Investment Trends With...
Mr. John E. Mack III
Co-founder and CEO of USBX Inc. (USBX)
and former CEO of Protection One (POIX)
SSW: John, the investment banking firm which
you co-founded, USBX Inc., specializes to a large extent in the security
industry. Please give us an overview of the company, your Board, your
Advisory Group, and your background.
John: My background was in the security industry. I was one of
the co-founders and ultimately the CEO of Protection One. In a 10-year
period in the 90’s (from 91 – 99), we built the company into the 2nd largest
security alarm business in the industry--going from about 17 mm in revenue
to 600 million in revenue with operations in Europe and North America.
The company consisted of over 1.5 million subscribers. So I had significant
exposure to the security industry in the 90’s, and had been an owner and
involved in the security business in the late 80’s as well. During the
90’s with Protection One, we did over 200 acquisitions of smaller alarm
company’s as well as raising over 1 billion in debt and equity in the
capital markets. So I have significant experience with the open capital
markets, merger & acquisitions activity and certainly with the security
industry itself.
We sold control of Protection One in 1997 to a large utility company in
the Midwest, Westar Industries. After completing a 3-year management contract
following the sale, I founded USBX in early 2000. Our goal was to build
a premier middle market investment banking firm with a particular focus
on the security industry.
The people who invested in the company are people who have previous investment
experience with me. The Carlyle Group, Evercore Partners, Topspin Partners,
who’s founding partner is Leo Guthart, the former chairman of Ademco (the
largest alarm equipment manufacturer in the world) at the time that they
sold Ademco to Honeywell, and various other investors who have some experience
in the security industry or the investment banking industry.
SSW: Is there a recent corporate financing success story you would
like to talk about?
John: One of the more recent success stories we feel very proud
of is working with Frisco Bay Industries, which is the largest systems
integration business in Canada. It’s a public company, and over the course
of 20 plus years it was built into the leading security systems integration
business in Canada. We had been in conversation with the management team
there for several years with strategy discussions to help the business
in thinking about different alternatives, ultimately heading toward an
exit opportunity for the business. That culminated in August of 2003 when
we signed an engagement to formally seek strategic alternatives, specifically
looking at an M&A opportunity for the business. We conducted a very
efficient, and we believe, well-run auction for the business, which ultimately
culminated in a successful transaction, which was announced in December
2003 with an acquisition of the company by Stanley Works, the large tool
& equipment business headquartered in Connecticut. That transaction
was completed in March 2004. When we started working with the company,
the stock was trading in the $7-8 range, and we were able to get a successful
transaction done with the company at a little over $15 a share, creating
significant value to the shareholders. I think the key success attributes
were: having a unique understanding of the security industry, knowing
how to position Frisco Bay and tell it’s story effectively, putting the
right group of strategic buyers together that were interested in the business,
and then executing a well run action process that delivered a very good
outcome for our client.
The Security Systems integration sector is one that has a lot of attention
right now. This transaction has also been very visible in the market place.
SSW: The recent tragedy in Madrid has heightened terrorism fears
once again. What is your opinion of the resulting investment climate for
security stocks in the near term and long term.
John: I believe that security stocks have seen an uplift that really
preceded 9/11 and the significant focus we have on terrorism based on
fundamentals today. The convergence of digital technology with security
systems, has spurred capital investing in security equipment. Security
systems with digital technology can yield heightened productivity because
things like video surveillance can be done much more effectively today.
So my starting comment world be that I think the uplift we are seeing
in the security industry today, had commenced and had some fundamental
elements of it that would have been in place irrespective of the events
of 9/11 and the heightened concerns of terrorism worldwide. That said,
the recent events in Madrid and the continued focus on terrorism certainly
spur additional focus on security and investments in security, in particular
by the federal government.
The Dept. of Homeland Security has allocated incrementally probably somewhere
in the neighborhood of $4-8 billion dollars of new additional spending
that can ultimately get out to the private sector in the form of additional
equipment and services that are being offered to government. A big part
of the $40 billion plus Dept. of Homeland Security budget that we hear
referenced quite often consists of existing budgets that were consolidated
from other departments and don’t really represent entirely new spending
-- but certainly even the $4-8 plus billion of net incremental investment
in technology and services is significant.
