|
|
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| |||||||||
Builders FirstSource DEF 14A 2009 Table of Contents
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
(Rule 14a-101) INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT
SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Filed by the Registrant
þ
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant
o
Check the appropriate box:
o Preliminary
Proxy Statement
o Confidential,
for Use of the Commission only (as permitted by
Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
þ Definitive
Proxy Statement
o Definitive
Additional Materials
o Soliciting
Material Pursuant to § 240.14a-12
BUILDERS FIRSTSOURCE, INC.
(Name of Registrant as Specified In
Its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy
Statement if Other Than the Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
þ No
fee required.
o Fee
paid previously with preliminary materials.
Table of Contents
To our Stockholders:
The severity and duration of the downturn in the homebuilding
industry has presented significant challenges to our business.
Our revenues have declined from approximately $2.2 billion
for the year ended December 31, 2006, to approximately
$1.0 billion for the year ended December 31, 2008,
with further declines expected in 2009. Despite the efforts of
our management to reduce our costs, our operating results have
continued to deteriorate and our liquidity has decreased and is
becoming constrained. In light of these conditions, our Board of
Directors determined that certain recapitalization transactions,
involving a common stock rights offering and a debt exchange,
would be in the best interests of our Company and its
stockholders. The proposed transactions would (i) provide
us with significant additional liquidity to fund operations,
(ii) deleverage our balance sheet, and (iii) extend
the maturity of our outstanding indebtedness in order to provide
us with additional time to recover from the current industry
downturn. Pursuant to the recapitalization transactions, we
propose to:
Our goal with the recapitalization transactions is to improve
our financial flexibility through the rights offering and debt
exchange. Upon completion of the recapitalization transactions,
the Company will receive $75.0 million for general
corporate purposes and to pay the expenses of the
recapitalization transactions, with any remaining proceeds of
the rights offering being used to repurchase a portion of our
outstanding 2012 notes in the debt exchange. We will reduce our
outstanding indebtedness by $130.0 million through the debt
exchange.
As part of the recapitalization transactions, we have entered
into an investment agreement with JLL Partners Fund V, L.P.
(JLL) and Warburg Pincus Private Equity IX, L.P.
(Warburg Pincus), who collectively beneficially own
approximately 50% of our common stock, before giving effect to
the recapitalization transactions, under which JLL and Warburg
Pincus have severally agreed to purchase from us, at the rights
offering subscription price, unsubscribed shares of our common
stock such that gross proceeds of the rights offering will be no
less than $75.0 million. In addition, each of JLL and
Warburg Pincus has agreed (i) to exchange up to
$48.909 million aggregate principal amount of 2012 notes
indirectly held by it in the debt exchange and (ii) to the
extent gross proceeds of the rights offering are less than
$205.0 million, to exchange such 2012 notes for shares of
our common stock at an exchange price equal to the rights
offering subscription price, subject to proration from the
participation of other holders of 2012 notes who submit for
exchange their 2012 notes for shares of our common stock not
subscribed for through the exercise of rights in the rights
offering. In addition, each of JLL and Warburg Pincus has agreed
to vote (or cause to be voted) the shares of common stock owned
by them in favor of the issuance of our common stock in the
rights offering, pursuant to the investment agreement and to
certain holders of our 2012 notes in the debt exchange.
Table of Contents
We have also entered into a support agreement with certain
accredited holders of approximately 61.0% of the aggregate
principal amount of our outstanding 2012 notes, under which such
noteholders have agreed to exchange their 2012 notes in the debt
exchange and to deliver consents to the proposed amendments to
the indenture governing the 2012 notes.
Pursuant to the support agreement, holders of approximately
94.67% of the aggregate principal amount of our outstanding 2012
notes held by holders other than JLL and Warburg Pincus have
agreed to deliver consents to the proposed amendments to the
indenture governing the 2012 notes, and pursuant to the support
agreement and investment agreement, as of December 14,
2009, holders of approximately 96.56% of the aggregate principal
amount of the 2012 notes have agreed to exchange their 2012
notes in the debt exchange.
You are cordially invited to attend a special meeting of
stockholders of Builders FirstSource, Inc., which will take
place at the corporate headquarters of Builders FirstSource,
Inc. at 2001 Bryan Street, Suite 1600, Dallas, Texas 75201
on January 14, 2010, at 10:00 a.m., local time.
At the special meeting, you will be asked to consider and vote
on the following proposals: (1) to approve the issuance of
our common stock in the rights offering, pursuant to the
investment agreement and to certain holders of our 2012 notes in
the debt exchange and (2) to approve an amendment to our
2007 Incentive Plan to increase the number of shares of common
stock that may be granted pursuant to awards under the 2007
Incentive Plan from 2,500,000 shares to
7,000,000 shares and re-approve a list of qualified
business criteria for performance-based awards in order to
preserve federal income tax deductions.
Even if you intend to join us in person, we encourage you to
vote in advance so we will know we have a quorum of stockholders
for the meeting. When you vote in advance, please indicate your
intention to personally attend the special meeting. Please see
the Question and Answer section on page 3 of the
accompanying proxy statement for instructions if you plan to
personally attend the special meeting.
Whether or not you are able to personally attend the special
meeting, it is important that your shares be represented and
voted. Your prompt vote over the internet, by telephone via
toll-free number, or, for stockholders who elect to receive
their proxy materials by mail, by written proxy, will save us
the expense and extra work of additional proxy solicitation.
Voting by any of these methods at your earliest convenience will
ensure your representation at the special meeting if you choose
not to attend in person. If you decide to attend the special
meeting, you will be able to vote in person, even if you have
previously submitted your proxy. Please review the instructions
on the proxy card or the information forwarded by your bank,
broker, or other stockholder of record, as applicable,
concerning each of these voting options.
On behalf of the Board of Directors, I would like to express our
appreciation for your continued support of Builders FirstSource,
Inc.
Paul S. Levy
Chairman of the Board
December 15, 2009
Table of Contents
To our Stockholders:
A special meeting of stockholders of Builders FirstSource, Inc.
will take place at the corporate headquarters of Builders
FirstSource, Inc. at 2001 Bryan Street, Suite 1600, Dallas,
Texas 75201 on January 14, 2010, at 10:00 a.m., local
time, for the purpose of considering and acting upon the
following:
(1) to approve (a) the issuance and sale of up to
58,571,428 shares of our common stock (common
stock) upon exercise of subscription rights to purchase
shares of common stock at a subscription price of $3.50 per
share pursuant to a rights offering to raise up to
$205.0 million, (b) the issuance and sale of our
common stock pursuant to the Investment Agreement dated as of
October 23, 2009, among us, JLL Partners Fund V, L.P.
(JLL) and Warburg Pincus Private Equity IX, L.P.
(Warburg Pincus) (as amended through the date of
this Proxy Statement, the Investment Agreement) and
(c) the issuance of our common stock to certain holders of
our Second Priority Senior Secured Floating Rate Notes due 2012
(the 2012 notes) pursuant to a debt exchange, in
which certain accredited holders of our outstanding 2012 notes
will exchange, at par, in transactions exempt from the
registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended, their outstanding 2012 notes for (i) up to
$145.0 million aggregate principal amount of newly-issued
Second Priority Senior Secured Floating Rate Notes due 2016 (the
2016 notes), (ii) up to $130.0 million in
cash from the proceeds of the rights offering, or (iii) a
combination of cash and 2016 notes, and, (iv) to the extent
the rights offering is not fully subscribed, shares of our
common stock; and
(2) to approve an amendment to the Builders FirstSource,
Inc. 2007 Incentive Plan to increase the number of shares of
common stock that may be granted pursuant to awards under the
2007 Incentive Plan from 2,500,000 shares to
7,000,000 shares and re-approve a list of qualified
business criteria for performance-based awards in order to
preserve federal income tax deductions.
Copies of the Investment Agreement and the form of Support
Agreement dated as of October 23, 2009, among the Company
and certain holders of the 2012 notes (as amended through the
date of this Proxy Statement, the Support
Agreement), are attached as Annex A and Annex B
to this proxy statement, respectively.
After careful consideration and upon the recommendation of the
special committee of our Board of Directors comprised entirely
of independent directors, our Board of Directors
(i) determined that the rights offering, the Investment
Agreement, the debt exchange, the Support Agreement, and the
transactions contemplated by such agreements are advisable and
in the best interests of our company and our stockholders,
(ii) approved and authorized the rights offering, the
Investment Agreement, the debt exchange, and the Support
Agreement and (iii) recommends that you vote
FOR the approval of the issuance of our common stock
pursuant to proposal (1) and FOR the approval
of the amendment to our 2007 Incentive Plan and re-approval of a
list of qualified business criteria for performance-based awards
in order to preserve federal income tax deductions pursuant to
proposal (2). Pursuant to the Investment Agreement, each of
JLL and Warburg Pincus, who collectively beneficially own
approximately 50% of our common stock, has agreed to vote (or
cause to be voted) the shares of common stock owned by them in
favor of proposal (1) at the special meeting.
Neither our Board of Directors nor the special committee of
our Board of Directors has made, nor will they make, any
recommendation to stockholders or noteholders regarding the
exercise of subscription rights under the rights offering or the
exchange of 2012 notes in the debt exchange. We refer to the
rights offering and the debt exchange (described herein),
together with the transactions contemplated by the Investment
Agreement and Support Agreement, as the Recapitalization
Transactions. Stockholders and holders of 2012 notes
should make an independent investment decision whether to
exercise their rights or exchange their 2012 notes.
Only holders of record of our common stock at the close of
business on December 14, 2009, will be entitled to vote at
the meeting. No business other than the proposals described in
this notice will be considered at the special meeting or any
adjournment or postponement thereof.
Table of Contents
Your vote is very important, regardless of the number of shares
of common stock you own. Builders FirstSource cannot complete
the Recapitalization Transactions unless proposal (1) is
approved by the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares of
common stock represented and entitled to vote at the meeting.
Please submit your proxy as soon as possible to make sure that
your shares are represented at the special meeting.
For your shares to be voted, you may complete, sign, date, and
return the enclosed proxy card or you may submit your proxy by
telephone or over the Internet. If you are a holder of record,
you may also cast your vote in person at the special meeting. If
your shares are held in an account by a broker, bank, or other
nominee, you must instruct them on how to vote your shares.
If you vote by proxy but abstain from voting on the
proposals, your abstention will have the same practical effect
as a vote against the proposals.
Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy
Materials for the Stockholder Meeting to be held on
January 14, 2010. The Proxy Statement is available at
www.bldr.com.
By Order of the Board of Directors,
Donald F. McAleenan
Corporate Secretary
December 15, 2009
Please see the Question and Answer section on page 3 of
this proxy statement for instructions on what you need to do to
attend the special meeting in person. Please note that the doors
to the special meeting will open at 9:00 a.m. and will
close promptly at 10:00 a.m. Whether or not you expect
to personally attend, we urge you to vote your shares at your
earliest convenience to ensure the presence of a quorum at the
meeting. Promptly voting your shares via the internet, by
telephone via toll-free number, or by signing, dating, and
returning the enclosed proxy card, will save us the expense and
extra work of additional solicitation. Because your proxy is
revocable at your option, submitting your proxy now will not
prevent you from voting your shares at the meeting if you desire
to do so. Please refer to the voting instructions included on
the proxy card or the voting instructions forwarded by your
bank, broker, or other stockholder of record, as applicable.
Table of Contents
This Proxy Statement is being furnished by Builders FirstSource,
Inc. (the Corporation, the Company, or
Builders FirstSource) in connection with a
solicitation of proxies by its Board of Directors (the
Board of Directors or the Board) to be
voted at the special meeting of the Corporations
stockholders to be held on January 14, 2010 (the
special meeting or the meeting). Whether
or not you personally attend, it is important that your shares
be represented and voted at the special meeting. Most
stockholders have a choice of voting over the internet, by using
a toll-free telephone number, or by completing a proxy card and
mailing it in the postage-paid envelope provided. Check your
proxy card, or the information forwarded by your bank, broker,
or other stockholder of record, as applicable, to determine
which voting options are available to you. Please be aware that
if you vote over the internet, you may incur costs, such as
telecommunication and internet access charges, for which you
will be responsible. The internet voting and telephone voting
facilities for stockholders of record will be available until
11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on January 13, 2010.
If any matters not specifically set forth in this Proxy
Statement properly come to a vote at the meeting, the members of
the Proxy Committee, comprised of M. Chad Crow and Donald F.
McAleenan, will vote regarding those matters in accordance with
their best judgments. If a proxy card is signed and returned, it
will be voted as specified on the proxy card, or, if no vote is
specified, it will be voted FOR Proposals
(1) and (2). At any time before it is exercised, you may
revoke your proxy by timely delivery of written notice to the
Corporate Secretary, by timely delivery of a properly executed,
later-dated proxy (including by internet or telephone vote), or
by voting via ballot at the special meeting. Voting in advance
of the special meeting will not limit your right to vote at the
special meeting if you decide to attend in person. If you are a
beneficial owner, but your shares are registered in the name of
a bank, broker, or other stockholder of record, to be able to
vote in person at the special meeting you must obtain, from the
stockholder of record, a proxy in your name and present it at
the meeting. See Questions and Answers about the Meeting
and Voting in this Proxy Statement for an explanation of
the term stockholder of record.
The proxy accompanying this Proxy Statement is being solicited
by the Board of Directors. The Corporation will bear the entire
cost of this solicitation, including the preparation and
delivery of this Proxy Statement, the proxy, and any additional
information furnished to stockholders. In addition to using the
mail and the internet, proxies may be solicited by directors,
executive officers, and other employees of Builders FirstSource
or its subsidiaries, in person or by telephone. No additional
compensation will be paid to directors, executive officers, or
other employees for their services in this regard. Builders
FirstSource will also request banks, brokers, and other
stockholders of record to forward proxy materials, at the
Corporations expense, to the beneficial owners of the
Corporations shares.
GENERAL
INFORMATION ABOUT PROXIES AND VOTING
The stockholders of record of Builders FirstSource, Inc. common
stock (common stock) at the close of business on
December 14, 2009, will be entitled to vote in person or by
proxy at the special meeting. At that
Table of Contents
time, the Corporation had 36,353,924 outstanding shares of its
common stock. Each stockholder will be entitled to one vote in
person or by proxy for each share of common stock held. A quorum
for the transaction of business shall be constituted by the
presence at the special meeting, in person or by proxy, of a
majority of the outstanding shares of common stock entitled to
vote. All shares for which proxies or voting instructions are
returned are counted as present for purposes of determining the
existence of a quorum at the special meeting.
Votes cast by proxy or in person at the meeting will be
tabulated by representatives from BNY Mellon Shareowner
Services, which has been appointed the Inspector of Election. In
addition, the following voting procedures will be in effect for
each proposal described in this Proxy Statement:
Proposals (1) and
(2). (1) Approval of the issuance of shares
of our common stock in the rights offering, to JLL and Warburg
Pincus pursuant to the Investment Agreement, and to our holders
of 2012 notes in the debt exchange and (2) approval of the
amendment to our 2007 Incentive Plan to increase the number of
shares of common stock that may be granted pursuant to awards
under the 2007 Incentive Plan from 2,500,000 shares to
7,000,000 shares and re-approval of a list of qualified
business criteria for performance-based awards in order to
preserve federal income tax deductions. Each proposal requires
the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares represented and
entitled to vote at the special meeting. If you vote by proxy,
but abstain from voting on the proposals, your abstention will
have the same practical effect as a vote against the proposals.
Please see page 4. Pursuant to the Investment Agreement,
each of JLL and Warburg Pincus has agreed to vote (or cause to
be voted) the shares of common stock owned by them in favor of
proposal (1) at the special meeting.
NO PERSON IS AUTHORIZED TO GIVE ANY INFORMATION OR TO MAKE
ANY REPRESENTATIONS OTHER THAN THOSE CONTAINED IN THIS PROXY
STATEMENT. IF GIVEN OR MADE, SUCH INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATIONS
MAY NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED. THE DELIVERY
OF THIS PROXY STATEMENT SHALL, UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES, CREATE
ANY IMPLICATION THAT THERE HAS BEEN NO CHANGE IN THE AFFAIRS OF
THE CORPORATION SINCE THE DATE OF THIS PROXY STATEMENT.
Table of Contents
A proxy is your legal designation of another person, called a
proxy holder, to vote the shares that you own. We designated M.
Chad Crow, our Senior Vice President and Chief Financial
Officer, and Donald F. McAleenan, our Senior Vice President and
General Counsel, to act as proxy holders at the special meeting
as to all shares for which proxy cards are returned or voting
instructions are provided by internet or telephone.
