PE firm calculates SumTotal

Contact: Brenon Daly

A half-decade ago, a pair of struggling public companies joined together in an effort to capitalize on the fragmented e-learning market. Click2Learn.com and Docent, which had beat up on each other for years, merged into a single company under the name SumTotal Systems. (Shareholders of Click2Learn held 52% of the combined entity, with Docent shareholders owning the rest.) The merger did little to help SumTotal’s performance on the Nasdaq. Since the pairing, which closed in mid-March 2004, the stock had dropped from above $8 to a low of $1.33 last month.

Earlier this week, Vista Equity Partners floated a bid of $3.25 for each of the 31.8 million shares of SumTotal outstanding. The buyout firm owns about four million SumTotal shares, or about 12.6% of the total. Vista started to accumulate its position in September, when the stock was just under $5, according to US Securities and Exchange Commission filings. Vista is the company’s largest shareholder. In addition, the second-largest holder, Discovery Group, has indicated that it wants SumTotal to sell the business. For its part, SumTotal (advised by RBC Capital Markets) has said only that it is reviewing the offer.

Vista’s unsolicited offer for SumTotal has more than a few echoes of Vector Capital’s recent grab of Aladdin Knowledge Systems. Both unsolicited bids came from San Francisco-based PE shops that had amassed a large stake in each company. Both valued the targeted company at less than 1x trailing sales, on enterprise value. (And somewhat unusually, both offers included ‘go-shop’ provisions.) There is one crucial difference, however, between the two targets: SumTotal isn’t profitable, and in fact has never turned a profit. Altogether, it has rung up an eye-popping $353m in accumulated deficit.

Polishing off Aladdin

Contact: Brenon Daly

After almost five months of sometimes-heated negotiations, buyout shop Vector Capital and Aladdin Knowledge Systems have agreed to take the authentication vendor private. The accord comes after two formal price adjustments (one up, one down) that left the final deal valued at $160m. Vector plans to slot Aladdin into SafeNet, which it acquired in March 2007 for $634m.

Vector’s two security purchases stand in sharp contrast to each other, since the SafeNet transaction went through with a minimum of histrionics. Consider that SafeNet took just five weeks to close, compared to the drawn-out battle for Aladdin, which included the threat of a proxy fight. Part of that may be explained by the relative valuation of the two deals. Vector paid about 2x trailing 12-month sales for SafeNet, twice the multiple it is paying for Aladdin. That discount compares to a roughly 40% slump in the Nasdaq during the time between the two acquisitions.

Standstill around the lamp

After a few months of pointed exchanges, Aladdin Knowledge Systems and its would-be buyer, Vector Capital, have agreed to a standstill in an attempt to negotiation a deal. Vector, the encryption vendor’s largest shareholder, had been pushing for a shareholder vote on Oct. 23 on its plan to replace three of Aladdin’s five board members. The buyout firm has set aside that demand, as well as agreeing not to unload any of its 14% holding. For its part, Aladdin agreed to sign a confidentiality agreement with Vector, and will not to seek another buyer for part or all of its business. Last month, Vector offered $13 for each share of Aladdin; the stock currently trades above that. The standstill gives the two sides at least a month to work out a deal, as Vector can’t call for another shareholder meeting until Oct. 30 at the earliest.