Among a couple of the sectors that are getting a lot of focus are the
ID solutions business companies, which are bringing together clever technologies
that incorporate better ID solutions, that include incorporating biometrics
into card access solutions, as well as convergence of the historical physical
security access business of carrying an access card to get access into
a building, with the logical security access business, which is gaining
access to a network with a password or gaining access to information on
your network with some sort of network password. To replace all this you
would carry a smart card with biometrics incorporated into that card.
Not only will that allow you access to your building, but you can also
use it to access network information. Certainly the same applies to the
government as well. There is a significant focus on having effective ID’s
for people. We have seen interest on the part of the US government to
tighten security around the passport. And there are significant initiatives
with issuing visas in the US and really governments worldwide. Clearly
the notion of I.D’ing people more effectively is fundamental to trying
to thwart terrorist acts. So that is one of the areas that I think is
seeing heightened focus in particular.
The other area where we have noted lots of focus is in technology surrounding
first responders, e.g., the Fire Department, the Paramedics, the Police
Department, the first responders to an emergency. There is an issue of
interoperability in their communication systems so that the Police dept.,
can talk to the Fire Dept., can talk to the Paramedics, can talk to “Hazmat”
units when responding to emergencies. It’s a significant initiative underway
with government spending in putting together technology that allows inter-operability
between those systems, both voice and data and other system capabilities.
So those are two areas where we have seen particular focus. Certainly
there is a broad uplift in security investing as well as with a focus
on terrorism, but those are the two specific ones I would highlight.
SSW: GE recently acquired Invision (INVN), an explosives detection
company, at a 20% premium. What does this mean for security companies
in general. Do you see more consolidation coming?
John: Certainly GE has been a significant acquirer within the security
industry. They have completed a number of transactions since buying Interlogix
in 2002 to get into the business. We believe GE and other large conglomerates
that are in the Security Industry today are going to continue to be acquisitive,
and there are a number of different trends that are causing these large
companies to be interested in acquisitions. Certainly you have large industrial
company’s like GE and Honeywell and others that see the growth in the
security sector, the size of the industry and it’s relationships to historical
businesses that these big companies have been involved in as a natural
opportunity for growth in their operations. So Honeywell buying Pittway
to get a bigger focus on this industry, and GE buying Interlogix and then
focusing on building the business, and Bosch, a very large German conglomerate,
buying Detection Systems all suggest the significant interest by these
large industrial businesses. And then you have these other developments
that are causing people to focus on acquisitions. You have large European
security companies that are mainly coming from the Guarding business that
are focused on acquisitions in the Guarding sector, and increasingly integrating
electronic access control acquisitions with their Guarding businesses.
And we’ve seen a more recent trend where companies involved in IT integration
work are looking at the intersection of physical and logical security,
or the intersection of IT infrastructure with physical security infrastructure
all of which is now operating on the same network with digital systems
in the security arena. All of this is causing large IT integrators to
focus on acquisitions in the security space. So there are a number of
different trends that intersect to causing what we believe will be a sustained
focus on M& A for some time to come. But there is getting to be a
smaller and smaller universe of attractive acquisition opportunities.
And the last thing I would say about InVision is that it creates a focus
on a broader view of what constitutes physical security. Historically,
the focus on the security equipment business would not have included the
notion of a bomb detection business, but more likely, card access control,
alarm panels, and digital video surveillance equipment. Certainly there
is a broader interpretation today, which includes things like bomb detection,
IT solutions and a whole range of things. We’re also seeing a very broad
definition of physical security from companies interested in broad exposure
to the market.
SSW: What's your perspective on the growing trend of end users
seeking to combine physical access with logical access for a simpler total
solution.