A proxy statement is a document that Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) regulations require us to give you
when we ask you to provide a proxy (by voting by phone or
internet or, if applicable, by returning a proxy card)
designating the proxy holders described above to vote on your
behalf.
If your shares are registered in your name at our transfer
agent, BNY Mellon Shareowner Services, you are a stockholder of
record.
If your shares are registered at BNY Mellon Shareowner Services
in the name of a broker, bank, trustee, nominee, or other
similar stockholder of record on your behalf, your shares are
held in street name and you are the beneficial owner of the
shares.
Stockholders of Record. Stockholders of record
must bring a government-issued photo identification card to gain
admission to the special meeting.
Street Name Holders. To obtain admission to
the special meeting, a street name holder must (1) bring a
government-issued photo identification card and (2) ask his
or her broker or bank for a legal proxy and must bring that
legal proxy with him or her to the meeting. If you do not
receive the legal proxy in time, bring your most recent
brokerage statement with you to the meeting. We can use that to
verify your ownership of common stock and admit you to the
meeting. However, you will not be able to vote your shares at
the meeting without a legal proxy. Please note that if you own
shares in street name, and you are issued a legal proxy, any
previously executed proxy will be revoked, and your vote will
not be counted unless you appear at the meeting and vote in
person.
By Written Proxy. Stockholders who elect to
receive their proxy materials by mail may vote by mailing the
written proxy card.
By Telephone and Internet Proxy. All
stockholders of record may also vote by telephone from the U.S.,
using the toll-free telephone number provided on the proxy card
or by the internet, using the procedures and instructions
described on the proxy card. Street name holders may vote by
telephone or the internet if their bank, broker, or other
stockholder of record makes those methods available. If that is
the case, the bank, broker, or other stockholder of record will
enclose the instructions with the Proxy Statement or other
notice of the meeting. The telephone and internet voting
procedures, including the use of control numbers, are designed
to authenticate stockholders identities, allow
stockholders to vote their shares, and confirm that their
instructions have been properly recorded.
In Person. All stockholders may vote in person
at the meeting (unless they are street name holders without a
legal proxy, as described in question 4).
Table of Contents
The record date for the special meeting is December 14,
2009. The record date was established by the Board of Directors
as required by Delaware law. Stockholders of record at the close
of business on the record date are entitled to receive notice of
the special meeting and to vote their shares at the meeting.
You will be entitled to one vote for each outstanding share of
our common stock you own as of the record date. As of the record
date for the special meeting, there were 36,353,924 shares
of common stock outstanding and eligible to vote.
For the vote to approve Proposals (1) and (2), you may vote
FOR or AGAINST either or both
proposal(s) or you may abstain from voting with respect to
either or both proposal(s).
The approval of Proposals (1) and (2) will require the
affirmative vote of a majority of the shares represented and
entitled to vote at the special meeting. Accordingly,
abstentions will have the effect of a vote against
Proposals (1) and (2). The Board recommends a vote
FOR each of Proposals (1) and (2).
Consummation of the Recapitalization Transactions is dependent
on the approval of Proposal (1). Pursuant to the Investment
Agreement, each of JLL and Warburg Pincus has agreed to vote (or
cause to be voted) the shares of common stock owned by them in
favor of Proposal (1) at the special meeting.
Stockholders should specify their choice for each proposal
described on the proxy card, if they receive one. However, proxy
cards that are signed and returned will be voted FOR
proposals described in this Proxy Statement for which no
specific instructions are given.
When a broker returns a proxy or voting instructions, but has
not received voting instructions from its customer with respect
to any proposal and does not vote with respect to such proposal,
those shares will be counted as present for purposes of
determining the existence of a quorum but are not entitled to
vote, and therefore will not have an effect on the outcome of
such proposal.
No. If the rights offering is approved, you may exercise any
number of your rights, or you may choose not to exercise any
rights.
We intend to announce the preliminary voting results at the
special meeting and publish the final results in a Current
Report on
Form 8-K
following the meeting.
If you have other questions or need assistance, please contact
the information agent, BNY Mellon Shareowner Services at
(201) 680-6676 (collect) or
(800) 777-3674
(toll-free).
Table of Contents
This summary highlights information contained elsewhere in
this Proxy Statement. This summary may not contain all of the
information that you should consider before deciding whether or
not you should approve the proposals. You should read the entire
Proxy Statement carefully, including the section entitled
Risk Factors in our Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2008, which we refer to as
our 2008
10-K, and
all other information included in this Proxy Statement, the
appendices to this Proxy Statement, and the documents we refer
to in this Proxy Statement in their entirety before you decide
whether to approve the proposals. See Where You Can Find
More Information on page 66 of this Proxy
Statement.
Unless otherwise indicated, Builders FirstSource,
the Company, we, us, and
our refer to Builders FirstSource, Inc. and its
subsidiaries.
Builders FirstSource, Inc. is a leading supplier and
manufacturer of structural and related building products for
residential new construction. We have operations principally in
the southern and eastern United States with 55 distribution
centers and 51 manufacturing facilities, many of which are
located on the same premises as our distribution centers. We
have successfully acquired and integrated 27 companies
since our formation and are currently managed as three regional
operating groups Atlantic, Southeast, and Central
with centralized financial and operational
oversight. We compete in the professional segment of the
U.S. residential new construction building products supply
market. Because of the predominance of smaller privately owned
companies and the overall size and diversity of the target
customer market, the professional segment remains fragmented.
We serve a highly diversified customer base, ranging from
production homebuilders to small custom homebuilders. For the
year ended December 31, 2008 and the nine months ended
September 30, 2009, our top 10 customers accounted for
approximately 19.0% and 21.3% of sales, respectively. We believe
we have a diverse geographical footprint, in 32 markets in
9 states. We offer an integrated solution to our customers
providing manufacturing, supply, and installation of a full
range of structural and related building products. We group our
building products and services into five product categories:
prefabricated components, windows and doors, lumber and lumber
sheet goods, millwork, and other building products and services.
In addition to our full range of construction services, we offer
a comprehensive offering of products that includes approximately
60,000 stock keeping units.
We are incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware. Our
principal executive offices are located at 2001 Bryan Street,
Suite 1600, Dallas, Texas 75201, and our telephone number
is
(214) 880-3500.
Our website is www.bldr.com. The information on our
website does not constitute part of this Proxy Statement and
should not be relied upon in connection with making any
investment in our securities.
The Recapitalization Transactions have the following components:
Table of Contents
As part of the Recapitalization Transactions, we have entered
into the Investment Agreement with JLL and Warburg Pincus, who
collectively beneficially own approximately 50% of our common
stock, before giving effect to the Recapitalization
Transactions, under which JLL and Warburg Pincus have severally
agreed to purchase from us, at the rights offering subscription
price, unsubscribed shares of common stock such that gross
proceeds of the rights offering will be no less than
$75.0 million. In addition, each of JLL and Warburg Pincus
has agreed (i) to exchange up to $48.909 million
aggregate principal amount of 2012 notes indirectly held by it
in the debt exchange and (ii) to the extent gross proceeds
of the rights offering are less than $205.0 million, to
exchange such 2012 notes for shares of our common stock at an
exchange price equal to the rights offering subscription price,
subject to proration from the participation of other holders of
2012 notes who submit for exchange their 2012 notes for shares
of our common stock not subscribed for through the exercise of
rights in the rights offering. As stockholders of the Company as
of the record date, JLL and Warburg Pincus will have the right
to subscribe for and purchase shares of our common stock under
the basic subscription privilege, although they will not have
the right to participate in the over-subscription privilege. The
purchase of any shares by JLL and Warburg Pincus, whether
pursuant to the Investment Agreement or upon exercise of rights,
would be effected in a transaction exempt from the registration
requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and,
accordingly, would not be registered pursuant to the
Registration Statement on
Form S-3
that we have filed related to the rights offering. Each of JLL
and Warburg Pincus has agreed to vote (or cause to be voted) the
shares of common stock owned by them in favor of Proposal
(1) described in this Proxy Statement at the special
meeting.
We have also entered into the Support Agreement with certain
accredited holders of approximately 61.0% of the aggregate
principal amount of our outstanding 2012 notes, under which such
noteholders have agreed to exchange their 2012 notes in the debt
exchange and to deliver consents to the proposed amendments to
the indenture governing the 2012 notes.
Pursuant to the Support Agreement, holders of approximately
94.67% of the aggregate principal amount of our outstanding 2012
notes held by holders other than JLL and Warburg Pincus have
agreed to deliver consents to the proposed amendments to the
indenture governing the 2012 notes, and pursuant to the Support
Agreement and Investment Agreement, as of December 14,
2009, holders of approximately 96.56% of the aggregate principal
amount of the 2012 notes have agreed to exchange their 2012
notes in the debt exchange.
We intend to commence the rights offering on or about
December 15, 2009, and the rights offering is scheduled to
expire on January 14, 2010, unless extended by the special
committee of our Board of Directors; provided that, pursuant to
the Investment Agreement, the expiration date of the rights
offering may not be extended by more than ten days without the
prior written consent of JLL and Warburg Pincus.
Our Board of Directors recommends that you vote FOR
approval of the issuance of shares of our common stock pursuant
to Proposal (1) and FOR the proposal to amend
our 2007 Incentive Plan to increase the number of shares of
common stock available for grant pursuant to awards issued
thereunder and re-approve a list of qualified business criteria
for performance-based awards in order to preserve federal income
tax deductions pursuant to Proposal (2). In reaching its
determination that the Recapitalization Transactions are
Table of Contents
advisable and in the best interests of our Company and our
stockholders, our Board of Directors considered a number of
factors, including:
Neither our Board of Directors nor the special committee of
our Board of Directors has made, nor will they make, any
recommendation to stockholders regarding the exercise of rights
under the rights offering or to noteholders regarding the
exchange of 2012 notes in the debt exchange. Stockholders and
holders of 2012 notes should make an independent investment
decision about whether or not to exercise their rights or
exchange their 2012 notes.
Consummation of the Recapitalization Transactions is dependent
on the approval of Proposal (1). Pursuant to the Investment
Agreement each of JLL and Warburg Pincus has agreed to vote (or
cause to be voted) the shares of common stock owned by them in
favor of Proposal (1) at the special meeting.
JLL and Warburg Pincus, who collectively beneficially own
approximately 50% of our common stock, before giving effect to
the Recapitalization Transactions, own approximately 36%, or
approximately $98 million aggregate principal amount, of
our 2012 notes. Six of our ten directors hold positions with
affiliates of either JLL or Warburg Pincus. We have entered into
the Investment Agreement with JLL and Warburg Pincus, under
which JLL and Warburg Pincus have severally agreed to purchase
from us, at the rights offering subscription price, unsubscribed
shares of common stock such that gross proceeds of the rights
offering will be no less than $75.0 million. In addition,
each of JLL and Warburg Pincus has agreed (i) to exchange
up to $48.909 million aggregate principal amount of 2012
notes indirectly held by it in the debt exchange and,
(ii) to the extent gross proceeds of the rights offering
are less than $205.0 million, to exchange such 2012 notes
for shares of our common stock at an exchange price equal to the
rights offering subscription price, subject to proration from
the participation of other holders of 2012 notes who submit for
exchange their 2012 notes for shares of our common stock not
subscribed for through the exercise of rights in the rights
offering. See Proposal One: The Recapitalization
Transactions The Rights Offering The
Backstop Purchasers. JLLs and Warburg Pincus
obligations, collectively, under this commitment are limited to
$75.0 million in cash and
Table of Contents
the exchange of approximately $98 million aggregate
principal amount of the 2012 notes in the debt exchange. In the
event gross proceeds of the rights offering are less than
$205.0 million, JLL and Warburg Pincus will likely increase
their percentage ownership of our issued and outstanding common
stock.
BUILDERS
FIRSTSOURCE, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED
STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
(Unaudited
in thousands, except per share amounts)
The following selected consolidated financial data of the
Company, for each of the fiscal years in the three-year period
ended December 31, 2008, have been derived from our audited
consolidated financial statements. The following selected
consolidated financial data for each of the nine-month periods
ended September 30, 2008 and 2009, have been derived from
the Companys unaudited condensed consolidated financial
statements included in the Companys Quarterly Reports on
Form 10-Q
for the quarters ended September 30, 2008 and 2009 and are
not necessarily indicative of the results for the remainder of
the fiscal year or any future period. We believe that the
unaudited condensed consolidated financial data reflects all
normal and recurring adjustments necessary for a fair
presentation of the results for the interim periods presented.
This information is only a summary and should be read in
conjunction with financial statements and the notes thereto
incorporated by reference into this Proxy Statement and the
Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operations section contained in
our 2008
10-K, as
updated by our Current Report on
Form 8-K
filed on October 30, 2009, and our Quarterly Report on
Form 10-Q
for the quarter ended September 30, 2009, which we refer to
as our Third Quarter 2009
10-Q.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
You should carefully consider the specific risks described
below, the risks described in our 2008
10-K, which
are incorporated herein by reference, and any risks described in
our other filings with the SEC incorporated herein by reference,
before voting on the proposals. See the sections of this Proxy
Statement entitled Where You Can Find More
Information and Incorporation of Certain Information
by Reference. Any of the risks we describe below or in the
information incorporated herein by reference could cause our
business, financial condition, or operating results to suffer.
The market price of our common stock could decline if one or
more of these risks and uncertainties develop into actual
events. You could lose all or part of your investment.
Additional risks and uncertainties not currently known to us or
that we currently deem to be immaterial also may materially
adversely affect our business, financial condition, or operating
results. Some of the statements in this section of the Proxy
Statement are forward-looking statements. For more information
about forward-looking statements, please see the section of this
Proxy Statement entitled Forward-Looking
Statements.
Risks
Related to Our Business and Industry
The building products industry is highly dependent on new home
construction, which in turn is dependent upon a number of
factors, including interest rates, consumer confidence,
foreclosure rates, and the health of the economy and mortgage
markets. Unfavorable changes in demographics, credit markets,
consumer confidence, housing affordability, or inventory levels,
or weakening of the national economy or of any regional or local
economy in which we operate, could adversely affect consumer
spending, result in decreased demand for homes, and adversely
affect our business. Production of new homes may also decline
because of shortages of qualified tradesmen, reliance on
inadequately capitalized sub-contractors, and shortages of
material. In addition, the homebuilding industry is subject to
various local, state, and federal statutes, ordinances, rules,
and regulations concerning zoning, building design and safety,
construction, and similar matters, including regulations that
impose restrictive zoning and density requirements in order to
limit the number of homes that can be built within the
boundaries of a particular area. Increased regulatory
restrictions could limit demand for new homes and could
negatively affect our sales and earnings. Because we have
substantial fixed costs, relatively modest declines in our
customers production levels could continue to have a
significant adverse effect on our financial condition, operating
results and cash flows.
The homebuilding industry is undergoing a significant and
sustained downturn. According to the U.S. Census Bureau,
actual single family housing starts in the U.S. during 2008
declined 57.5% from 2006 to 2008 and declined 34.5% for the nine
months ended September 30, 2009 compared to the prior year
period. We believe that the market downturn is attributable to a
variety of factors including: an economic recession; limited
credit availability; excess home inventories; a substantial
reduction in speculative home investment; a decline in consumer
confidence; higher unemployment; and an industry-wide softening
of demand. The downturn in the homebuilding industry has
resulted in a substantial reduction in demand for our products
and services, which in turn had a significant adverse effect on
our business and operating results during fiscal 2007, 2008, and
2009 to date.
In addition, beginning in 2007, the mortgage markets experienced
substantial disruption due to increased defaults, primarily as a
result of credit quality deterioration. The disruption has
continued to date and has precipitated evolving changes in the
regulatory environment and reduced availability of mortgages for
potential homebuyers due to an illiquid credit market,
substantial declines in housing prices, and more restrictive
standards to qualify for mortgages. During 2008, the conditions
in the credit markets worsened and the economy fell into a
recession. In addition, the credit markets and the financial
services industry experienced a significant crisis characterized
by the bankruptcy or failure of various financial institutions
and severe limitations on credit availability. As a result, the
credit markets have become highly illiquid as financial and
lending institutions have severely restricted lending in order
to conserve cash and protect their balance sheets.
