Shipyard deal
marks biggest mergers in 2001
Defense in, high technology out
among M&As
by
Brett Lieberman
Last
year's weakened economy, pummeled by recession and a
terrorist attack, certainly took a toll on deal-making
in the Old Dominion. Our annual look at the biggest
deals for 2001 showed a drop in number of deals and
a big drop in total dollar value for mergers and acquisitions.
There were about 100 fewer transactions - 317 deals
valued at $18 billion, compared to 413 deals in 2000,
worth $146 billion. Of course the 2000 figure was skewed
by the huge $101 billion merger of America Online and
TimeWarner, the biggest acquisition in Virginia and
the U.S. for that matter. AOL TimeWarner has seen profits
tumble, while many high-flying Internet companies, which
dominated our list of biggest deals just a year ago,
have folded. With few exceptions, old economy businesses
top this year's lists. Our information focuses on three
areas: mergers, stock offerings and venture capital.
We begin each category with a close-up look at that
category's biggest deal.
Some
people would call it a fatal attraction - the joining
of the maker of stealth bombers with the only maker
of nuclear aircraft carriers, the largest, deadliest
weapons in the U. S. arsenal. But for Newport News Shipbuilding
Inc., which for years fought off merger deals with unwanted
suitors, the marriage boiled down to this: the offer
was too good to refuse.
Virginia's
largest merger deal in 2001 -one that had the drama
of a soap opera - saw Los Angeles-based Northrop Grumman
Corp. buying Virginia's largest private employer - 17,800
people work at the shipyard - for $2.6 billion. Northrop
Grumman jumped in after archrival and would-be suitor
General Dynamics made an all-cash offer that initially
turned Newport News Shipbuilding's head. But Northrop
Grumman ended up winning the shipyard's hand after the
government made clear that it would block any union
with General Dynamics on antitrust grounds. Newport
News and General Dynamics Electric Boat are the only
makers of nuclear-powered warships in the country. Northrop
offered $67.50 per share in cash or enough shares of
its common stock to provide an equivalent value - not
a bad deal considering that just two years ago Newport
News stock sold for $17 a share.
The
acquisition positions Northrop as the leading defense
contractor at a time when President Bush is promising
the largest increase in military spending in 20 years.
Northrop, a $15 billion global aerospace and defense
company with 80,000 employees in 25 countries, serves
U.S. and international military, government and commercial
customers. It expects to benefit from increases in spending
for homeland security and intelligence. It also should
gain from additional spending on precision-guided weapons
as well as replacing those used in Afghanistan.
The
influx of government funding may prove critical to keeping
Northrop and Newport News afloat after last year's fight
for the shipyard. While General Dynamics offered a $2.1
billion, all-cash deal, Northrop's was made up of 75
percent of its own shares. The company also acquired
Litton - owner of shipyards in Mississippi and Louisiana
- for $5.1 billion. Consequently, by year's end Northrop's
debt stood at $5 billion, compared to only $1.3 billion
a year earlier. Though nobody has suggested that Northrop
is at risk of bankruptcy, the Moody's Investors Service
and Standard & Poor's Corp. investment rating firms
have assigned the company their lowest investment-grade
ratings.
William
P. Fricks, the former CEO whose cost-cutting strategies
turned the stodgy shipyard into a $2 billion-a-year
revenue maker, retired a few months after the merger
announcement.
Other
major mergers of 2001 included:
AT&T
Wireless Services Inc.'s $1.9 billion acquisition of
the part of Arlington-based TeleCorp PCS Inc. that it
didn't already own. It had always been in TeleCorp.'s
plan to merge with the third-largest wireless carrier
in the United States. TeleCorp., which had 914,000 subscribers
in mid-size and smaller Southeastern and Midwest markets,
had been buying spectrum licenses and helping to fill
the gaps in AT&T Wireless' network.
Richmond-based
utility Dominion's purchase of Louis Dreyfus Natural
Gas Corp. of Oklahoma City for $1.7 billion. The deal
increases Dominion's reserves by more than 60 percent
and provides nearly 2 trillion cubic feet of proven
gas reserves, and another potential 2 trillion cubic
feet of natural gas, that could be drilled during the
next 10 years. Dominion financed the deal with proceeds
from $1.1 billion in debt offerings.
Charles
E. Smith Residential Realty of Arlington was acquired
by rival apartment developer Archstone Communities Trust
of Englewood, Colo. for $1.2 billion. The deal, which
involves the residential side of one of the Washington,
D.C., metro area's largest real estate companies, creates
the second-largest apartment real estate investment
trust in the country. The new company, Archstone-Smith
Trust, has a market capitalization of $9.3 billion.
Another
North Carolina bank, this time Winston-Salem-based BB&T
Corp., bought out F&M National Corp. of Winchester
for nearly $1.1 billion. The transaction expands BB&T's
presence along the Interstate 81 and Interstate 95 corridors
into northern Virginia and the Richmond and metro Washington,
D.C. markets.
Falls
Church-based General Dynamics purchased Motorola's Integrated
Information Systems Group for $825 million. The unit
produces communications equipment for government and
military customers. The deal continues General Dynamics'
efforts to build its information technology business.
