Balch Hill Partners, L.P., a Delaware
limited partnership, together with its affiliates, and Potomac Capital
Partners II, L.P., together with its affiliates, with approximately 9.8% of
the outstanding common stock of STEC, Inc., a California corporation (the
"Company"), announced today that they have delivered an open letter to
shareholders of the Company.
The full text of the letter is included below:
BALCH HILL CAPITAL, LLC
2778 Green Street
San Francisco, CA 94123
March 18, 2013
Dear Fellow STEC Shareholders,
Balch Hill Partners, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership (together with its
affiliates, "Balch Hill"), Potomac Capital Partners II, L.P. (together with
its affiliates, "Potomac"), and their fellow group members, currently own
approximately 9.8% of the outstanding common stock of STEC, Inc. ("STEC" or
the "Company"). We believe there is significant value to be realized at STEC,
but we do not believe this value will be realized unless the Company's current
Board of Directors (the "Board") and executive management team are
reconstituted. Accordingly, we have nominated a slate of highly qualified
nominees for election to the Board who have a wealth of industry and
management experience to guide the Company in addressing market share losses
and enhancing shareholder value for all.
STEC HAS TREMENDOUS VALUE TO BE REALIZED
The Company has:
o world class enterprise SSD technology and products;
o a strong patent portfolio (as of March 8, 2013, STEC owned 48 patents and
had 88 additional patent applications pending);
o a strong but eroding balance sheet (as of December 31, 2012, STEC had cash
and cash equivalents of approximately $158.2 million, or $3.40 per share,
approximately $41.8 million in inventories, and no long term debt); and
o a state of the art manufacturing facility in Malaysia.
The Company has not capitalized on this value. Instead, the current Board and
executive management team have presided over a massive loss of revenue and
market share in the Company's core OEM enterprise SSD market, even as that
market grows strongly. The Company has also suffered reputational damage
caused by the SEC investigation involving trading in the Company's securities
by Manouch Moshayedi, the Company's Founder, and Mark Moshayedi, the Company's
CEO and President, which ultimately led to an action filed by the SEC against
Manouch Moshayedi for insider trading. In response to the Company's crisis,
we believe the current Board and executive management team have misallocated
corporate funds and pursued a misguided business strategy that fails to
address the Company's fundamental leadership issue, resulting in the
significant destruction of shareholder value.
POOR CAPITAL ALLOCATION
o From August 9, 2011 until March 30, 2012, the Company spent approximately
$55 million to repurchase 1,546,700 shares of common stock at an average
price per share of $9.72 and 4,063,911 shares of common stock at an
average price per share of $9.86. Less than eight months later, the stock
closed at a low of $4.07 on the trading day immediately preceding the
filing of our initial Schedule 13D on November 16, 2012.
o In fiscal 2012, STEC recorded approximately $21.8 million of settlement
costs and legal fees in excess of its insurance deductible under its
director and officer insurance coverage, $15 million of which relates to
the settlement of a federal shareholder class action, which is subject to
court approval, relating to claims that the Company and certain of its
senior officers and directors made materially false or misleading public
statements.
o STEC spent over $66 million in R&D spending for the year ended December
31, 2012, an increase of $12 million more than the year ended December 31,
2011 and an over 68% increase since 2008, but has failed to see
commensurate increases in revenue or income.
THE CURRENT BOARD HAS OVERSEEN MASSIVE OPERATING LOSSES
o Total revenues for the year ended December 31, 2012 are down by over 45%
from the year ended December 31, 2011.
o STEC suffered operating losses of over $103 million for the year ended
December 31, 2012, an over 510% decline in operating income from the year
earlier.
o Revenues from sales to STEC's three largest customers in 2011 declined by
more than 65% in the year ended December 31, 2012.
These results are particularly troubling, since according to STEC's own
investor presentation, the SAS SSD market, which is the bulk of STEC revenues,
grew significantly from fiscal 2011 to fiscal 2012.
* Revenues derived from the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended December 31, 2012
SIGNIFICANT SHAREHOLDER VALUE HAS BEEN DESTROYED
o STEC's share price has declined over 60% in the year preceding our initial
filing of a Schedule 13D on November 16, 2012 and approximately 70% since
the Company first announced, in its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
year ended December 31, 2009, that the SEC had commenced a formal
investigation involving trading in the Company's securities by Manouch and
Mark Moshayedi.
o Based on the Company's guidance, STEC will post non-GAAP losses of $0.40
to $0.42 per share in the quarter ended March 31, 2013. This implies a
cash burn from operations of over $19 million, and this does not include
the likelihood of more significant legal expenditures. It appears that in
order for the Company to break even, it would need to generate revenues of
$70 million in the first quarter of 2013 or, in other words, grow its
revenue by over 200%. Without immediate action, we do not believe the
Company can break even for several more quarters.
MANAGEMENT HAS FAILED TO ANTICIPATE MARKET SHARES LOSSES AND IS TRYING TO
ADDRESS EROSION WITH A MISGUIDED BUSINESS STRATEGY THAT EVEN THEY ONCE
DISMISSED
At the Company's conference call held on November 8, 2011, Manouch Moshayedi
stated,
"Because we continue to invest heavily in our R&D and have plans to introduce
new products that are faster, lower priced and more efficient, we expect to
have a large market share as we move forward."
Unfortunately, the Company's performance shows a different result, as its
market share has continued to decline dramatically.