Table of Contents
Although Congress and applicable regulatory authorities have
enacted legislation and implemented programs designed to protect
financial institutions and free up the credit markets, it is
unclear whether these actions have been effective to date or
will be effective in the future. Mortgage financing and
commercial credit for homebuilders continues to be severely
constrained. As the housing industry is dependent upon the
economy as well as potential homebuyers access to mortgage
financing and homebuilders access to commercial credit, it
is likely there will be further damage to an already weak
housing industry until conditions in the economy and the credit
markets substantially improve.
We cannot predict the duration of the current market conditions,
or the timing or strength of a future recovery of housing
activity in our markets, if any. We also cannot provide any
assurances that the homebuilding industry will not weaken
further or that the operational strategies we have implemented
to address the current market conditions will be successful.
Continued weakness in the homebuilding industry would have a
significant adverse effect on our business, financial condition
and operating results.
During 2008, we recorded goodwill impairment charges of
$39.9 million in continuing operations related to our
Florida reporting unit and $4.0 million in discontinued
operations, net of tax, related to our Ohio reporting unit. We
also recorded in 2008 impairment charges related to long-lived
assets, other than goodwill, of $7.0 million in continuing
operations and $0.1 million in discontinued operations, net
of tax. During 2009, we recorded an impairment charge of
$0.5 million in continuing operations to reduce the
carrying value of a parcel of real estate being held for sale.
If the current weakness in the homebuilding industry continues,
we may need to take additional goodwill
and/or asset
impairment charges relating to certain of our reporting units.
Any such non-cash charges would have an adverse effect on our
financial results. In addition, in response to industry and
market conditions, we may have to close certain facilities in
under-performing markets, although we have no specific plans for
additional facility closures at this time. Any such facility
closures could have a significant adverse effect on our
financial condition, operating results, and cash flows.
We are substantially reliant on cash on hand and our
$250 million senior secured revolving credit facility to
provide working capital and fund our operations. Our inability
to renew or replace this facility when required or when business
conditions warrant could have a material adverse effect on our
business, financial condition, and results of operations. As of
September 30, 2009, our outstanding borrowings under this
facility were $20 million, and our net available borrowing
capacity in excess of our minimum liquidity covenant was $0. Our
inability to borrow additional funds under this facility to fund
our working capital requirements and our operations could have a
significant adverse effect on our financial condition, operating
results and cash flows. Current economic conditions and
conditions in the credit markets, the economic climate affecting
our industry, and the success of our Recapitalization
Transactions, as well as other factors, may constrain our
financing abilities. Our ability to secure additional financing,
if available, and to satisfy our financial obligations under
indebtedness outstanding from time to time will depend upon our
future operating performance, the availability of credit
generally, economic conditions, and financial, business, and
other factors, many of which are beyond our control. The
prolonged continuation or worsening of the current market and
macroeconomic conditions that affect our industry could require
us to seek additional capital and have a material adverse effect
on our ability to secure such capital on favorable terms, if at
all. In addition, there can be no assurance that, if the
Recapitalization Transactions are consummated, the additional
liquidity provided will be sufficient to fund our operations
until the housing market recovers.
We may be unable to secure additional financing or financing on
favorable terms or our operating cash flow may be insufficient
to satisfy our financial obligations under indebtedness
outstanding from time to time, including our 2012 notes, our
senior secured revolving credit facility, and the 2016 notes
being offered in the debt exchange. The indenture governing the
2016 notes, moreover, is expected to, among other restrictions,
reduce the amount of permitted indebtedness allowed the Company.
In addition, if financing is not available
Table of Contents
when needed, or is available on unfavorable terms, we may be
unable to take advantage of business opportunities or respond to
competitive pressures, any of which could have a material
adverse effect on our business, financial condition, and results
of operations. If additional funds are raised through the
issuance of additional equity or convertible debt securities,
our stockholders may experience significant dilution.
As of September 30, 2009, our funded debt was
$295.0 million, of which $20.0 million consisted of
outstanding borrowings under our senior secured revolving credit
facility and $275.0 million was indebtedness under our 2012
notes. In addition, we have significant obligations under
ongoing operating leases that are not reflected in our balance
sheet.
As of September 30, 2009, $295.0 million of our debt
was at a variable interest rate. If interest rates rise, our
interest expense would increase. However, our interest rate swap
contracts fix interest rates on a portion of our outstanding
long-term debt balances. Based on debt outstanding at
September 30, 2009, a 1% increase in interest rates would
result in approximately $1.0 million of additional interest
expense annually. In addition, the 2016 notes to be issued in
the debt exchange bear interest at a significantly higher
interest rate
(3-month
LIBOR (subject to a 3% floor) plus 10%) than the interest rate
under the 2012 notes
(3-month
LIBOR plus 4.25%).
Our substantial debt could have important consequences to us,
including:
In addition, some of our debt instruments, including those
governing our senior secured credit facility and our notes,
contain cross-default provisions that could result in our debt
being declared immediately due and payable under a number of
debt instruments, even if we default on only one debt
instrument. In such event, it is unlikely that we would be able
to satisfy our obligations under all of such accelerated
indebtedness simultaneously.
We may incur additional indebtedness under our senior secured
credit facility, which provides for up to $250.0 million of
revolving credit borrowings. Given the severe housing downturn,
we are currently substantially reliant on our cash on hand and
our credit facility to fund our operations. In addition, we may
be able to incur substantial additional indebtedness in the
future, including collateralized debt, subject to the
restrictions contained in the credit agreement governing our
senior secured credit facility, the indenture currently
governing our 2012 notes, and the proposed indenture that will
govern the 2016 notes. If new debt is added to our current debt
levels, the related risks that we now face could intensify.
Table of Contents
Our financing arrangements, including our senior secured
revolving credit facility and the indenture currently governing
our 2012 notes, contain, and the proposed indenture that will
govern the 2016 notes will contain, various provisions that
limit our ability to, among other things:
In addition, our senior secured revolving credit facility
requires us to meet a specified financial ratio. This financial
ratio is a fixed charge coverage ratio of 1:1 that is triggered
if our available borrowing capacity, as determined under the
borrowing base formula, is less than $35 million. The fixed
charge coverage ratio is defined as the ratio of earnings before
interest expenses, income taxes, depreciation, and amortization
expenses minus capital expenditures, cash taxes paid, dividends,
distributions and share repurchases or redemptions to the sum of
scheduled principal payments and interest expense on a trailing
12 month basis from the trigger date. These covenants may
restrict our ability to expand or fully pursue our business
strategies. Our ability to comply with these and other
provisions of the indenture governing our notes and the senior
secured revolving credit facility may be affected by changes in
our operating and financial performance, changes in general
business and economic conditions, adverse regulatory
developments, a change in control or other events beyond our
control. The breach of any of these covenants, including those
contained in our senior secured revolving credit facility, the
indenture governing our 2012 notes and the proposed indenture
that will govern our 2016 notes, could result in a default under
our indebtedness, which could cause those and other obligations
to become due and payable. If any of our indebtedness is
accelerated, we may not be able to repay it.
At September 30, 2009, our net available borrowing capacity
under our senior secured revolving credit facility in excess of
the $35 million liquidity covenant was zero due to a drop
in our eligible borrowing base coupled with lower seasonal
advance rates set forth under the credit agreement.
Approximately $4.3 million of cash on hand at
September 30, 2009 supported a short-fall in the
calculation of the $35 million minimum liquidity covenant
contained in the credit agreement. This covenant calculates as
eligible borrowing base less outstanding borrowings. The
resulting amount must exceed $35 million or we are required
to meet a fixed charge coverage ratio of 1:1, which we currently
would not meet. Further declines in our borrowing base, if any,
could compel us to either repay outstanding borrowings under the
senior secured revolving credit facility or increase cash on
deposit with the agent
Most of our facilities are located in leased premises. Many of
our current leases are non-cancelable and typically have terms
ranging from 5 to 15 years and most provide options to
renew for specified periods of time. We believe that leases we
enter into in the future will likely be long-term and
non-cancelable and have similar renewal options. If we close or
idle a facility, we generally remain committed to perform our
obligations under the applicable lease, which would include,
among other things, payment of the base rent for the balance of
the lease term. During 2007, 2008, and 2009, we closed or idled
a number of facilities for which we remain liable on the lease
obligations. Our obligation to continue making rental payments
in respect
Table of Contents
of leases for closed or idled facilities could have a material
adverse effect on our business and results of operations.
Alternatively, at the end of the lease term and any renewal
period for a facility, we may be unable to renew the lease
without substantial additional cost, if at all. If we are unable
to renew our facility leases, we may close or relocate a
facility, which could subject us to construction and other costs
and risks, and could have a material adverse effect on our
business and results of operations. For example, closing a
facility, even during the time of relocation, will reduce the
sales that the facility would have contributed to our revenues.
Additionally, the revenue and profit, if any, generated at a
relocated facility may not equal the revenue and profit
generated at the existing one.
We are a holding company that derives all of our operating
income from our subsidiaries. All of our assets are held by our
direct and indirect subsidiaries. We rely on the earnings and
cash flows of our subsidiaries, which are paid to us by our
subsidiaries in the form of dividends and other payments or
distributions, to meet our debt service obligations. The ability
of our subsidiaries to pay dividends or make other payments or
distributions to us will depend on their respective operating
results and may be restricted by, among other things, the laws
of their jurisdiction of organization (which may limit the
amount of funds available for the payment of dividends and other
distributions to us), the terms of existing and future
indebtedness and other agreements of our subsidiaries, the
senior secured revolving credit facility, the terms of the
indenture governing our 2012 notes, the terms of the proposed
indenture that will govern our 2016 notes, and the covenants of
any future outstanding indebtedness we or our subsidiaries incur.
Our financial condition and operating performance and that of
our subsidiaries is also subject to prevailing economic and
competitive conditions and to certain financial, business, and
other factors beyond our control. We cannot assure you that we
will maintain a level of cash flows from operating activities
sufficient to permit us to pay the principal, premium, and
interest on our indebtedness.
If our cash flows and capital resources are insufficient to fund
our debt service obligations, we may be forced to reduce or
delay capital expenditures, sell assets, seek additional
capital, or restructure or refinance our indebtedness. These
alternative measures may not be successful and may not permit us
to meet our scheduled debt service obligations. In the absence
of such operating results and resources, we could face
substantial liquidity problems and might be required to dispose
of material assets or operations to meet our debt service and
other obligations. The credit agreement governing our senior
secured revolving credit facility, the indenture governing the
2012 notes, without giving effect to the proposed amendments in
the consent solicitation, and the proposed indenture that will
govern our 2016 notes restrict our ability to dispose of assets
and use the proceeds from such disposition. We may not be able
to consummate those dispositions or be able to obtain the
proceeds that we could realize from them, and these proceeds may
not be adequate to meet any debt service obligations then due.
The building products supply industry is subject to cyclical
market pressures. Prices of building products are subject to
fluctuations arising from changes in supply and demand, national
and international economic conditions, labor costs, competition,
market speculation, government regulation, and trade policies,
as well as from periodic delays in the delivery of lumber and
other products. For example, prices of wood products, including
lumber and panel products, are subject to significant volatility
and directly affect our sales and earnings. In particular, low
market prices for wood products over a sustained period can
adversely affect our financial condition, operating results and
cash flows. For the nine months ended September 30, 2009,
average prices for lumber and lumber sheet goods were 16.2%
lower than the prior year. The current housing downturn has
resulted in a prolonged period of relatively low market prices
for wood products. Our lumber and lumber sheet goods product
category represented 23.9% of total sales for the nine months
ended September 30, 2009. We have no ability to control the
timing and amount of pricing changes for building products. In
addition, the supply of building products fluctuates based on
available manufacturing capacity. A shortage of capacity or
excess capacity in the industry can result in significant
increases or declines in market prices for those
Table of Contents
products, often within a short period of time. Such price
fluctuations can adversely affect our financial condition,
operating results and cash flows.
In addition, although weather patterns affect our operating
results throughout the year, adverse weather historically has
reduced construction activity in the first and fourth quarters
in our markets. To the extent that hurricanes, severe storms,
floods, other natural disasters, or similar events occur in the
markets in which we operate, our business may be adversely
affected. We anticipate that fluctuations from period to period
will continue in the future.
Our 10 largest customers generated approximately 19.0% and 21.3%
of our sales for the year ended December 31, 2008 and the
nine months ended September 30, 2009, respectively. We
cannot guarantee that we will maintain or improve our
relationships with these customers or that we will continue to
supply these customers at historical levels. Due to the current
housing downturn, many of our homebuilder customers have
substantially reduced construction activity. Some homebuilder
customers have exited or severely curtailed building activity in
certain of our markets. This trend is likely to continue until
there is a housing recovery in our markets. A continued housing
downturn could have a significant adverse effect on our
financial condition, operating results, and cash flows.
In addition to these factors, production homebuilders and other
customers may: (1) seek to purchase some of the products
that we currently sell directly from manufacturers,
(2) elect to establish their own building products
manufacturing and distribution facilities, or (3) give
advantages to manufacturing or distribution intermediaries in
which they have an economic stake. In addition, continued
consolidation among production homebuilders could also result in
a loss of some of our present customers to our competitors. The
loss of one or more of our significant customers or
deterioration in our relations with any of them could
significantly affect our financial condition, operating results
and cash flows. Furthermore, our customers are not required to
purchase any minimum amount of products from us. The contracts
into which we have entered with most of our professional
customers typically provide that we supply particular products
or services for a certain period of time when and if ordered by
the customer. Should our customers purchase our products in
significantly lower quantities than they have in the past, such
decreased purchases could have a material adverse effect on our
financial condition, operating results, and cash flows.
The building products supply industry is highly fragmented and
competitive. We face significant competition from local and
regional building materials chains, as well as from
privately-owned single site enterprises. Any of these
competitors may (1) foresee the course of market
development more accurately than do we, (2) develop
products that are superior to our products, (3) have the
ability to produce similar products at a lower cost,
(4) develop stronger relationships with local homebuilders,
or (5) adapt more quickly to new technologies or evolving
customer requirements than do we. As a result, we may not be
able to compete successfully with them. In addition, home center
retailers, which have historically concentrated their sales
efforts on retail consumers and small contractors, may in the
future intensify their marketing efforts to professional
homebuilders. Furthermore, certain product manufacturers sell
and distribute their products directly to production
homebuilders. The volume of such direct sales could increase in
the future. Additionally, manufacturers of products distributed
by us may elect to sell and distribute directly to homebuilders
in the future or enter into exclusive supplier arrangements with
other distributors. Consolidation of production homebuilders may
result in increased competition for their business. Finally, we
may not be able to maintain our operating costs or product
prices at a level sufficiently low for us to compete
effectively. If we are unable to compete effectively, our
financial condition, operating results, and cash flows may be
adversely affected.
Table of Contents
Production homebuilders historically have exerted significant
pressure on their outside suppliers to keep prices low because
of their market share and their ability to leverage such market
share in the highly fragmented building products supply
industry. The current housing industry downturn has resulted in
significantly increased pricing pressures from production
homebuilders and other customers. In addition, continued
consolidation among production homebuilders, and changes in
production homebuilders purchasing policies or payment
practices, could result in additional pricing pressure. If we
are unable to generate sufficient cost savings to offset any
price reductions, our financial condition, operating results and
cash flows may be adversely affected. In addition, as a result
of the housing downturn, several of our homebuilder customers
have defaulted on amounts owed to us, or their payable days have
become extended as a result of their financial condition. Such
payment failures or delays may significantly adversely affect
our financial condition, operating results, and cash flows.
JLL and Warburg Pincus control Building Products, LLC, which
owns approximately 50% of our outstanding common stock. Six of
our ten directors hold positions with affiliates of either
JLL or Warburg Pincus. Accordingly, JLL and Warburg Pincus have
significant influence over our management and affairs and over
all matters requiring stockholder approval, including the
election of directors and significant corporate transactions,
such as a merger or other sale of our Company or its assets. In
addition, beneficial ownership of our common stock by JLL and
Warburg Pincus could increase significantly as a result of the
Recapitalization Transactions. This concentrated ownership
position limits other stockholders ability to influence
corporate matters and, as a result, we may take actions that
some of our stockholders do not view as beneficial.
Additionally, JLL and Warburg Pincus are in the business of
making investments in companies and may, from time to time,
acquire and hold interests in businesses that compete directly
or indirectly with us. These entities may also pursue, for their
own accounts, acquisition opportunities that may be
complementary to our business, and, as a result, those
acquisition opportunities may not be available to us. Further,
certain provisions of our amended and restated certificate of
incorporation and amended and restated bylaws may limit your
ability to influence corporate matters, and, as a result, we may
take actions that some of our stockholders do not view as
beneficial.