McLean-based
candy maker Mars Inc. bought a 56 percent share of Royal
Canin SA of France for $696 million. Besides producing
candies such as M&Ms, Mars was already in the pet
food business, owning Pedigree dog food and Whiskas
cat food.
General
Dynamics also purchased Fort Worth-based Galaxy Aerospace
Co., a venture between Hyatt and Israel Aircraft Industries.
The $668 million deal includes $315 million that General
Dynamics would have to pay through 2006 if Galaxy achieves
certain revenue targets.
Charles E. Smith Commercial Realty of Arlington, the
largest commercial landlord in the Washington, D.C.
region, agreed to sell the remaining 66 percent that
Vornado Realty Trust did not already own for $598 million.
The deal makes Vornado, one of New York's biggest property
owners, also the fourth-largest U.S. real estate investment
trust. Smith Commercial owns and manages 18.2 million
square feet of office and retail space in the region.
Dimension
Data Holdings acquired Web consulting firm Proxicom
Inc.'s outstanding shares for $427 million. Dimension,
South Africa's largest network services firm, won out
after Compaq Computer Corp. ended its bid for Reston-based
Proxicom.
United
Defense heads list for stock offering
It's hard to find a firm better connected than United
Defense Industries Inc., this year's leader in stock
offerings. The defense contractor, bought by The Carlyle
Group in 1997, claims a board of directors that includes
a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a former
defense secretary and advisers such as former President
George H.W. Bush and former Secretary of State James
Baker.
While such connections may have garnered some additional
attention for United Defense's $401 million December
offering, that's only part of the story. The company's
offering, the first in the defense industry since 1996,
could not have been better timed to tap the public markets
and the attention of investors looking for something
better than last year's anemic returns.
The
Arlington-based maker of combat vehicles and weapons
systems has been making tanks, amphibious assault craft
and other weapons for the U.S. military since World
War II. One product under development: the 40-ton Crusader
self-propelled howitzer that sells for $23 million a
pop. The company also is a major arms supplier to some
40 foreign governments.
Its
success is showing up on the bottom line. Buoyed by
Army purchases of its Crusader system, United Defense
reported its fourth quarter profit rose 62 percent.
Net income of $6 million on $405 million in sales during
the quarter represented a 28 percent increase over the
prior year. The company, along with much of the military-industrial
complex, also expects to fare well in President Bush's
proposed fiscal 2003 budget which calls for a 14 percent
increase in military spending, the largest since Ronald
Reagan's first term. In fact, two of the other top deals
of last year - Anteon Inter-national Corp. and ManTech
International Corp., both of Fairfax - are also military-defense
companies expected to benefit from increased defense
spending.
The
administration wants to spend $3.8 billion over the
next five years on the Crusader, with a large chunk
of the money going to United Defense. Though the administration's
proposal represents an enormous increase in defense
spending, it may end up only being the starting point
given the sense of patriotism pervading the nation and
Congress' inclination to spend even more money on the
war on terrorism. And United Defense's blue-chip connections
can't hurt either.
Other
big stock deals during 2001 included:
The
$283 million that nonconforming mortgage lender Saxon
Capital Inc. of Glen Allen received from its October
offering. The former unit of Dominion originated $2.1
billion of loans last year and hopes the added capital
raised will give it the resources to grow in the subprime
lending market. Saxon buys loans issued to borrowers
with spotty credit histories.
Like
United Defense, Anteon's $230 million offering in December
was snapped up on the expectation of increased defense
spending and the promise of its information technology
used in emergency response management by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency and state agencies, as well
as its ballistic missile defense systems. The capital
will likely be used to pursue acquisitions.
When
American Medical Laboratories, a medical testing company
that performs complex and costly services such as genetic
testing, screenings for sexually transmitted disease
and routine medical procedures, first tested the IPO
waters in September 2000, it found a slowing market.
The Chantilly company withdrew its filing last spring
only to refile in November to raise $115 million. It
wants to use the proceeds to repurchase preferred stock
and pay debts.
ManTech
International Corp. of Fairfax is the third of four
defense contractors nationally to go public late last
year. The provider of high-tech manpower mainly to government
intelligence agencies, ManTech filed in November to
sell 5.7 million shares to raise $90 million. The proceeds
will go to pay off debt, fund acquisitions and provide
for working capital.
Reston-based
Millennium Bankshares Corp., which has three branches
in Fairfax County, filed in October to sell 1.2 million
shares for $7.8 million. The community bank was founded
in 1999. The offering has yet to be completed.
Netplex
Group Inc. raised $6 million in the spinoff of its technology
consulting business, Netplex Systems. The Reston-based
company had hoped to raise at least $6.5 million, but
cut the price because of the hostile market toward technology
offerings.
Biotechnology
companies attract investors
Burning through $600,000 a month, Aderis Pharmaceuticals
(formerly Discovery Therapeutics), like a lot of biotechnology
companies, needs a lot of cash. But while many high-tech
companies found venture capital funding hard to come
by last year, the Richmond company received two $45
million infusions to help fund its development of drugs
to diagnose and treat Parkinson's, renal and cardiac
diseases.