We believe the Company has lost incredible market share in the wake of
increasing competition because it has lost the trust of its large storage OEM
customers. Rather than trying to repair its relationships with its large
storage OEM customers, the Board and executive management team have decided to
go after a broader array of enterprise customers. Consider Mark Moshayedi's
statements made on the Company's conference call held on November 6, 2012:
"Although our latest generation of products, including PCIe accelerator cards,
Gen 4 ZeusIOPS and MACH16 SSDs and EnhanceIO software are available at certain
of our OEM, channel and enterprise customers, the increasingly competitive
environment over the past year and the slower-than-expected uptake of our new
products with OEMs have made refocusing our go-to-market strategy a top
priority."
We believe this is a failing strategy. A strategy that Manouch Moshayedi
himself once considered "not a long-term strategy." On the Company's
conference call held on November 8, 2011, Manouch Moshayedi stated the
following, in response to a question on the Company's sales strategy and why
the Company was not building a direct to customer sales effort:
"First of all, building a distribution channel is not something that can be
done overnight. It takes months if not years to build a proper channel out
there. But, at the end of the day, this is a product that has to get
integrated into an OEM system.
…that type of a sales model that you are talking about, it is very good if you
are selling a system, a fully enclosed system, that you go sell it to an
end-user, and they just plug it in and it all works. But if you have to sell a
component that goes into another system, another OEM system, then it is pretty
tough. It is good on a temporary basis, but not a long-term strategy."
STEC'S BOARD AND EXECUTIVE MANAGEMENT TEAM MUST BE RECONSTITUTED FOR
UNDERLYING VALUE TO BE REALIZED
We do not believe the Company can rebuild the trust it has lost with its key
customers and shareholders without immediate and meaningful change to the
Board and executive management team. We strongly believe that Manouch
Moshayedi's continued presence at the Company is detrimental to STEC and Mark
Moshayedi is too closely aligned with his brother to rebuild the trust that
has been lost.
Manouch Moshayedi recently stepped down as Chairman of the Board and CEO
pending the resolution of a civil complaint filed against him by the SEC for
insider trading. However, we believe his change in title to Founder and
continuation as a director of the Company are cosmetic changes. Why, for
example, did Manouch Moshayedi continue to receive the same salary and
benefits following his resignation as Chairman and CEO until both Mark and
Manouch Moshayedi decided to reduce their salaries to $1.00 shortly after the
filing of our initial Schedule 13D? Also, rather than appointing an outside
candidate as CEO to replace Manouch Moshayedi to energize the business and
represent a new direction for the Company, why did the Board appoint Mark
Moshayedi, Manouch Moshayedi's brother, to the role of CEO? Did the Board
believe that Mark Moshayedi was the best candidate for the position? Was he
appointed after a full and robust process to identify the best candidate to
lead the Company forward? We believe the Company's continuing
underperformance clearly indicates that Mark Moshayedi is the wrong man for
the job. Would he really have been appointed to CEO if he had not been the
brother of Manouch Moshayedi?
On February 8, 2013, Balch Hill nominated a slate of seven (7)
highly-qualified directors for election to the Board at the 2013 annual
meeting of shareholders (the "Annual Meeting"). We nominated seven (7)
directors in order to preserve our rights at the Annual Meeting. Our nominees
have the extensive range of relevant operating expertise and quality industry
experience necessary to address the difficult challenges currently facing the
Company, and are well equipped to both evaluate and execute the strategic
steps necessary to improve shareholder value.
Specially, we believe a reconstituted Board with truly independent directors
can unlock significant value from the Company by taking the following steps:
o Replace Mark and Manouch Moshayedi with trusted industry veterans to
assist in the reengagement of large OEM customers;
o Refocus the business on SAS SSD sales to large storage OEM customers;
o Significantly reduce operating expenses and improve capital allocation;
o Reevaluate the direction of the Company's PCI Express, SATA, I/O software,
and other business initiatives;
o Explore all strategic alternatives, including a possible sale of the
Company if the Company cannot remain a stand-alone entity.
We do not believe that shareholders can afford to wait any longer under the
unchecked leadership of the Moshayedi brothers. Accordingly, we were engaged
for several weeks in good faith negotiations with the Company regarding the
composition of the Board. We believe we were close to a settlement that would
result in the immediate resignation of Manouch Moshayedi from all positions
with the Company and the appointment of Eric Singer to the Board shortly
thereafter. We also had a verbal agreement with the Company that Mark
Moshayedi would step down as a director at the Annual Meeting and as CEO
following a search for a new CEO to be headed by a special committee of the
Board composed of four (4) independent directors, including Eric Singer.
Unfortunately, the Company was unwilling to reflect their verbal agreement in
writing and we were forced to pursue a proxy contest.
As we have stated in the past, we remain willing to engage in meaningful
discussions with the Company regarding the composition of the Board in hopes
of ultimately reaching a mutually agreeable resolution that will serve the
best interests of all shareholders. However, any proposed resolution must
include a reconstituted Board and management team without Manouch or Mark
Moshayedi in control. We believe the time to act is now to avoid the further
erosion of shareholder value.
Sincerely,
BALCH HILL PARTNERS, L.P.
By: Balch Hill Capital, LLC,
its general partner
By: /s/ Simon J. Michael
Name: Simon J. Michael
Title: Manager
POTOMAC CAPITAL PARTNERS II, L.P.
By: Potomac Capital Management II, L.L.C.,
its general partner
By: /s/ Eric Singer
Name: Eric Singer
Title: Co-Managing Member
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