Our
continued success will depend on our ability to retain our key
employees and to attract and retain new qualified
employees.
Our success depends in part on our ability to attract, hire,
train, and retain qualified managerial, sales, and marketing
personnel. We face significant competition for these types of
employees in our industry and from other industries. We may be
unsuccessful in attracting and retaining the personnel we
require to conduct and expand our operations successfully. In
addition, key personnel may leave us and compete against us. Our
success also depends to a significant extent on the continued
service of our senior management team. We may be unsuccessful in
replacing key managers who either quit or retire. The loss of
any member of our senior management team or other experienced,
senior employees could impair our ability to execute our
business plan, cause us to lose customers and reduce our net
sales, or lead to employee morale problems
and/or the
loss of other key employees. In any such event, our financial
condition, operating results, and cash flows could be adversely
affected.
We are involved in product liability and product warranty claims
relating to the products we manufacture and distribute that, if
adversely determined, could adversely affect our financial
condition, operating results, and cash flows. We rely on
manufacturers and other suppliers to provide us with many of the
products we sell and distribute. Because we do not have direct
control over the quality of such products manufactured or
supplied by such third-party suppliers, we are exposed to risks
relating to the quality of such products. In
Table of Contents
addition, we are exposed to potential claims arising from the
conduct of homebuilders and their subcontractors, for which we
may be contractually liable. Although we currently maintain what
we believe to be suitable and adequate insurance in excess of
our self-insured amounts, there can be no assurance that we will
be able to maintain such insurance on acceptable terms or that
such insurance will provide adequate protection against
potential liabilities. Product liability claims can be expensive
to defend and can divert the attention of management and other
personnel for significant periods, regardless of the ultimate
outcome. Claims of this nature could also have a negative impact
on customer confidence in our products and our Company. In
addition, we are involved on an ongoing basis in other types of
legal proceedings. We cannot assure you that any current or
future claims will not adversely affect our financial condition,
operating results, and cash flows.
Our ability to offer a wide variety of products to our customers
is dependent upon our ability to obtain adequate product supply
from manufacturers and other suppliers. Generally, our products
are obtainable from various sources and in sufficient
quantities. However, the loss of, or a substantial decrease in
the availability of, products from our suppliers or the loss of
key supplier arrangements could adversely impact our financial
condition, operating results, and cash flows.
Although in many instances we have agreements with our
suppliers, these agreements are generally terminable by either
party on limited notice. Failure by our suppliers to continue to
supply us with products on commercially reasonable terms, or at
all, could put pressure on our operating margins or have a
material adverse effect on our financial condition, operating
results, and cash flows. Short-term changes in the cost of these
materials, some of which are subject to significant
fluctuations, are sometimes, but not always, passed on to our
customers. Our delayed ability to pass on material price
increases to our customers could adversely impact our financial
condition, operating results, and cash flows.
We have historically experienced, and in the future will
continue to experience, variability in revenues and earnings on
a quarterly basis. The factors expected to contribute to this
variability include, among others: (1) the volatility of
prices of lumber and wood products, (2) the cyclical nature
of the homebuilding industry, (3) general economic
conditions in the various local markets in which we compete,
(4) the pricing policies of our competitors, (5) the
production schedules of our customers, and (6) the effects
of the weather. These factors, among others, make it difficult
to project our operating results on a consistent basis, which
may affect the price of our stock.
Our operations are dependent upon our information technology
systems, which encompass all of our major business functions.
Our primary enterprise resource planning (ERP)
system, which we use for operations representing approximately
97% of our sales, is a proprietary system that has been highly
customized by our computer programmers. Our centralized
financial reporting system currently draws data from our ERP
systems. We rely upon such information technology systems to
manage and replenish inventory, to fill and ship customer orders
on a timely basis, and to coordinate our sales activities across
all of our products and services. A substantial disruption in
our information technology systems for any prolonged time period
(arising from, for example, system capacity limits from
unexpected increases in our volume of business, outages, or
delays in our service) could result in delays in receiving
inventory and supplies or filling customer orders and adversely
affect our customer service and relationships. Our systems might
be damaged or interrupted by natural or man-made events or by
computer viruses, physical or electronic break-ins, or similar
disruptions affecting the global Internet. As part of our
continuing integration of our computer systems, we plan to
integrate our ERPs into a single system. This integration may
divert managements attention from our core businesses. In
addition, we may experience delays in such integration or
problems with the functionality of the integrated system, which
could increase the expected cost of the integration. There can
be no assurance
Table of Contents
that such delays, problems, or costs will not have a material
adverse effect on our financial condition, operating results and
cash flows.
We currently maintain a broad network of distribution and
manufacturing facilities throughout the southern and eastern
U.S. Any serious disruption to our facilities resulting
from fire, earthquake, weather-related events, an act of
terrorism, or any other cause could damage a significant portion
of our inventory and could materially impair our ability to
distribute our products to customers. Moreover, we could incur
significantly higher costs and longer lead times associated with
distributing our products to our customers during the time that
it takes for us to reopen or replace a damaged facility. In
addition, any shortages of fuel or significant fuel cost
increases could seriously disrupt our ability to distribute
products to our customers. If any of these events were to occur,
our financial condition, operating results, and cash flows could
be materially adversely affected.
Our strategy depends in part on growing our sales of
prefabricated components and other value-added products and
increasing our market share. If any of these initiatives are not
successful, or require extensive investment, our growth may be
limited, and we may be unable to achieve or maintain expected
levels of growth and profitability.
Our long-term business plan also provides for continued growth
through strategic acquisitions and organic growth through the
construction of new facilities or the expansion of existing
facilities. Failure to identify and acquire suitable acquisition
candidates on appropriate terms could have a material adverse
effect on our growth strategy. Moreover, a significant change in
our business, the economy, or the housing market, an unexpected
decrease in our cash flow for any reason, or the requirements of
our senior secured revolving credit facility, the indenture
governing the 2012 notes, or the proposed indenture that will
govern the 2016 notes could result in an inability to obtain the
capital required to effect new acquisitions or expansions of
existing facilities. Our failure to make successful acquisitions
or to build or expand facilities, including manufacturing
facilities, produce saleable product, or meet customer demand in
a timely manner could result in damage to or loss of customer
relationships, which could adversely affect our financial
condition, operating results, and cash flows. In addition,
although we have been successful in the past in integrating 27
acquisitions, we may not be able to integrate the operations of
future acquired businesses with our own in an efficient and
cost-effective manner or without significant disruption to our
existing operations. Acquisitions, moreover, involve significant
risks and uncertainties, including difficulties integrating
acquired personnel and corporate cultures into our business, the
potential loss of key employees, customers or suppliers,
difficulties in integrating different computer and accounting
systems, exposure to unforeseen liabilities of acquired
companies, and the diversion of management attention and
resources from existing operations. We may be unable to
successfully complete potential acquisitions due to multiple
factors, such as issues related to regulatory review of the
proposed transactions. We may also be required to incur
additional debt in order to consummate acquisitions in the
future, which debt may be substantial and may limit our
flexibility in using our cash flow from operations. Our failure
to integrate future acquired businesses effectively or to manage
other consequences of our acquisitions, including increased
indebtedness, could prevent us from remaining competitive and,
ultimately, could adversely affect our financial condition,
operating results, and cash flows.
We are subject to various federal, state, local, and other
regulations, including, among other things, regulations
promulgated by the Department of Transportation and applicable
to our fleet of delivery trucks, work safety regulations
promulgated by the Department of Labors Occupational
Safety and Health
Table of Contents
Administration, employment regulations promulgated by the United
States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, accounting
standards issued by the Financial Accounting Standards Board or
similar entities, and state and local zoning restrictions and
building codes. More burdensome regulatory requirements in these
or other areas may increase our general and administrative costs
and adversely affect our financial condition, operating results,
and cash flows. Moreover, failure to comply with the regulatory
requirements applicable to our business could expose us to
substantial penalties that could adversely affect our financial
condition, operating results and cash flows.
We are subject to various federal, state, and local
environmental laws, ordinances, and regulations. Although we
believe that our facilities are in material compliance with such
laws, ordinances, and regulations, as owners and lessees of real
property, we can be held liable for the investigation or
remediation of contamination on such properties, in some
circumstances, without regard to whether we knew of or were
responsible for such contamination. No assurance can be provided
that remediation may not be required in the future as a result
of spills or releases of petroleum products or hazardous
substances, the discovery of unknown environmental conditions,
or more stringent standards regarding existing residual
contamination. More burdensome environmental regulatory
requirements may increase our general and administrative costs
and adversely affect our financial condition, operating results,
and cash flows.
Instability in the economy and financial markets, including as a
result of terrorism and the war in the Middle East and
Afghanistan, may result in a decrease in housing starts, which
would adversely affect our business. In addition, the war,
related setbacks or adverse developments, including a
retaliatory military strike or terrorist attack, may cause
unpredictable or unfavorable economic conditions and could have
a material adverse effect on our financial condition, operating
results, and cash flows. In addition, any shortages of fuel or
significant fuel cost increases related to geopolitical
conditions could seriously disrupt our ability to distribute
products to our customers. Terrorist attacks similar to the ones
committed on September 11, 2001, may directly affect our
ability to keep our operations and services functioning properly
and could have a material adverse effect on our financial
condition, operating results, and cash flows.
Risks
Related to our Common Stock, the Rights Offering and the Debt
Exchange
The market price of our common stock historically has
experienced and may continue to experience significant price
fluctuations similar to those experienced by the broader stock
market in recent years. In addition, the price of our common
stock may fluctuate significantly in response to various
factors, including:
Table of Contents
Broad market and industry factors may materially harm the market
price of our common stock, regardless of our operating
performance. In the past, following periods of volatility in the
market price of a companys securities, securities class
action litigation has often been instituted against that
company. If we were involved in any similar litigation we could
incur substantial costs and our managements attention and
resources could be diverted, which could adversely impact our
financial condition, results of operations and cash flows. As a
result, it may be difficult for you to resell your shares of
common stock in the future.
If the closing of the Recapitalization Transactions is delayed,
or if the Recapitalization Transactions are not consummated, our
liquidity position may be constricted and we may be unable to
reduce or refinance our existing indebtedness when it becomes
due. In addition, we will have incurred significant costs,
including the diversion of management resources, from which we
will have received little or no benefit. Moreover, we may
experience negative reactions from the financial markets and
from our suppliers, customers, and employees. Each of these
factors may adversely affect the trading price of our common
stock and financial results and operations. There can also be no
assurance that if the recapitalization transactions are
consummated, the additional liquidity provided will be
sufficient to fund our operations until the housing market
recovers.
Any
outstanding 2012 notes not exchanged in the debt exchange will
remain outstanding, and, if we cannot extend the maturity of
such 2012 notes, we may be required to redeem them before their
maturity date; failure to do so will result in an earlier
maturity for our senior secured revolving credit
facility.
Any outstanding 2012 notes not exchanged in the debt exchange
will remain outstanding and continue to be indebtedness of the
Company. While the outside maturity date of our senior secured
revolving credit facility is December 14, 2012, if by
November 11, 2011 the 2012 notes have not been paid in full
(or otherwise cease to be outstanding), or if the maturity date
of the 2012 notes that remain outstanding has not been extended
to a date no earlier than March 14, 2013, the senior
secured revolving credit facility maturity date will be
November 11, 2011. As a result, in order to prevent the
obligations under our senior secured revolving credit facility
from becoming due and payable (and to prevent the facility from
terminating) on November 11, 2011, we will likely seek to
redeem or extend the maturity date of the 2012 notes that remain
outstanding following the completion of the Recapitalization
Transactions. However, there can be no assurance that we will
satisfy the applicable tests under the senior secured revolving
credit facility in order to redeem the 2012 notes that remain
outstanding, that we will have sufficient cash available to
redeem the outstanding 2012 notes or that we will be able to
obtain such an extension on favorable terms or at all. Moreover,
any such redemption would negatively affect our liquidity and
may require us to seek additional financing, which we may not be
able to obtain on favorable terms, if at all. Should we be
unable to extend the maturity date of outstanding 2012 notes not
exchanged in the debt exchange, or should we fail to redeem such
2012 notes prior to November 11, 2011, all outstanding
principal and interest under our senior secured revolving credit
facility would become due and payable and our financial
condition, operating results, and cash flows may be adversely
affected.
Several lawsuits related to the Recapitalization Transactions
were filed in September 2009 and have been consolidated into one
action in the Delaware Court of Chancery. On November 5,
2009, the parties entered into a definitive Stipulation and
Agreement of Compromise, Settlement, and Release with respect to
the
Table of Contents
settlement of this consolidated litigation. Court approval of
such settlement is a condition to the completion of the rights
offering. If the parties to the stipulation do not receive the
approval of the Delaware Court of Chancery to the proposed
settlement prior to the closing of the Recapitalization
Transactions, the Company, JLL, and Warburg Pincus would have to
waive the closing condition related to the settlement of the
stockholder class and derivative litigation to complete the
Recapitalization Transactions. The failure to receive court
approval of the settlement could lead to protracted litigation
that we intend to defend vigorously, would be expensive and
could have an adverse effect on our financial condition,
operating results, and cash flows.
If you do not exercise any rights in the rights offering, the
number of shares of our common stock that you own will not
change. However, because 58,571,428 shares of our common
stock will be issued if the Recapitalization Transactions are
completed, if you do not exercise your rights in full, your
percentage ownership will be diluted after completion of the
rights offering and the debt exchange.
If the
rights offering is not fully subscribed, JLL and Warburg Pincus
may increase their ownership.
We have entered into the Investment Agreement with JLL and
Warburg Pincus, under which JLL and Warburg Pincus have
severally agreed to purchase from us, at the subscription price,
unsubscribed shares of common stock such that gross proceeds of
the rights offering will be no less than $75.0 million. In
addition, each of JLL and Warburg Pincus has agreed (i) to
exchange up to $48.909 million aggregate principal amount
of 2012 notes indirectly held by it in the debt exchange and
(ii) to the extent gross proceeds of the rights offering
are less than $205.0 million, to exchange such 2012 notes
for shares of our common stock at an exchange price equal to the
rights offering subscription price, subject to proration from
the participation of other holders of 2012 notes who submit for
exchange their 2012 notes for shares of our common stock not
subscribed for through the exercise of rights in the rights
offering. The other participants in the debt exchange will also
be permitted to submit for exchange, to the extent of the
exchange deficiency, 2012 notes held by them for shares of our
common stock, in lieu of 2016 notes and cash, at an exchange
price equal to the rights offering subscription price.
On the record date for the rights offering, JLL beneficially
owned approximately 24.6% of our outstanding common stock, and
Warburg Pincus beneficially owned approximately 24.9% of our
outstanding common stock. As stockholders of the Company as of
the record date, JLL and Warburg Pincus will have the right to
subscribe for and purchase shares of our common stock under the
basic subscription privilege of the rights offering, although
they will not have the right to participate in the
over-subscription privilege. If JLL and Warburg Pincus are the
only holders of rights who exercise their rights in the rights
offering and JLL and Warburg Pincus each exchange
$48.909 million aggregate principal amount of 2012 notes
for common stock, the Company will issue an aggregate of
28,397,849 and 28,563,541 shares of common stock to JLL and
Warburg Pincus, respectively, and 1,610,038 shares of
common stock to the other 2012 noteholders participating in the
debt exchange. Under such circumstances, JLLs ownership
percentage of our outstanding common stock would increase to
approximately 39.3%, and Warburg Pincus ownership
percentage of our outstanding common stock would increase to
approximately 39.6%, in each case after giving effect to this
rights offering and the debt exchange. As a result, JLL and
Warburg Pincus would be able to exercise substantial control
over matters requiring stockholder approval. Your interests as a
holder of common stock may differ from the interests of JLL and
Warburg Pincus.
The special committee of our board of directors determined the
subscription price after considering, among other things, (i)
the opinion delivered to the special committee of our board of
directors by its financial advisor, Moelis & Company LLC,
that the financial terms of the rights offering are fair from a
financial point of view to our stockholders, other than JLL and
Warburg Pincus, taken as a whole; (ii) the likely cost of
capital from other sources and the price at which our
stockholders might be willing to participate in the rights
Table of Contents
offering; (iii) the price at which JLL and Warburg Pincus would
be willing to backstop a portion of the rights offering and
exchange their 2012 notes for common stock in the debt exchange;
and (iv) the price at which certain holders of our 2012 notes
would be willing to participate in the debt exchange. The
subscription price for a subscription right is $3.50 per share.