The funding topped the list of 84 venture capital deals
worth $759 million in Virginia during 2001.
The
investors included the Palladin Group, International
Biotechnology Trust, Schroder Ventures Life Sciences,
China Development Industrial Bank, MDS Capital Corp,
NeoMed Fund of Norway, Perseus-Soros BioPharmaceutical
Fund, Sanderling Biomedical Ventures, Singapore BioInno-vations
and Temasek Capital of Singapore.
The
funding is an enormous sum to a company that managed
to leverage a $12 million budget, paltry by biotech
standards, to get five drugs in clinical trials including
a transdermal patch for Parkinson's disease. The patch,
Rotigotine CDS, is currently in Phase III of the four
levels of trails drugs must pass.
Founded
as Discovery Therapeutics in Richmond in 1994, the company
changed names to Aderis earlier this year and moved
its corporate management and administrative offices
to Hopkington, Mass., one of the nation's leading areas
for biotechnology research.
Yet the company is far from pulling up stakes in Virginia.
Aderis maintains 7,000 square feet of laboratory and
office space in Richmond where it maintains research
operations. Though drug development can take five years
or more to move a product through the "pipeline"
from testing to government approval and, finally, the
market, Aderis believes the new investment will provide
needed resources. After posting a $6.7 million loss
in the nine months that ended on Sept. 30, 2001, Aderis
is still looking for cash to fund its research and has
announced plans for an initial public offering of as
much as $100 million this year. The funds would go to
additional research and development, clinical trials
and acquisitions.
Other
venture capital deals last year included:
EchoStar
Communications, parent company of the satellite television
provider Dish Network, boosted its stake in McLean-based
StarBand Communications Inc. The $50 million investment
increases its share in StarBand, which provides high-speed,
two-way Internet connections through satellite dishes,
from 19 percent to 32 percent. Echostar will eventually
control 60 percent of the company when construction
of StarBand's next generation satellites begins. Microsoft
Corp. and other companies previously invested $275 million
in StarBand, formerly Gilat-To-Home Inc. StarBand abandoned
plans last March for a $287.5 million initial public
offering. The proceeds would have been used to grow
business operations, expand its subscriber base and
for capital.
Fairfax-based Vibrant Solutions raised $26 million in
first-round financing, led by Columbia Capital of Arlington
and Bessemer Venture Partners. Vibrant, a provider of
network management software, plans to use the funding
for expansion, product development, research, and to
build a European sales force.
In
November, Vibrant acquired Longitude Systems, a telecommunications
software maker. Chantilly-based Longitude had run out
of money and dismissed its staff.
Sonic
Telecom received $20 million from Mastel Ventures. The
Chantilly-based telecommunications firm has now raised
$34 million through four rounds of financing. Sonic
Telecom owns a fiber-optic network and provides the
equipment and services for video-conferencing. Earlier
in the year it received $3.5 million in bridge financing
from undisclosed investors.
Riptech
Inc. of Alexandria raised $21 million in its second
round of funding last year, bringing its total from
Arlington's Columbia Capital to $45 million. Riptech
is a computer network security firm that monitors clients'
computer networks 24 hours a day, looking for cracks
hackers could use to infiltrate a network.
eCommerce
Industries Inc. of Vienna plans to use the $21 million
raised last year to fund acquisitions of software systems.
New Enterprise Associates led the funding for eCommerce,
which develops e-commerce technologies for office products,
industrial paper and sanitation markets. Other investors
included Accel Partners, Frazier Technology Ventures
and Friedman, Billings and Ramsey.
Intersect
Software raised $18 million in first round funding led
by Bessemer Venture Partners, Bluestream Ventures and
Columbia Capital. Bessemer and Columbia had provided
the initial $1.3 million in seed funding for the engineering
management software firm in the spring of 2000.
Vienna-based
BioNetrix, a developer of authentication software that
works with smart cards, tokens, biometrics and other
systems, raised $16 million in a third round of funding
led by Columbia Capital, Advanta Partners, The Carlyle
Group, The Dinner Club, NextLevel Group and Walker Ventures.
Its technology allows remote access to personal and
company data mainly in the health care and banking sectors.
ComScore Networks Inc. of Reston, which develops software
to monitor and analyze consumers' Internet use, raised
$16 million in a third round of investment. The investment
was led by Adams Street Partners of Chicago and included
existing investors Accel Partners, Flatiron Partners,
Institutional Venture Partners and Lehman Brothers.
ComScore has now raised $57 million in three rounds.
Danville-based
R2 Technology raised $14 million, bringing its total
financing to $76 million. The company developed the
only FDA-approved computer-aided detection system for
mammography. Its technology helps radiologists in the
early detection of cancer. The financing will help the
company expand its market position. Investors included
Morgan Stanley, GE Capital, ARCH Venture Partners, Alta
Partners, Sigma Partners and Thorner Ventures. New investors
included China Development Industrial Bank, UOB Hermes
Asia Technology Fund and United Investments. R2 Technology
recently filed plans for an $86.2 million initial public
offering.
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