John: I suggest that there is a fairly significant focus on this
concept, and I actually foresee an intersection of this business opportunity
as with a company like Viisage (NASDAQ: VISG), which has had a very significant
run recently based on their focus in building the leading high-tech ID
solutions business. Their ID Solutions business ultimately focuses on
the idea of combining physical and logical security within smart card
technology. These smart cards have a lot of information imbedded in the
card, having to do with privileges, authority and access rights, both
in the physical domain, which is to suggests access to buildings and other
things, as well as logical access, which has to do with being able to
use that same card for logging onto your computer, logging onto the network,
and ultimately allowing you different levels of access to information
on your network. This is all enabled by a system that uniquely identifies
you through biometrics and other devices as the end-user who should have
access to this information or gain access to the building. So I think
Viisage in particular is a great example of those opportunities, and we
believe will continue to have a significant focus on this notion of the
intersection of physical access and logical access, so really we don’t
end up with multiple access systems in our lives. We’re all frustrated
with multiple access passwords, multiple key cards, I carry 3 or 4 different
access cards. There are definitely some very elegant solutions in this
sector.
SSW: What is your opinion about the direction of interest rates
in the 2nd half of 2004 and 2005?
John: I believe, like most people now, that interest rates will
be rising for the balance of 2004 and into 2005. Federal Reserve Chairman
Greenspan in his comments to Congress recently suggested that he didn’t
feel any significant deflationary pressure, and indeed he may start to
worry about inflation shortly, and certainly that is a precursor to seeing
interest rates raise. We have seen mortgage rates rise in the last few
months, as well as some pressure on financial institutions’ stocks, which
certainly is a harbinger of higher rates to come.
SSW: Protection One (POIX) , one of the largest security alarm
companies with over 1 million customers now has new owners, The Quadrangle
Group. As the former CEO of Protection One , what do you feel are the
prospects for this company in the future.
John: I believe the prospects for the Protection One team are very
bright. The management team of Richard Ginsberg and Darious Neven and
the rest of the team they have assembled is very solid with good industry
experience. There are good solid opportunities in both residential and
the small to medium size commercial markets on which Protection One is
now focused. They seem to have the attrition issues under control in the
business. There are still solid organic growth opportunities on the residential
side of the business. If the company stays disciplined about their investment
multiples for creating new subscribers, which the company seems to be
doing, they have a nice opportunity to create significant value with their
positioning in the market as one of the few companies with a truly national
infrastructure. I think there is a reasonably good opportunity for them
in the small to medium sized commercial marketplace, where they are one
of the few companies that can address a company who wants a national accounts
kind of attention for their business. So all in all I think there are
good prospects for Protection One, and I’m hopeful that the company will
regain it’s leading place in the market.
SSW: Please tell us about the Security Growth Conference which
your firm has recently organized.
John: USBX, Security Systems News and Mitchell, Silberberg &
Knupp, three firms who respectively lead their area of practice in the
security industry, put the Security Growth Conference (SGC) together.
USBX is an investment bank with a practice specifically focused on the
Security Industry, Security Systems News is a leading provider of news
to the security industry, and Mitchell, Silberberg & Knupp is the
leading law firm serving the security alarm industry. We all felt the
need for a conference that would better showcase some of the leading middle
market companies that are in the industry. With this in mind, we created
a conference format to get 40-50 CEOs of leading middle market security
companies to talk about the prospects for their businesses and what they
see in the industry overall in half hour sessions. We run simultaneous
presentations in a day-and-a-half format that allows those attending the
conference an opportunity to see a cross section of CEOs representing
different sectors of the industry, talking about what they see for their
own company as well as the industry at large. The conference is a private
event with invitations going to the CEOs of the company themselves, (who
get to hear what their fellow CEOs are saying), as well as public and
private investment funds, and various key business development executives
from larger companies with exposure to the security industry for purposes
of networking, and the opportunity for exposure to financial institutions
for potential investment opportunities. The peer group networking amongst
the CEOs has been a very successful outgrowth of the conference, and we
look forward to continuing the conference well into the future each March
of every year.
SSW: Thank you very much for your time, John. We wish you continued
success.
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