The subscription price is not intended to bear any relationship
to the book value of our assets or our past operations, cash
flows, losses, financial condition, net worth, or any other
established criteria used to value securities. You should not
consider the subscription price to be an indication of the fair
value of the common stock to be offered in the rights offering.
After the date of this Proxy Statement, our common stock may
trade at prices above or below the subscription price.
Table of Contents
This Proxy Statement includes or incorporates
forward-looking statements, within the meaning of
Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended and
Section 21E of the Exchange Act, regarding, among other
things, our financial condition and business strategy. We based
these forward-looking statements on our current expectations and
projections about future events. All statements, other than
statements of historical facts, included in this Proxy
Statement, including, without limitation, statements under the
headings Summary and Risk Factors and
located elsewhere in this Proxy Statement, regarding the
prospects of our industry and our prospects, plans, financial
position, and business strategy may constitute forward-looking
statements. In addition, forward-looking statements generally
can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such
as may, expect, intend,
estimate, anticipate, plan,
foresee, believe, or
continue, or the negatives of these terms or
variations of them or similar terminology. Although we believe
that the expectations reflected in these forward-looking
statements are reasonable, we can give no assurance that these
expectations will prove to be correct. Important factors that
could cause actual results to differ materially from our
expectations are disclosed in this Proxy Statement, including in
conjunction with the forward-looking statements included in this
Proxy Statement and under Risk Factors. These
forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this
Proxy Statement. We will not update these statements except as
may be required by applicable securities laws. Factors, risks,
and uncertainties that could cause actual outcomes and results
to be materially different from those projected include, among
others:
Table of Contents
Consummation of the Recapitalization Transactions requires
stockholder approval of Proposal (1). If Proposal (1) is
not approved by our stockholders at the special meeting, then we
can not consummate the Recapitalization Transactions and
Proposal (2) in this Proxy Statement will not become
effective.
The severity and duration of the downturn in the homebuilding
industry has presented significant challenges to our business.
Our revenues have declined from approximately $2.2 billion
for the year ended December 31, 2006, to approximately
$1.0 billion for the year ended December 31, 2008,
with further declines expected in 2009. Despite the efforts of
our management to reduce our costs, our operating results have
continued to deteriorate and our liquidity has decreased and is
becoming constrained. In light of these conditions, our Board of
Directors determined that certain recapitalization transactions,
involving a common stock rights offering and a debt exchange,
would be in the best interests of our Company and its
stockholders. The proposed transactions would (i) provide
the Company with significant additional liquidity to fund
operations, (ii) deleverage our balance sheet, and
(iii) extend the maturity of our outstanding indebtedness
in order to provide us with additional time to recover from the
current industry downturn. Pursuant to the recapitalization
transactions:
Our goal is to improve our financial flexibility through the
rights offering and debt exchange. Upon completion of the
Recapitalization Transactions, the Company will receive
$75.0 million for general corporate purposes and to pay the
expenses of the Recapitalization Transactions, with any
remaining proceeds of the rights offering being used to
repurchase a portion of our outstanding 2012 notes in the debt
exchange. We will reduce outstanding indebtedness by
$130.0 million through the debt exchange.
In connection with the Recapitalization Transactions, we have
entered into the Investment Agreement with JLL and Warburg
Pincus, who collectively beneficially own approximately 50% of
our common stock, before giving effect to the Recapitalization
Transactions, under which JLL and Warburg Pincus have severally
agreed to purchase from us, at the rights offering subscription
price, unsubscribed shares of common stock
Table of Contents
such that gross proceeds of the rights offering will be no less
than $75.0 million. In addition, each of JLL and Warburg
Pincus has agreed (i) to exchange up to
$48.909 million aggregate principal amount of 2012 notes
indirectly held by it in the debt exchange and (ii) to the
extent gross proceeds of the rights offering are less than
$205.0 million, to exchange such 2012 notes for shares of
our common stock at an exchange price equal to the rights
offering subscription price, subject to proration from the
participation of other holders of 2012 notes who submit for
exchange their 2012 notes for shares of our common stock not
subscribed for through the exercise of rights in the rights
offering.
Pursuant to the Support Agreement, holders of approximately
94.67% of the aggregate principal amount of our outstanding 2012
notes held by holders other than JLL and Warburg Pincus have
agreed to consent to the proposed amendments to the indenture
governing the 2012 notes, and pursuant to the Support Agreement
and Investment Agreement, as of December 14, 2009, holders
of approximately 96.56% of the aggregate principal amount of the
2012 notes have agreed to exchange their 2012 notes in the debt
exchange.
We intend to commence the rights offering on or about
December 15, 2009. The rights offering is scheduled to
expire on January 14, 2010, unless extended by the special
committee of our Board of Directors, provided that, pursuant to
the Investment Agreement, the expiration date of the rights
offering may not be extended by more than ten days without the
prior written consent of JLL and Warburg Pincus.
We intend to close the Recapitalization Transactions at
10:00 a.m., Eastern Time, on the fourth (4th) business day
following the later of (i) the expiration date of the
rights offering and (ii) the satisfaction of the conditions
to the rights offering and debt exchange (or waiver thereof by
the party or parties entitled to waive such conditions), or such
other time as shall be agreed upon by the Company and JLL and
Warburg Pincus.
The completion of the Recapitalization Transactions is
conditioned on our stockholders approving Proposal
(1) at the special meeting of stockholders. This proposal
is discussed in greater detail in this Proxy Statement. If
Proposal (1) is not approved by our stockholders at the
special meeting, then we can not consummate the Recapitalization
Transactions and Proposal (2) in this Proxy Statement will
not become effective.
There are no appraisal rights provided to dissenting
stockholders under our amended and restated certificate of
incorporation or the laws of the State of Delaware in connection
with the proposals being voted upon at the special meeting.
Background
of the Recapitalization Transactions
The severity and duration of the downturn in the homebuilding
industry has presented significant challenges to our business.
Our revenues have declined from approximately $2.2 billion
for the year ended December 31, 2006, to approximately
$1.0 billion for the year ended December 31, 2008,
with further declines expected in 2009. Despite the efforts of
our management to reduce our costs, our operating results have
continued to deteriorate and our liquidity has decreased and is
becoming constrained. In light of these conditions, our Board of
Directors determined that certain recapitalization transactions
involving a common stock rights offering and a debt exchange
would be in the best interests of our Company and its
stockholders. The proposed transactions would (i) provide
us with significant additional liquidity to fund operations,
(ii) deleverage our balance sheet, and (iii) extend the
maturity of our outstanding indebtedness in order to provide us
with additional time to recover from the current industry
downturn.
Formation
of the Special Committee of our Board of Directors
At a meeting of our Board of Directors held on August 31,
2009, JLL and Warburg Pincus delivered a written proposal (the
Initial Proposal) to the Company for a
recapitalization transaction that called for an exchange of the
Companys outstanding $275.0 million aggregate
principal amount of 2012 notes for new notes and common stock
and a $75.0 million common stock rights offering at a
subscription price of $2.00 per share that would be backstopped
by JLL and Warburg Pincus.
Table of Contents
At that same meeting, our Board of Directors established a
special committee of independent directors (the Special
Committee), consisting of Robert C. Griffin, Cleveland A.
Christophe and Craig A. Steinke, to review and evaluate the
Initial Proposal from JLL and Warburg Pincus and consider any
alternative transactions. Mr. Griffin was appointed Chair
of the Special Committee. Messrs. Griffin, Christophe and
Steinke were specifically selected because of their independence.
Later that same day, the Special Committee held its first
meeting and retained Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell,
LLP as its Delaware counsel and Alston & Bird LLP as
its securities counsel. At this meeting, the Special Committee
discussed the retention of a financial advisor.
On September 1, 2009, the Company publicly announced that
it had received the Initial Proposal and that it had formed the
Special Committee of independent directors to evaluate the
Initial Proposal.
The Special Committee interviewed four investment banking firms
to select a financial advisor. Following these interviews, the
Special Committee selected Moelis & Company LLC
(Moelis) as its financial advisor because of its
expertise and experience in financial restructurings and its
knowledge of the building products industry. On
September 5, 2009, the Special Committee entered into an
engagement letter with Moelis.
Over the next three weeks, at the direction of the Special
Committee, Moelis met with the Companys management to
discuss the Companys business, capital structure and
liquidity needs. Moelis also analyzed the Companys capital
needs based on the Companys current and projected
liquidity needs and independently compiled industry information
and analyses. Moelis also analyzed comparable pricing models for
the proposed rights offering. In addition, Moelis explored
alternatives to the Initial Proposal, including by contacting 82
individual parties about a potential capital raising
transaction. Only one of those parties entered into a
confidentiality agreement and none made a formal expression of
interest concerning an alternative transaction.
The Special Committee met on September 11, 2009 and
September 18, 2009 to receive updates from Moelis on its
analyses and to review the status of its process for exploring
alternatives to the Initial Proposal.
During the week of September 18, 2009, representatives of
the Special Committee met with representatives of various
stockholders to hear their concerns regarding the Initial
Proposal.
Between September 10, 2009 and September 15, 2009,
four lawsuits were filed in the Delaware Court of Chancery
challenging aspects of the Initial Proposal. On
September 18, 2009, these suits were consolidated into a
single action. A fifth lawsuit challenging aspects of the
Initial Proposal was filed in the Delaware Court of Chancery on
September 30, 2009 and was consolidated with the earlier
filed lawsuits on October 30, 2009.
On September 24, 2009, the Special Committee met and
received Moelis analysis and conclusions concerning the
Companys capital needs and the Initial Proposal.
On the evening of September 26, 2009, the Special Committee
met telephonically to review Moelis analysis and
conclusions. Having considered the analyses provided by Moelis,
the Special Committee members unanimously agreed that they could
not recommend the Initial Proposal. However, the Special
Committee also concluded that, given the Companys need for
additional capital, it would propose to the Board of Directors a
stand-alone rights offering on more favorable terms or that some
other capital-raising alternative be pursued. The Special
Committee authorized Moelis to communicate these points to JLL
and Warburg Pincus, through their financial advisor Evercore
Partners (Evercore).
During the week of September 28, 2009, Moelis and Evercore
met several times to discuss the Special Committees
conclusions and the data and analysis that formed the basis for
those conclusions. Also during that week, the Special Committee
requested that a Board of Directors meeting be held to permit
the Special Committee to present to and discuss with the Board
of Directors the Special Committees conclusions. That
meeting was scheduled for October 6, 2009.
On the morning of October 6, 2009, our Board of Directors
met to hear a presentation from the Special Committee and
Company management. Mr. Griffin presented the Special
Committees conclusions and Mr. Charles Horn, our
then-Chief Financial Officer, presented the Companys
internal financial and liquidity analyses. The members of the
Board of Directors then discussed the presentation by the
Special Committee and
Table of Contents
Company management and their conclusions. Following an
adjournment of the meeting of our Board of Directors, the
Special Committee convened to review the points raised by the
Board of Directors, including the representatives of JLL and
Warburg Pincus serving on our Board of Directors.
The Board of Directors reconvened and discussed various matters
regarding the Companys liquidity and the Special Committee
asked that representatives of JLL, Warburg Pincus, management,
Evercore, and Moelis meet to attempt to develop an alternative
transaction. Following the meeting of our Board of Directors,
representatives of JLL, Warburg Pincus, management, Evercore,
and Moelis met to discuss possible alternatives. On
October 7, 2009, a revised term sheet was circulated by
counsel to JLL and Warburg Pincus. Under the revised proposal,
the rights offering was increased to $205.0 million, as
opposed to the original amount of $75.0 million, and was to
be backstopped by JLL and Warburg Pincus up to
$75.0 million. The revised terms also included an exchange
of outstanding 2012 notes, at par, for up to $145.0 million
aggregate principal amount of new notes, up to
$130.0 million in cash from the proceeds of the rights
offering, or a combination of cash and new notes. To the extent
stockholders did not subscribe for the full $205.0 million
in the rights offering, the notes would be exchanged, at par,
for common stock at the rights offering subscription price, with
JLL and Warburg Pincus agreeing to exchange the approximately
$98 million aggregate principal amount of outstanding 2012
notes indirectly owned by them in the debt exchange if the
rights offering were not fully subscribed.
On October 8, 2009, the Special Committee met to review and
discuss the revised term sheet from JLL and Warburg Pincus.
The Special Committee met again on October 9, 2009 to
consider the terms of the revised proposal. At the Special
Committees request, Moelis presented an analysis of the
proposed terms.
The Special Committee discussed a number of the terms, including
price, whether the rights would be transferable, the
availability of over-subscription rights, whether or not JLL and
Warburg Pincus would be paid a backstop commitment fee, and the
substantive terms of the new notes to be issued in the debt
exchange. Using Moeliss analysis of the proposed terms,
the Special Committee determined that it would direct Moelis to
negotiate these terms, including a $4.00 rights offering
subscription price, with JLL, Warburg Pincus and certain holders
of the 2012 notes.
Between October 12, 2009, and October 21, 2009, Moelis and
Evercore, and counsel for the Special Committee, JLL, Warburg
Pincus and certain holders of the 2012 notes negotiated the
terms of the revised proposal, including a proposal of a $3.00
rights offering subscription price submitted by JLL and Warburg
Pincus without a backstop commitment fee. The Special Committee
met six times to review and consider the progress of the
negotiations with respect to such terms.
During this period, the advisors and counsel to the Special
Committee met with the lead attorneys in the consolidated
lawsuit challenging aspects of the Initial Proposal. These
settlement discussions occurred through October 22, 2009,
and on October 23, 2009, the representatives for the
stockholders agreed to a proposed Memorandum of Understanding,
subject to the terms and conditions thereof, including court
approval, that provided a release of all claims arising from the
transaction. The representatives for the fifth stockholder
lawsuit subsequently agreed to join this settlement memorialized
in the Memorandum of Understanding discussed below. On November
5, 2009, we entered into a definitive Stipulation and Agreement
of Compromise, Settlement, and Release to settle the
consolidated class and derivative action that was filed in
connection with the Initial Proposal. See Settlement of
Stockholder Class and Derivative Litigation below.
Also, during this period, drafts of the Investment Agreement and
the Support Agreement were distributed to, and negotiated by,
representatives of the Company, the Special Committee, JLL,
Warburg Pincus and the holders of the 2012 notes and their
respective counsel, and representatives for JLL and Warburg
Pincus, Evercore and Moelis met with the holders of the 2012
notes to negotiate the terms of the new notes that would be
issued in the debt exchange.
On October 21, 2009, the Special Committee met to consider
the most recent proposal from JLL and Warburg Pincus.
Table of Contents
On the night of October 22, 2009, the Special Committee met
to consider a revised proposal from JLL and Warburg Pincus,
which included a rights offering subscription price proposed by
the Special Committee of $3.50. Moelis and counsel to the
Special Committee advised the Special Committee on the terms of
the current transaction as proposed. The Special Committee
reviewed the draft Investment Agreement and Support Agreement
and discussed the transactions contemplated by those two
documents. Moelis delivered its opinion to the Special Committee
that the financial terms of the rights offering taken as a whole
were fair to the stockholders of the Company, other than JLL and
Warburg Pincus, from a financial point of view. The Special
Committee voted unanimously to recommend that the Board approve
the Investment Agreement and Support Agreement and the
transactions contemplated by those two documents.
Moelis subsequently issued a written fairness opinion, a copy of
which is attached hereto as Annex C, confirming the opinion
it had delivered orally to the Special Committee at the October
22 meeting.
On October 23, 2009, our Board of Directors met and
received the recommendation of the Special Committee. At the
request of our Board of Directors, members of the Special
Committee communicated the Special Committees reasons for
recommending that our Board of Directors approve the proposed
recapitalization transactions. A discussion followed during
which members of our Board of Directors reviewed the terms of
the proposed Recapitalization Transactions. Following that
discussion, our Board of Directors (i) determined that the
rights offering, the Investment Agreement, the debt exchange and
the Support Agreement and the transactions contemplated by such
agreements, are advisable and in the best interests of our
company and our stockholders, and (ii) approved and
authorized the rights offering, the Investment Agreement, the
debt exchange and the Support Agreement. Following such
determination, representatives of the Company, JLL and Warburg
Pincus executed and delivered the Investment Agreement and
representatives of the Company and certain holders of the 2012
notes executed and delivered the Support Agreement, and the
Company publicly announced execution of the Investment Agreement
and the Support Agreement.
In September 2009, four lawsuits were filed in the Delaware
Court of Chancery challenging certain aspects of the Initial
Proposal. On September 18, 2009, these suits were
consolidated into a single action in the Delaware Court of
Chancery. On September 30, 2009, another lawsuit was filed
that also challenged certain aspects of the Initial Proposal.
