Edmonton Journal

Mitel goes private following $2B buyout by U.S. investor

Time is ripe for new opportunit­ies with booming cloud business, CEO declares

- VITO PILIECI

Mitel Network Corp. will be taking its business private as it prepares for decisions that are sure to cause short-term pain, but should, ultimately, lead to longterm gains, according to the firm’s chief executive officer.

Richard McBee, who has been CEO at Mitel since 2011, said Tuesday that with customers moving away from large purchases of telephone equipment, the time is ripe to pursue new business opportunit­ies. Mitel makes telephone and communicat­ions systems for small and medium-sized businesses.

Today’s customers want subscripti­on-based services they can pay for monthly. That allows businesses to avoid allocating a large amount of cash toward the purchase of a phone system that will quickly become obsolete and need costly maintenanc­e or upgrades.

“Our on-site business generates a lot of cash; it’s a main source of profitabil­ity for us, but it is a declining business,” he said. “With our cloud business, it’s a great business. It’s a recurring revenue business.”

As a result, the Kanata, Ont.based company has agreed to be acquired by a U.S. investment firm in a $2-billion cash deal designed to take it private. The deal, announced early Tuesday, will see Mitel shareholde­rs receive $11.15 per share, which puts the firm’s market capitaliza­tion at $1.35 billion. The U.S. investor, Searchligh­t Capital Partners, L.P., will also assume all of Mitel’s corporate debt.

Subscripti­on-based services allow a business to have the phone systems they need by connecting to them through the internet. Mitel phone systems provide whatever the subscriber needs from a centralize­d location. Subscriber­s pay a monthly fee, typically a fraction of what a permanent on-site installed system would cost to Mitel.

It’s a business model that is affecting change in numerous sectors, most notably for internet based websites and stores. Amazon Web Services has become a giant in the provision of centralize­d web hosting technology that powers millions of sites including those of banks, stores and sports teams. Similarly, Ottawa’s Shopify provides online retail systems, provided a customers pays their monthly subscripti­on fee.

The news of the purchase, expected to close in the second half of 2018, sent Mitel’s shares up by as much as 14 per cent in pre-market trading Tuesday. Its shares closed at $14.29, up 9.6 per cent in Toronto.

McBee said that with a publicly traded company he has a fiduciary duty to his shareholde­rs to prioritize profits at the firm even as a groundswel­l of change engulfs the telecommun­ications industry. He said the shift to subscripti­onbased revenues is a positive one that the company is convinced will help it to better position itself for new business in the near future. However, the decision is a tough vision to sell to investors.

“A public market is highly focused on quarter-by-quarter (results). The reality is, as the CEO, I have decisions I have to make every quarter about whether I invest in ‘a’ or ‘b” he said. “We’re taking the company private so we can execute our longterm strategy faster.”

Since he joined Mitel as CEO in 2011, McBee has acquired a string of telecommun­ications firms with the goal of creating an industry powerhouse. Not all the deals have been successful, but the purchase of ShoreTel, a California­based rival that Mitel acquired last September for $430 million, and Aastra Technologi­es of Toronto in 2013 gave McBee a sizable operation with which to work.

In February, Mitel reported fourth-quarter revenues of $356 million, up 37 per cent year-overyear, thanks to the addition of ShoreTel’s results effective Sept. 25. Excluding ShoreTel from the equation, Mitel’s revenues in the quarter were up a modest four per cent compared to the same period a year earlier. These results understate the performanc­e of Mitel as it migrates to smaller, but more steady, subscripti­on-based sales. Instead of paying for hardware upfront, many clients are instead paying a bit at a time. This has the effect of depressing Mitel’s revenues in the short term though over time the company’s financial picture should improve.

During this transition, McBee has been trying to squeeze as much cash as possible from operations — mainly by eliminatin­g overlappin­g jobs following each of the acquisitio­ns. For instance, Mitel employed 4,136 at year-end 2017 (including 550 or so at the Kanata headquarte­rs) and this has already declined to 3,820 as the company combs through ShoreTel’s operations.

Mitel reported adjusted net income of $33.1 million (27 cents per share) in the fourth quarter compared to $27.3 million (22 cents per share) in the fourth quarter of 2016.

For the full fiscal year, Mitel’s revenues reached $1.06 billion compared to $987.6 million in 2016 while adjusted earnings were $81.1 million (65 cents per share), an improvemen­t over adjusted earnings in 2016 of $74.9 million (60 cents per share).

Debt of $612 million at year end remains relatively high.

Mitel forecast revenues for the current quarter in the range of $300 million to $320 million, compared to analysts’ previous consensus projection of $314 million. McBee also predicts his firm’s adjusted earnings will be somewhere between seven and 13 cents per share, slightly below analysts’ forecasts.

As part of the acquisitio­n agreement with Searchligh­t, Mitel confirmed it will be releasing a set of financial statements detailing its performanc­e during the first four months of 2018 on May 3. The company will also open a 45-day window, in which it will allow competing bids to be submitted. Mitel will weigh any bids against the one submitted by Searchligh­t before closing the acquisitio­n.

This won’t be the first time Mitel has been taken private. The original Mitel was co-founded in Ottawa by Terry Matthews and Michael Cowpland in 1973 and was publicly traded on the Toronto exchange before being taken private. Matthews left the firm in the mid-1980s to launch Newbridge Networks. After selling Newbridge in 2000, Matthews re-acquired control of Mitel. The company re-listed as a publicly traded firm on the TSX in 2012.

McBee said the deal with Searchligh­t will see him stay on as the company’s chief executive. He also said the company isn’t planning any changes to its workforce.

 ?? JEAN LEVAC/FILES ?? Kanata, Ont.-based Mitel has agreed to be acquired by Searchligh­t Capital Partners in a $2-billion cash deal designed to take the company private. Mitel is shifting to subscripti­on-based services.
JEAN LEVAC/FILES Kanata, Ont.-based Mitel has agreed to be acquired by Searchligh­t Capital Partners in a $2-billion cash deal designed to take the company private. Mitel is shifting to subscripti­on-based services.

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