Thompson: Hi guys. Can you talk a little bit about -- I guess it's probably in your OpenServer platform -- your various messaging products and the opportunity potentially that might come up from Microsoft elimination of support for certain versions of it older Windows 95 and such?
Darl McBride: Did you say "messaging products?"
Cal Thompson: Yes
Darl McBride: You're talking about mail servers, specifically?
Cal Thompson: Yes, exactly
Darl McBride: OK. I think that as we look at forward prospects, I think that when we talk about mail server opportunities it's probably historically been tied to our base and to the extent that they needed a mail server -- we have some things there, we've been developing them there, and they're still there and available -- the things that may be going on with Microsoft could present some opportunities but I think, to be honest with you, our biggest going forward opportunities will be around Me Inc. at how we're doing a new level, a new array -- if you will -- of messaging services, and when we talk about messaging down into smart hand-held devices we're not talking about the hand-held devices themselves, we're very focused on how the back end interacts with these mobile devices. So, I think that most of the energy that you're going to see coming from us as it relates to messaging, in the messaging space, is probably going to come more from the Me Inc. space than the direct mail server environment.
Cal Thompson: Great. Thanks.
Darl McBride: Yep.
[28:44]
Announcer: Gentlemen, there are no more questions in the queue. I'll turn things back over to you for any further closing comments you may have today.
Darl McBride. Appreciate you joining us here today. In summary, during Q4 we remained solidly focused on executing our business strategies around our Unix business and introducing of new and innovative technology with the introduction of Me Inc. mobile digital services and while our legal teams continue their efforts to protect our intellectual property through the court system, as a company we remain solidly focused on succeeding through the marketplace. The company's Unix business is continuing to generate solid cash flow, legal fees are in line with expectations, and we have made solid progress with regard to our litigation efforts and are looking forward to having our day in court. So as we wrap this call up, I have two messages here. The first one is to Al Petrofsky -- who if I'm not mistaken graduated from the University of California...I believe that our alma mater's are about ready to kick off here in a few minutes, Al, and I'd like to make a small bet with you that depending on who wins this game I will challenge you to whoever loses it will have to sing the other person's alma mater's fight song on a public forum web site sometime in the next 90 days. If you can meet my challenge there, please send me a communique however it would be best for you. I go into this with greatly handicapped, we're a seven point underdog but I'm going to play you straight up.
The second message I would like to leave for all of you is that with the holiday season upon us we'd like to with you all a happy holiday season and we look forward to seeing you all in 2006.
Thanks for joining us today.
Announcer: Once again, everyone this will conclude today's program. Thanks for joining us today, you may now disconnect the line.
[30:43]
~ Merkey v The Internet et al Docs ~ Yahoeuvre ~ tuxrocks.com (SCO cases legal docs) ~ scofacts.org ~ eagle.petrofsky.org ~ Zen's Den ~ Yahoo SCOX Message Board ~ Lamlaw ~ Microsoft Watch ~ Groklaw ~ Korgwal - a Groklaw mirror ~ nosoftwarepatents.com ~ Flame Warriors ~ SCOXE Wars ~ Get your Merkey Number here! ~ Digital Law Online
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