This subsequent lawsuit was consolidated with the earlier filed
lawsuits on October 30, 2009.
On October 23, 2009, we and lead counsel for the plaintiffs
entered into a Memorandum of Understanding, subject to the terms
and conditions thereof, including court approval, that provides
a release of all claims arising from the Recapitalization
Transactions. The Memorandum of Understanding also provides that
upon Court approval of the settlement the Company will form a
nominating committee of the Board of Directors comprised solely
of independent directors, who will consider, among other things,
nominations of directors by significant stockholders of the
Company. Court approval of the settlement is a condition to the
completion of the rights offering.
On November 5, 2009, we entered into a definitive
Stipulation and Agreement of Compromise, Settlement and Release
to settle the consolidated class and derivative action that was
filed in connection with the Initial Proposal. The settlement is
subject to the approval of the Delaware Court of Chancery.
On October 22, 2009, the Special Committee met and, on the
following day, our Board of Directors met and considered and
approved the proposed Recapitalization Transactions. In
evaluating the proposed Recapitalization Transactions, the
favorable effects identified and discussed by the Special
Committee and our Board of Directors included, but were not
limited to, the following:
Table of Contents
The negative effects identified and discussed by the Special
Committee and our Board of Directors included, but were not
limited to, the following:
In addition, if Proposal (1) is not approved by the
requisite vote of our stockholders, we will cancel the rights
offering and the debt exchange and terminate the Investment
Agreement and Support Agreement. In such event, we could be
required to seek alternative sources of liquidity in lieu of the
Recapitalization Transactions. No assurances can be given that
we would be able to obtain such alternative source of financing
on commercially reasonable terms, if at all. Our inability to
de-leverage the Companys balance sheet, extend the
maturity of the Companys outstanding indebtedness and
obtain significant additional liquidity to fund
Table of Contents
operations could have a material adverse impact on our financial
condition and could adversely affect the price of our common
stock.
Pursuant to the Investment Agreement, each of JLL and Warburg
Pincus, who collectively beneficially own approximately 50% of
our common stock, has agreed to vote (or cause to be voted) the
shares of common stock owned by them in favor of Proposal
(1) at the special meeting.
Neither our Board of Directors nor the Special Committee of
our Board of Directors has made, nor will they make, any
recommendation to stockholders regarding the exercise of rights
under the rights offering or to noteholders regarding the
exchange of 2012 notes in the debt exchange. Stockholders and
holders of 2012 notes should make an independent investment
decision about whether or not to exercise their rights or
exchange their 2012 notes.
The
Rights Offering
We are distributing to the record holders of our common stock as
of December 14, 2009 (the record date)
transferable subscription rights to purchase shares of our
common stock at a subscription price of $3.50 per share. The
subscription rights will entitle the holders of those rights to
purchase up to an aggregate of 58,571,428 shares of common stock
for an aggregate purchase price of $205.0 million.
Stockholders will receive 1.611144 subscription rights for every
share of our common stock they own at the close of business on
the record date, subject to adjustments to eliminate fractional
rights. Each subscription right will entitle the holder thereof
to purchase, at the subscription price, on or before the
expiration time of the rights offering, one share of common
stock. Stockholders (other than JLL and Warburg Pincus) who
elect to exercise their basic subscription privilege in full may
also subscribe, at the rights offering subscription price, for
additional shares of our common stock under their respective
over-subscription privileges (up to the number of shares
subscribed for under the basic subscription privilege) to the
extent that other rights holders do not exercise their basic
subscription privileges in full. If a sufficient number of
shares of our common stock are unavailable to fully satisfy the
over-subscription privilege requests, the available shares of
common stock will be sold pro rata to subscription rights
holders who exercised their over-subscription privilege based on
the number of shares each subscription rights holder subscribed
for under the over-subscription privilege. Any excess
subscription funds will be promptly returned without interest or
deduction after completion of the rights offering.
We will not issue fractional subscription rights or cash in lieu
of fractional rights. Fractional subscription rights will be
rounded down to the nearest whole number to ensure that we offer
not more than 58,571,428 shares of common stock in the
rights offering.
Conditions to the Rights Offering. The
completion of the rights offering is subject to closing
conditions, including:
(i) the registration statement relating to the rights
offering shall have been declared effective by the SEC and shall
continue to be effective, and no stop order shall have been
entered by the SEC with respect thereto;
(ii) the rights offering and the debt exchange shall have
been conducted in accordance with the Investment Agreement in
all material respects without the waiver of any condition
thereto;
(iii) all material governmental and third-party
notifications, filings, consents, waivers, and approvals
required for the consummation of the rights offering shall have
been made or received;
(iv) all terminations or expirations of waiting periods
imposed under the
Hart-Scott-Rodino
Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976, as amended (the HSR
Act) shall have occurred and all other notifications,
Table of Contents
consents, authorizations, and approvals required to be made or
obtained from any competition or antitrust authority shall have
been made or obtained for the Recapitalization Transactions;
(v) no action shall have been taken, no statute, rule,
regulation, or order shall have been enacted, adopted, or issued
by any federal, state, or foreign governmental or regulatory
authority, and no judgment, injunction, decree, or order of any
federal, state, or foreign court shall have been issued that, in
each case, prohibits the implementation of the rights offering
and the issuance and sale of our common stock in the rights
offering or materially impairs the benefit of implementation
thereof, and no action or proceeding by or before any federal,
state, or foreign governmental or regulatory authority shall be
pending or threatened wherein an adverse judgment, decree, or
order would be reasonably likely to result in the prohibition of
or material impairment of the benefits of the implementation of
the rights offering and the issuance and sale of our common
stock in the rights offering;
(vi) at least ninety percent (90%) of the aggregate
principal amount of outstanding 2012 notes shall have been
validly exchanged in the debt exchange;
(vii) all other conditions to our obligation to consummate
the debt exchange shall have been satisfied (or waived, to the
extent permitted);
(viii) the settlement of the stockholder lawsuit against
the Company, its directors, JLL, and Warburg Pincus shall have
received final approval by the Delaware Court of Chancery, and
such action shall have been dismissed with prejudice pursuant to
such approval;
(ix) stockholder approval for the issuance of shares of our
common stock in the rights offering, pursuant to the Investment
Agreement, and in the debt exchange shall have been
received; and
(x) the shares of our common stock to be issued in the
Recapitalization Transactions shall have been approved for
listing on the Nasdaq Global Select Market, subject to official
notice of issuance.
JLL and Warburg Pincus, who collectively beneficially own
approximately 50% of our common stock before giving effect to
the Recapitalization Transactions and approximately
$98 million aggregate principal amount of the 2012 notes,
have agreed to vote (or cause to be voted) the shares of our
common stock owned by them in favor of the issuance of shares of
common stock in the rights offering, pursuant to the Investment
Agreement, and in the debt exchange at the special meeting.
We intend to keep the rights offering open until
January 14, 2010, unless the special committee of our Board
of Directors, in its sole discretion, extends such time,
provided that, pursuant to the Investment Agreement, the
expiration date of the rights offering may not be extended by
more than ten days without the prior written consent of JLL and
Warburg Pincus.
This Proxy Statement is not an offer to sell or the solicitation
of an offer to buy shares of common stock or any other
securities, including the rights or any shares of common stock
issuable upon exercise of the rights. Offers and sales of common
stock issuable upon exercise of the rights will only be made by
means of a prospectus meeting the requirements of the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended (the Securities Act), and
applicable state securities laws, on the terms and subject to
the conditions set forth in such prospectus. In connection with
the rights offering, we have filed a Registration Statement on
Form S-3
with the SEC.
Stockholders are being asked at the special meeting to approve
the issuance of shares of our common stock in the rights
offering, pursuant to the Investment Agreement and in the debt
exchange. A vote in favor of such issuance and sale will not
obligate any stockholder to purchase shares in the rights
offering.
We obtained the commitments of JLL and Warburg Pincus under the
Investment Agreement to ensure that, subject to consummation of
the Recapitalization Transactions, we would receive a minimum
level of gross proceeds from the rights offering of at least
$75.0 million less expenses of the Recapitalization
Transactions and to ensure the exchange of approximately
$98 million aggregate principal amount of our 2012 notes in
the debt exchange. Through this arrangement, we have a very high
degree of certainty that, assuming
Table of Contents
at least 90% aggregate principal amount of the 2012 notes are
submitted for exchange in the debt exchange, we will receive
gross proceeds of $75.0 million through the rights offering
and the Investment Agreement and reduce the outstanding
aggregate principal amount of our indebtedness by
$130.0 million.
The Investment Agreement. We have entered into
the Investment Agreement with JLL and Warburg Pincus, under
which JLL and Warburg Pincus have severally agreed to purchase
from us, at the rights offering subscription price, unsubscribed
shares of common stock such that gross proceeds of the rights
offering will be no less than $75.0 million. In addition,
each of JLL and Warburg Pincus has agreed (i) to exchange
up to $48.909 million aggregate principal amount of 2012
notes indirectly held by it in the debt exchange and
(ii) to the extent gross proceeds of the rights offering
are less than $205.0 million, to exchange such 2012 notes
for shares of our common stock at an exchange price equal to the
rights offering subscription price, subject to proration from
the participation of other holders of 2012 notes who submit for
exchange their 2012 notes for shares of our common stock not
subscribed for through the exercise of rights in the rights
offering. As stockholders of the Company as of the record date,
JLL and Warburg Pincus will have the right to subscribe for and
purchase shares of our common stock under the basic subscription
privilege, although they will not have the right to participate
in the over-subscription privilege. The purchase of any shares
by JLL and Warburg Pincus, whether pursuant to the Investment
Agreement or upon exercise of rights, would be effected in a
transaction exempt from the registration requirements of the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and, accordingly, would not
be registered pursuant to the Registration Statement on
Form S-3
that we have filed related to the rights offering. JLLs
and Warburg Pincus obligations, collectively, under this
commitment are limited to $75.0 million in cash and the
exchange of approximately $98 million aggregate principal
amount of 2012 notes in the debt exchange.
The Closing. The closing of the transactions
contemplated by the Investment Agreement is subject to
satisfaction or waiver of the following conditions: (i) the
effectiveness of the registration statement relating to the
rights offering; (ii) the rights offering and the debt
exchange having been conducted in accordance with the Investment
Agreement in all material respects without the waiver of any
condition thereto; (iii) receipt of all requisite approvals
and authorizations of, filings with, and notifications to, or
expiration or termination of any applicable waiting period under
applicable antitrust, competition and merger control laws,
including the HSR Act; (iv) receipt of all material
governmental and third party consents; (v) receipt of
approval of the Companys stockholders of the issuance of
shares of our common stock in the rights offering, pursuant to
the Investment Agreement, and in the debt exchange;
(vi) the absence of any legal impediment to the
consummation of the Recapitalization Transactions;
(vii) the compliance with covenants and the accuracy of
representations and warranties provided in the Investment
Agreement in all material respects; (viii) entry into a
registration rights agreement between the Company and each of
JLL and Warburg Pincus; (ix) the exchange of at least 90%
of the aggregate principal amount of outstanding 2012 notes in
the debt exchange; (x) court approval of the settlement of
certain litigation related to the Recapitalization Transactions;
and (xi) shares of Company common stock issued in the
Recapitalization Transactions having been approved for listing
on the Nasdaq Global Select Market.
The Company and JLL filed a Premerger Notification and Report
Form under the HSR Act with the Federal Trade Commission (the
FTC) and the Antitrust Division of the Department of
Justice (the Antitrust Division), in connection with
JLLs acquisition of common stock in the Recapitalization
Transactions. The statutory waiting period under the HSR Act
expired at 11:59 p.m. on December 10, 2009.
Termination. The Investment Agreement may be
terminated at any time prior to the closing of the backstop
commitment:
Table of Contents
Expenses. There is no backstop commitment fee
payable to JLL or Warburg Pincus in connection with the rights
offering; however, we have agreed to reimburse each of JLL and
Warburg Pincus for all reasonable and actual out-of-pocket
expenses it incurs in connection with the Recapitalization
Transactions, as well as all transfer and similar taxes, unless
we terminate the Investment Agreement in accordance with its
terms due to a breach of a covenant, representation or warranty
by either of JLL or Warburg Pincus.
Indemnification. We have agreed to indemnify
each of JLL and Warburg Pincus and their respective affiliates
and their respective officers, directors, members, partners,
employees, agents, and controlling persons for losses arising
out of circumstances existing on or prior to the closing date of
the rights offering to which an indemnified party becomes
subject arising out of a claim instituted by a third party with
respect to the Recapitalization Transactions (other than with
respect to losses due to statements or omissions made in
reliance on information provided to us in writing by each of JLL
and Warburg Pincus for use herein and losses attributable to the
gross negligence or willful misconduct of the indemnified party
or breaches of the Investment Agreement).
Registration Rights Agreement. We have agreed
to provide certain customary demand and piggyback
registration rights to each of JLL and Warburg Pincus with
respect to the shares of common stock owned by them and their
affiliates.
Subscription Rights. JLL and Warburg Pincus
each maintain the right to subscribe for shares in the rights
offering by exercising their basic subscription rights. However,
we have agreed, pursuant to the Investment Agreement, that
neither JLL nor Warburg Pincus will have an over-subscription
privilege in the rights offering. Pursuant to the Investment
Agreement, JLL and Warburg Pincus are not required to exercise
their basic subscription rights until two business days after
the expiration of the rights offering.
Restrictions on Transfer. Pursuant to the
Investment Agreement, JLL and Warburg Pincus have each agreed
not to transfer, without the prior written consent of the
Special Committee of our Board of Directors, (i) during the
pendency of the rights offering, any subscription rights
distributed, directly or indirectly, to them and (ii) until
the earlier of the closing of the Recapitalization Transactions
or termination of the Investment Agreement, any 2012 notes or
shares of common stock held, directly or indirectly, by them,
except, in each case, to affiliates who agree to be bound by the
terms of the Investment Agreement.
All rights issued to a stockholder of record (other than JLL and
Warburg Pincus) who would, in our opinion, be required to obtain
prior clearance or approval from any state, federal, or
non-U.S. regulatory
authority for the ownership or exercise of rights or the
ownership of additional shares are null and void and may not be
held or exercised by any such holder. We are not undertaking to
advise you of any such required clearance or approval or to pay
any expenses incurred in seeking such clearance or approval.
We reserve the right to refuse to issue shares of our common
stock to any stockholder of record who would, in our opinion, be
required to obtain prior clearance or approval from any state,
federal, or
non-U.S. regulatory
authority to own or control such shares if, at the time shares
are to be issued upon payment therefor, such holder has not
obtained such clearance or approval.
We are not offering or selling, or soliciting any purchase of,
shares in any state or other jurisdiction in which the rights
offering is not permitted. We reserve the right to delay the
commencement of the rights offering in certain states or other
jurisdictions if necessary to comply with local laws. We may
elect not to
Table of Contents
offer shares to residents of any state or other jurisdiction
whose laws would require a change in this offering in order to
carry out this offering in such state or jurisdiction.
In connection with the rights offering, certain accredited
holders of outstanding 2012 notes have agreed to exchange, at
par, in transactions exempt from registration under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, their outstanding 2012 notes
for (i) up to $145.0 million aggregate principal
amount of our 2016 notes, (ii) up to $130.0 million in
cash from the proceeds of the rights offering, or (iii) a
combination of cash and 2016 notes, and, (iv) to the extent
the rights offering is not fully subscribed, shares of our
common stock. The 2016 notes will have substantially similar
terms to the 2012 notes, but will have an interest rate of
3-month
LIBOR (subject to a 3.00% floor) plus 10% and will mature in
2016 instead of 2012. For each $1,000 aggregate principal amount
of 2012 notes exchanged in the debt exchange, a noteholder will
receive, at the noteholders election, (a) $1,000 in
principal amount of the 2016 notes, or (b) $1,000 in cash,
or (c) a combination of cash and 2016 notes, subject to
proration and subject to the following adjustments:
Exchanging holders of 2012 notes will be prorated to the extent
of any over-subscription for 2016 notes or cash.
We have also solicited consents to amend the indenture under
which the 2012 notes were issued to eliminate substantially all
of the restrictive covenants, certain conditions to defeasance,
and certain events of default and to release the liens on the
collateral securing the 2012 notes. Holders of at least
662/3%
of the aggregate principal amount of the 2012 notes, excluding
JLL and Warburg Pincus, must deliver consents to the proposed
amendments to the indenture governing the 2012 notes in order
for the proposed amendments to become effective.
At least 90% of the aggregate principal amount of the 2012 notes
must be exchanged in the debt exchange to complete the
Recapitalization Transactions.
JLL and Warburg Pincus have each agreed, that, in the event that
the holders of our 2012 notes that are party to the Support
Agreement receive in exchange for 2012 notes held directly or
indirectly by such holders pursuant to the debt exchange an
aggregate of 2,857,143 shares of our common stock (the
Minimum Share
Table of Contents
Amount), until the earlier of 180 days following the
closing of the Recapitalization Transactions and the date upon
which such holders own, directly or indirectly, less than the
Minimum Share Amount, they will not transfer any shares of
common stock held, directly or indirectly, by them, except
(i) with the prior written consent of such holders owning,
directly or indirectly, a majority of the shares of our common
stock held by all such holders, (ii) to affiliates who
agree to such restrictions on transfer, and (iii) transfers
pursuant to any transaction or series of transaction in which
all holders of 2012 notes party to the Support Agreement are
entitled to participate on a pro rata basis and receive the same
consideration for their shares of our common stock.
We have entered into a Support Agreement (the Support
Agreement) with holders of approximately 61.0% of the
aggregate principal amount of our outstanding 2012 notes, under
which such holders have agreed to exchange their 2012 notes in
the debt exchange and to deliver consents to the proposed
amendments to the indenture governing the 2012 notes.
Pursuant to the Support Agreement, holders of approximately
94.67% of the aggregate principal amount of our outstanding 2012
notes held by holders other than JLL and Warburg Pincus have
agreed to consent to the proposed amendments to the indenture
governing the 2012 notes, and pursuant to the Support Agreement
and Investment Agreement, as of December 14, 2009, holders
of approximately 96.56% of the aggregate principal amount of the
2012 notes have agreed to exchange their 2012 notes in the debt
exchange.
The debt exchange with the holders of 2012 notes is being made
in reliance on the exemption from registration of
Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. We
have agreed to disseminate to certain accredited holders a
private placement offering memorandum related to the debt
exchange as promptly as practicable. In addition, we have agreed
to file a registration statement to register offers and sales of
2016 notes and shares of our common stock received in the debt
exchange by the holders of 2012 notes who are party to the
Support Agreement and have such registration statement declared
effective prior to the closing date of the debt exchange and to
maintain the effectiveness of the resale registration statement
for 180 days following the closing date of the debt
exchange.
The holders of 2012 notes party to the Support Agreement have
agreed that, prior to the earlier of the closing of the debt
exchange or the termination of the Support Agreement, such
holders will not, directly or indirectly, effect any short sale
or similar hedging transaction in our common stock.
The closing of the transactions contemplated by the Support
Agreement is subject to satisfaction or waiver of certain
conditions, including: (i) satisfaction of the conditions
to the rights offering; (ii) receipt of all material
governmental and third-party approvals; (iii) at least 90%
of the aggregate principal amount of outstanding 2012 notes
shall have been validly submitted for exchange; (iv) at
least
662/3%
of the aggregate principal amount of the 2012 notes, not
including 2012 notes held by JLL or Warburg Pincus, shall have
consented to the proposed amendments to the indenture governing
the 2012 notes; and (v) a registration statement covering
the resale by the holders of 2016 notes and common stock
received in the debt exchange having been declared effective.
The Support Agreement may be terminated under certain
circumstances including the breach of the Support Agreement by
the Company or a holder or in the event the debt exchange does
not close prior to February 15, 2010, and will
automatically terminate on March 31, 2010, unless such date
is extended in accordance with the terms of the Support
Agreement.
We have agreed to pay the reasonable fees and expenses of the
legal counsel of the holders party to the Support Agreement
incurred in connection with the debt exchange.
JLL and Warburg Pincus, who collectively beneficially own
approximately 50% of our common stock, before giving effect to
the Recapitalization Transactions, own approximately 36%, or
approximately $98 million aggregate principal amount, of
our 2012 notes. Six of our ten directors hold positions with
affiliates of
Table of Contents
either JLL or Warburg Pincus. We have entered into the
Investment Agreement with JLL and Warburg Pincus, under which
JLL and Warburg Pincus have severally agreed to purchase from
us, at the subscription price, unsubscribed shares of common
stock such that gross proceeds of the rights offering will be no
less than $75.0 million. In addition, each of JLL and
Warburg Pincus has agreed (i) to exchange up to
$48.909 million aggregate principal amount of 2012 notes
indirectly held by it in the debt exchange and (ii) to the
extent gross proceeds of the rights offering are less than
$205 million, to exchange such 2012 notes for shares of our
common stock at an exchange price equal to the rights offering
subscription price, subject to proration from the participation
of other holders of 2012 notes who submit for exchange their
2012 notes for shares of our common stock not subscribed for
through the exercise of rights in the rights offering.
JLLs and Warburg Pincus obligations, collectively,
under this commitment are limited to $75.0 million in cash
and the exchange of approximately $98 million aggregate
principal amount of 2012 notes in the debt exchange. In the
event gross proceeds of the rights offering are less than
$205.0 million, JLL and Warburg Pincus will likely increase
their percentage ownership of our issued and outstanding common
stock.
If all of our stockholders, including JLL and Warburg Pincus,
exercise in full the basic subscription rights issued to them in
the rights offering and the rights offering is therefore fully
subscribed, JLLs and Warburg Pincus beneficial
ownership percentage will not change. If JLL and Warburg Pincus
are the only holders of rights who exercise their rights in the
rights offering and JLL and Warburg Pincus each exchange
$48.909 million aggregate principal amount of 2012 notes
for common stock, the Company will issue an aggregate of
28,397,849 and 28,563,541 shares of common stock to JLL and
Warburg Pincus, respectively, and 1,610,038 shares of
common stock to the other 2012 noteholders participating in the
debt exchange. Under such circumstances, JLLs ownership
percentage of our outstanding common stock would increase to
approximately 39.3%, and Warburg Pincus ownership
percentage of our outstanding common stock would increase to
approximately 39.6%, in each case after giving effect to this
rights offering and the debt exchange.
We will issue 58,571,428 shares of common stock in the
Recapitalization Transactions and, based on the
36,353,924 shares of our common stock outstanding as of
December 14, 2009, 94,925,352 shares of our common
stock will be issued and outstanding following the
Recapitalization Transactions, excluding any shares that may be
issued pursuant to the exercise of 2,283,561 outstanding vested
and unvested stock options as of December 14, 2009.
The Compensation Committee of our Board of Directors will
determine, at the appropriate time, whether the issuance and
sale of our common stock in the rights offering will result in
an equitable adjustment to outstanding awards under our
incentive plans, based upon, among other things, the market
price of shares of our common stock for periods prior to and
after the record date for the rights offering.
If a stockholder does not exercise any rights in the rights
offering, the number of shares of our common stock that such
stockholder will own will not change. However, because
58,571,428 shares of our common stock will be issued if the
Recapitalization Transactions are completed, if a stockholder
does not exercise its rights under the basic subscription
privilege in full, its percentage ownership will be diluted
after the rights offering and completion of the debt exchange.
See also Risk Factors Risks Related to our
Common Stock, the Rights Offering and the Debt
Exchange If the rights offering is not fully
subscribed, JLL and Warburg Pincus may increase their
ownership.
Table of Contents
The following table describes capitalization as of
September 30, 2009 (i) on an actual basis and
(ii) on an as adjusted basis to give effect to the sale of
all 58,571,428 shares offered in the Recapitalization
Transactions (including application of net proceeds as described
above) at a price of $3.50 per share and assuming that all of
the holders of our 2012 notes exchange such notes in the debt
exchange. As adjusted balances are subject to change based upon
final participation in the rights offering and the debt exchange.
Table of Contents
The Corporation currently maintains the Builders FirstSource,
Inc. 2007 Incentive Plan (the 2007 Plan), which was
originally approved by stockholders at the 2007 Annual Meeting.
The Corporation also maintains the Builders FirstSource, Inc.
2005 Equity Incentive Plan (the 2005 Plan). The 2007
Plan provides for the issuance of up to 2,500,000 shares
pursuant to the grant or exercise of awards granted thereunder,
of which 455,968 shares have already been issued or are
subject to outstanding awards as of December 14, 2009. The
2005 Plan provides for the issuance of up to
2,200,000 shares pursuant to the grant or exercise of
awards granted thereunder, of which 1,360,344 shares have
already been issued or are subject to outstanding awards as of
December 14, 2009. Given the change in the equity structure
of the Corporation contemplated by the Recapitalization
Transactions, the Compensation Committee believes the number of
shares available under the 2007 Plan and the 2005 Plan will not
be sufficient to make the grants it believes will be needed over
the next few years to provide adequate long-term equity
incentives to our key employees. Therefore, on November 16,
2009, the Board of Directors approved an amendment (the
Amendment) to the 2007 Plan to increase the number
of authorized shares to 7,000,000, subject to stockholder
approval. The increased shares will enable the Company to
continue making equity compensation grants that serve as
incentives to recruit and retain key employees and to continue
aligning the interests of its employees with stockholders.
In addition, the 2007 Plan contains a list of business criteria
(Qualified Business Criteria) with respect to which
the Compensation Committee may establish objectively
determinable performance goals for performance-based awards
under the 2007 Plan that are fully deductible without regard to
the $1,000,000 deduction limit imposed by Section 162(m) of
the U.S. Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the
Code). In order to preserve the Corporations
ability to continue to grant certain fully deductible
performance-based awards, a list of Qualified Business Criteria
must be approved by the stockholders no less often than every
five years. The Board of Directors recommends that the
stockholders re-approve at the special meeting the list of
Qualified Business Criteria for the 2007 Plan set out below
under the caption Performance Goals.
As of December 14, 2009 (the record date for the special
meeting), there were approximately 2,508 of the
Corporations employees, officers and directors eligible to
participate in the 2007 Plan. If the Amendment is not approved
by the stockholders at the special meeting, the 2007 Plan will
remain in effect in accordance with its terms as currently in
effect.
Summary
of the Amended 2007 Plan
The following is a summary of the provisions of the 2007 Plan,
as proposed to be amended. This summary is qualified in its
entirety by the full text of the 2007 Plan, as proposed to be
amended, which is attached to this proxy statement as
Annex D.
Purpose. The purposes of the 2007 Plan are to
retain and incentivize employees, officers, non-employee
directors, and consultants of the Corporation and its
affiliates, to increase their efforts on behalf of the
Corporation, and to promote the success of the
Corporations business.
Administration. The 2007 Plan is administered
by the compensation committee (the Compensation
Committee) of the Board of Directors, or if the board so
determines, by the Board of Directors. The Compensation
Committee has the authority to designate participants; determine
the type or types of awards to be granted to each participant
and the number, terms, and conditions thereof; establish, adopt,
or revise any rules and regulations as it may deem advisable to
administer the 2007 Plan; and make all other decisions and
determinations that may be required under the 2007 Plan.
Eligibility. The 2007 Plan permits the grant
of incentive awards to employees, officers, non-employee
directors, and consultants of the Corporation and its affiliates
as selected by the Compensation Committee.
Table of Contents
Permissible Awards. The 2007 Plan authorizes
the granting of awards in any of the following forms:
Shares Available for Awards. Subject to
adjustment as provided in the 2007 Plan, the aggregate number of
shares of common stock reserved and available for issuance
pursuant to awards granted under the 2007 Plan, as proposed to
be amended, is 7,000,000. No more than 7,000,000 shares may
be made subject to options or SARs. No more than 3,500,000 of
these shares may be made subject to stock-based awards other
than options or SARs.
Limitations on Individual Awards. The maximum
aggregate number of shares of common stock subject to
stock-based awards that may be granted under the 2007 Plan in
any 12-month
period to any one participant is (i) 750,000 shares for
options and SARs and (ii) 750,000 shares for restricted
stock, restricted stock units, and other stock-based awards. The
maximum aggregate amount that may be paid with respect to
cash-based awards under the 2007 Plan to any one participant in
any 12-month
period is $5,000,000.
Performance Goals. Any awards granted under
the 2007 Plan may be designated as a qualified performance-based
award in order to make the award fully deductible without regard
to the $1,000,000 deduction limit imposed by Code
Section 162(m). If an award is so designated, the
Compensation Committee must establish objectively determinable
performance goals for the award based on one or more of the
following business criteria, which may be expressed in terms of
attaining a specified level of the particular criterion or the
attainment of a percentage increase or decrease in the
particular criterion, and may be applied to one or more of the
Corporation or a parent or subsidiary of the Corporation, or a
division or strategic business unit of the Corporation, as
determined by the Compensation Committee:
Table of Contents
Limitations on Transfer; Beneficiaries. A
participant may not assign or transfer an award other than by
will or the laws of descent and distribution; provided,
however, that the Compensation Committee may permit other
transfers (other than transfers for value) where it concludes
that such transferability does not result in accelerated
taxation, does not cause any option intended to be an incentive
stock option to fail to qualify as such, and is otherwise
appropriate and desirable, taking into account any factors
deemed relevant, including without limitation, any state or
federal tax or securities laws or regulations applicable to
transferable awards.
Treatment of Awards upon a Change in
Control. Unless otherwise provided in an award
agreement, upon a change in control, all outstanding options and
SARs will become fully vested, all restrictions on outstanding
awards will lapse, and any performance conditions on outstanding
awards will be deemed to have been fully earned at the target
level.
Adjustments. If any dividend or other
distribution (whether in the form of cash, stock, or other
property), recapitalization, stock split, reverse split,
reorganization, merger, consolidation, spin-off, combination,
repurchase, share exchange, or other similar corporate
transaction or event affects the common stock such that an
adjustment is appropriate in order to prevent dilution or
enlargement of the rights of the participants, then the
Compensation Committee will make such equitable changes or
adjustments as it deems necessary or appropriate to any or all
of: (i) the number and kind of shares of stock or other
property (including cash) that may be issued in connection with
awards; (ii) the number and kind of shares of stock or
other property (including cash) issued or issuable in respect of
outstanding awards; (iii) the exercise price, grant price,
or purchase price relating to any award; and (iv) the
performance goals applicable to outstanding awards. In addition,
the Compensation Committee may determine that any such equitable
adjustment may be accomplished by making a payment to the award
holder in the form of cash or other property (including but not
limited to shares of stock). The Compensation Committee will
determine, at the appropriate time, whether the issuance and
sale of our common stock in the Recapitalization Transactions
will result in an equitable adjustment to outstanding awards
under the 2007 Plan and our other incentive plans, based upon,
among other things, the market price of shares of our common
stock for periods prior to and after the record date for the
rights offering.
Termination and Amendment. The Board of
Directors or the Compensation Committee may, at any time and
from time to time, terminate or amend the 2007 Plan, but if an
amendment would constitute a material amendment requiring
stockholder approval under applicable listing requirements,
laws, policies, or regulations, then such amendment will be
subject to stockholder approval. The Board of Directors or the
Compensation Committee may amend or terminate outstanding
awards. No termination or amendment of the 2007 Plan or
Table of Contents
any award granted thereunder may, without the consent of the
participant, adversely affect the rights of any participant
under such award.
Prohibition on Repricing. Except as set forth
above in Adjustments, outstanding stock options and
SARs cannot be repriced, directly or indirectly, without
stockholder approval. The exchange of an underwater
option (i.e., an option having an exercise price in excess
of the current market value of the underlying stock) for another
award would be considered an indirect repricing and would,
therefore, require stockholder approval.
The U.S. federal income tax discussion set forth below is
intended for general information only and does not purport to be
a complete analysis of all of the potential tax effects of the
2007 Plan. It is based upon laws, regulations, rulings, and
decisions now in effect, all of which are subject to change.
State and local income tax consequences are not discussed, and
may vary from locality to locality.
Nonqualified Stock Options. There will be no
federal income tax consequences to the optionee or to the
Corporation upon the grant of a nonqualified stock option under
the 2007 Plan. When the optionee exercises a nonqualified
option, however, he or she will recognize ordinary income in an
amount equal to the excess of the fair market value of the stock
received upon exercise of the option at the time of exercise
over the exercise price and the Corporation will be allowed a
corresponding federal income tax deduction. Any gain that the
optionee realizes when he or she later sells or disposes of the
option shares will be short-term or long-term capital gain,
depending on how long the shares were held.
Incentive Stock Options. There typically will
be no federal income tax consequences to the optionee or to the
Corporation upon the grant or exercise of an incentive stock
option. If the optionee holds the option shares for the required
holding period of at least two years after the date the option
was granted and one year after exercise, the difference between
the exercise price and the amount realized upon sale or
disposition of the option shares will be long-term capital gain
or loss, and the Corporation will not be entitled to a federal
income tax deduction. If the optionee disposes of the option
shares in a sale, exchange, or other disqualifying disposition
before the required holding period ends, he or she will
recognize taxable ordinary income in an amount equal to the
excess of the fair market value of the option shares at the time
of exercise over the exercise price and the Corporation will be
allowed a federal income tax deduction equal to such amount.
While the exercise of an incentive stock option does not result
in current taxable income, the excess of the fair market value
of the option shares at the time of exercise over the exercise
price will be an item of adjustment for purposes of determining
the optionees alternative minimum taxable income.
SARs. A participant receiving a SAR under the
2007 Plan will not recognize income, and the Corporation will
not be allowed a tax deduction, at the time the award is
granted. When the participant exercises the SAR, the amount of
cash and the fair market value of any shares of stock received
will be ordinary income to the participant and the Corporation
will be allowed a corresponding federal income tax deduction at
that time.
Restricted Stock. Unless a participant makes
an election to accelerate recognition of the income to the date
of grant as described below, a participant will not recognize
income, and the Corporation will not be allowed a tax deduction,
at the time a restricted stock award is granted, provided that
the award is nontransferable and is subject to a substantial
risk of forfeiture. When the restrictions lapse, the participant
will recognize ordinary income equal to the fair market value of
the stock as of that date (less any amount he or she paid for
the stock) and the Corporation will be allowed a corresponding
federal income tax deduction at that time, subject to any
applicable limitations under Code Section 162(m). If the
participant files an election under Code Section 83(b)
within 30 days after the date of grant of the restricted
stock, he or she will recognize ordinary income as of the date
of grant equal to the fair market value of the stock as of that
date (less any amount paid for the stock) and the Corporation
will be allowed a corresponding federal income tax deduction at
that time, subject to any applicable limitations under Code
Section 162(m). Any future appreciation in the stock will
be taxable to the participant at capital gains rates. However,
if the stock is later
Table of Contents
forfeited, the participant will not be able to recover the tax
previously paid pursuant to the Code Section 83(b) election.
Restricted Stock Units. A participant will not
recognize income, and the Corporation will not be allowed a tax
deduction, at the time a restricted stock unit award is granted.
Upon receipt of shares of stock (or the equivalent value in cash
or other property) in settlement of a restricted stock unit
award, a participant will recognize ordinary income equal to the
fair market value of the stock or other property as of that date
(less any amount he or she paid for the stock or property) and
the Corporation will be allowed a corresponding federal income
tax deduction at that time, subject to any applicable
limitations under Code Section 162(m).
Cash-Based Awards. A participant will not
recognize income, and the Corporation will not be allowed a tax
deduction, at the time a cash-based award is granted (for
example, when the performance goals are established). Upon
receipt of cash in settlement of the award, a participant will
recognize ordinary income equal to the cash received and the
Corporation will be allowed a corresponding federal income tax
deduction at that time, subject to any applicable limitations
under Code Section 162(m).
Code Section 409A. The 2007 Plan permits
the grant of various types of incentive awards, which may or may
not be exempt from Code Section 409A. If an award is
subject to Section 409A, and if the requirements of
Section 409A are not met, the taxable events as described
above could apply earlier than described and could result in the
imposition of additional taxes and penalties. Restricted stock
awards, and stock options and SARs that comply with the terms of
the 2007 Plan, are generally exempt from the application of
Section 409A. Restricted stock units, other stock-based
awards and cash-based awards that are granted in one year and
payable in a later year generally are subject to
Section 409A unless they are designed to satisfy the
short-term deferral exemption from such law. If not exempt, such
awards must be specially designed to meet the requirements of
Section 409A in order to avoid early taxation and penalties.
Tax Withholding. The Corporation has the right
to deduct or withhold, or require a participant to remit to the
Corporation, an amount sufficient to satisfy federal, state, and
local taxes (including employment taxes) required by law to be
withheld with respect to any exercise, lapse of restriction, or
other taxable event arising as a result of the 2007 Plan.
The Compensation Committee may consider making additional grants
of equity awards following consummation of the Recapitalization
Transactions in light of the dilution that may result from such
transactions. No final decision has been made to date. All
awards after the date hereof under the 2007 Plan or the 2005
Plan will be made at the discretion of the Compensation
Committee or the Board. Therefore, it is not presently possible
to determine the benefits or amounts that will be received by
any particular person or group pursuant to the 2007 Plan or the
2005 Plan in the future.
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR
PROPOSAL (2).
Table of Contents
The following table sets forth certain information regarding
securities authorized for issuance under the Corporations
equity compensation plans as of December 14, 2009.
Table of Contents
EXECUTIVE
COMPENSATION AND OTHER INFORMATION
In the discussion that follows, we will give an overview and
analysis of our compensation program and policies, the material
compensation decisions we have made under those programs and
policies with respect to our top executive officers, and the
material factors that we considered in making those decisions.
The persons who served as our Chief Executive Officer and Chief
Financial Officer during 2008, as well as the other individuals
named in the Summary Compensation Table, are
referred to as the named executive officers or
NEOs throughout this Proxy Statement.
As for nearly all companies in the housing industry, 2008 was a
very challenging year for us. According to the U.S. Census
Bureau, actual single-family housing starts in the
U.S. during 2008 declined 40.5% from 2007. Our management
and our Board of Directors responded to the ongoing financial
crises and the severe housing downturn by reviewing our business
strategy, facility requirements, expense structure, and staffing
levels. As discussed in further detail below, the Company made
some important decisions regarding executive compensation and
implemented some significant changes to its compensation
programs for 2008, many of which were a direct response to the
current economic conditions, including the following:
In addition, faced with the deteriorating state of the housing
industry and the economy in general, the Company made a number
of important compensation decisions for 2009, including the
following:
Table of Contents
Our executive compensation program has been designed to provide
a total compensation package that allows us to attract, retain,
and motivate executives who have the talent to capably manage
our business. Our executive compensation program is guided by
several key principles:
Role of the Compensation
Committee. Under its charter, the
Compensation Committee is responsible for designing our
executive compensation program and assisting the Board in
discharging its responsibilities relating to executive
compensation. The Compensation Committee approved, and
recommended to the Board of Directors for its approval, the 2008
base salary amounts, annual bonus program, long-term incentive
compensation levels, and perquisites of our executive officers.
During a series of meetings between October 2007 and February
2008, the Compensation Committee established the 2008
compensation framework for our executive officers. As part of
its evaluation process, the Committee reviewed compensation
proposals and related information from a number of sources,
including a compensation consultant and certain members of our
management team, as described below. In February 2008, the
Compensation Committee recommended to the Board of Directors,
for its approval, the 2007 bonus payouts and the 2008
compensation program for our NEOs.
Compensation Consultant. To assist the
Committee in its review and evaluation of the 2008 officer
compensation program, the Committee selected Mercer Human
Resource Consulting (Mercer) to serve as its
advisor. Mercer reported directly to the Compensation Committee,
and the Committee reviewed and approved the fees payable to
Mercer. Mercer was retained by the Committee to conduct a review
of our proposed management compensation program for 2008
(including base salary, annual bonus plan, and equity awards),
to conduct market total compensation comparisons for the
executive officers, and to make recommendations to the Committee
regarding any suggested changes to our executive compensation
program. The Committee met with Mercer, reviewed its reports,
and considered its advice in making its determinations regarding
our 2008 officer compensation program.
Role of Executives. Our CEO, CFO, and
General Counsel, as well as members of our Legal and Finance
Departments, assisted the Compensation Committee, the Board, and
Mercer in gathering the information needed for their respective
reviews of our 2008 executive compensation program. This
assistance included the preparation of tally sheets and the
assembly of requested compensation data. The Compensation
Committee and the Board also met with our CEO and considered his
recommendations for our executive officers (other than himself)
with respect to: (i) the bonus payments earned by the
executive officers for 2007, (ii) the 2008
Table of Contents
base salaries, annual cash incentives, and long-term equity
incentives for our NEOs, and (iii) approval of the 2008
stock option exchange program (described below).
Market Comparisons. Using data provided
by its consultant, the Compensation Committee periodically
examines the competitiveness of our compensation programs to
determine how our compensation levels compare to our overall
philosophy and target markets. Peer selection is somewhat
difficult due to the lack of publicly-traded companies with whom
we compete and the lack of available data for privately-held
competitors. According to the most recent ProSales 100 rankings
by ProSales Magazine, only three (including Builders
FirstSource) of the 20 largest competitors in the professional
building products market are publicly-traded. Therefore, we
expanded the peer group to include additional publicly-traded
building products companies of generally similar size that serve
additional end markets to provide a proxy for the market in
which we compete for executive talent. Peer selection was
focused on size based on revenues because revenues provide a
reasonable point of reference for comparing like positions and
scope of responsibility. For 2008, the primary peer group (our
Peer Group) included:
Our market comparison analysis consisted of all components of
direct compensation, including base salary, annual bonus, and
long-term incentives. Information gathered from the proxy
statements of the Peer Group as well as from Mercers
proprietary databases were reviewed for this analysis. In
addition, in order to more accurately reflect the market in
which we compete for executive talent, survey data for
comparable positions at industrial companies of generally
similar size was analyzed to develop a broader market point of
reference. Surveys reviewed were published by leading human
resource organizations, including Mercer, and cover
approximately 60 to 70 companies per positional match. The
companies evaluated in the market surveys are not individually
identifiable for a particular executive position, and,
therefore, we are not benchmarking against any particular
company in this regard. Given the changing nature of our
industry, the companies that comprise our Peer Group may vary
from year to year, and the Compensation Committee intends to
review the Peer Group and make changes as appropriate for 2009.
2008 Review of Total Compensation. A
tally sheet affixing dollar amounts for the following components
of compensation was prepared by management and reviewed by the
Compensation Committee: salary, bonus, long-term incentives,
accumulated (unrealized) gains under outstanding equity awards,
the cost to the Company of perquisites, and projected payout
obligations under potential severance and
change-in-control
scenarios. Based on its review, and market data provided by
Mercer, the Compensation Committee determined that our
NEOs total compensation (and, in the case of the severance
and
change-in-control
scenarios, the potential payments) in the aggregate was
appropriate based on their contribution toward achieving the
Companys business and financial objectives, overall
responsibilities, individual performance, and proposed
compensation compared to that of comparable positions at peer
companies, including those within our Peer Group.
Role of the Board of Directors. The
Board of Directors is responsible for reviewing the
recommendations of the Compensation Committee and making the
final decisions on our executive compensation program. In
February 2008, after considering the recommendation of the
Compensation Committee, the Board approved the bonus amounts for
2007 for our NEOs and the 2008 executive officer compensation
program.
Table of Contents
Components of Compensation. There are
only three components of our executive compensation program:
Reflecting our philosophy to focus on direct (rather than
indirect) compensation as the most appropriate means to attract
and retain key executive talent, the Board offers few
perquisites to our executive officers and no retirement benefits
beyond our company-wide 401(k) plan.
The following sections describe in greater detail each of the
elements of our executive compensation program, why they were
selected, and how the amounts of each element were determined.
Base salary is designed to compensate the executive officers in
part for their roles and responsibilities and to provide a
stable and fixed level of compensation that serves as a
retention tool throughout the executives career. In
determining base salaries, we consider each executives
role and responsibilities, unique skills, the salary levels for
similar positions in our target market, and internal pay equity.
Our compensation philosophy is to target base salaries for our
NEOs at or below the market median.
In February 2008, the Board determined to raise the NEOs
base salaries by amounts ranging from 3.3% to 20%, except that,
at his request, the Board did not raise Mr. Shermans
base salary. The Board made the salary adjustments to bring the
NEOs more in line with the market and to provide a more
effective retention incentive for our executive officers. The
Board gave higher raises to Messrs. Horn (20%) and Tolly
(12.5%) because of the additional operational responsibilities
assumed by them following the departure of Kevin OMeara,
the Companys former Chief Operating Officer, in October
2007. After making these adjustments for 2008, the base salaries
of our NEOs generally were at or below the median of similar
positions at peer companies included in the market surveys
referenced above, except that Mr. Horns salary was
between the median and the 75th percentile. On
November 17, 2009, Mr. Horn announced his resignation
as Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer effective
as of November 23, 2009. Mr. M. Chad Crow replaced
Mr. Horn as Senior Vice President and Chief Financial
Officer of the Company. Mr. Shermans base salary
remained below the 25th percentile. At
Mr. Shermans request, the Board has not raised
Mr. Shermans salary since he commenced employment
with the Corporation in September 2001.
We provide annual cash incentive awards under our Management
Incentive Plan. These short-term cash incentives are designed to
reward the achievement of financial results measured over the
current fiscal year. In addition, as referenced below, in order
to provide a mechanism to reward individual performance, a
portion of each NEOs annual cash incentive bonus award has
historically been payable at the Boards discretion.
The Compensation Committee selects the financial performance
goals applicable to the Management Incentive Plan, which may be
based on one or more criteria. For the 2007 executive bonus
program, the Compensation Committee had utilized the following
performance criteria and weightings for cash incentive bonus
awards:
Table of Contents
After careful consideration and consultation with Mercer and
management, the Committee adopted a new corporate bonus program
for 2008 (the 2008 Bonus Program), in which the NEOs
participated. The Committee selected substantially different
financial performance criteria for the 2008 Bonus Program, as
follows:
The 2008 Bonus Program established a bonus pool equivalent to
18.5% of EBT for the entire company. Of this bonus pool amount,
8.5% is attributable to corporate office personnel (the
Corporate Office Bonus Pool), in which the NEOs
participate. EBT is calculated as Earnings before Interest,
Taxes and Amortization (EBITA) less an interest
charge based upon the Companys weighted average cost of
capital multiplied by average net tangible assets.
The Committee adopted the 2008 Bonus Program for the following
reasons:
For 2008, the Committee allocated the following percentages of
the EBT Corporate Office Bonus Pool (which consists of 8.5% of
total company EBT) to the executive officers, as follows:
In selecting the above EBT-based bonus percentages, the
Committee reviewed actual bonus payments made to the executive
officers over the past few years under the prior bonus plan and
compared those payments to the pro-forma amounts that would have
been earned if the 2008 Bonus Program performance criteria were
in place during those years. The Committee determined that the
average bonus payments to the NEOs over the prior four years
would have been less under the new program by amounts ranging
from 16.5% to 25% and that the volatility of bonus payment
amounts year-over-year would also have been reduced under the
new plan.
With respect to the discretionary bonus criteria, the
Compensation Committee determined that the NEOs would be
eligible for a maximum discretionary payment of up to 25% of
their base salary in order to provide a mechanism to reward each
NEOs individual performance and contribution to the
business, as well as to provide an effective retention incentive.
Table of Contents
At the time of adopting the 2008 Bonus Program, it was expected
that the Company would realize negative EBT for the
2008 year given the severe housing downturn and, therefore,
that the NEOs would not earn any bonus amounts for 2008. The
Committee nevertheless adopted the 2008 Bonus Program based on
the EBT performance criteria because the Committee and
management agreed that the NEOs current bonus potential
should be reduced in light of the continuing industry downturn,
as well as the Companys program to reduce operating
expenses. The Committee believes that the new bonus program will
provide appropriate incentives to the management team when the
Company returns to profitability.
As expected, the Company incurred a significant operating loss
for 2008 and the NEOs did not receive any payments under the EBT
performance criteria. Given the expectation of negative EBT for
the Company for the 2008 year, the actual target
bonus for the NEOs for 2008 was limited to the maximum
amount payable under the discretionary component of the bonus
program, which was equal to 25% of their base salaries. This
target award level is below the 25th percentile
of our peer companies.
As noted above, the Committee and the Board, in accordance with
senior managements recommendation, decided not to award
any discretionary bonuses to the NEOs for performance in 2008.
Although the Committee believes that the executive management
team performed very well during the year, the Committee decided
not to award discretionary bonuses as part of the Companys
expense control program.
A key component of our executive compensation program includes
rewards for long-term strategic accomplishments and enhancement
of long-term stockholder value through the use of equity-based
incentives. We believe that long-term incentive compensation
performs an essential role in attracting and retaining executive
talent and providing them with incentives to maximize the value
of stockholders investments. Historically, the annualized
value of the equity awards to our NEOs has been at or below the
median of the market, with some variation.
In a departure from past practice, and in accordance with senior
managements recommendation, the Committee decided not to
grant additional equity awards to the Companys executive
officers in 2008 (except for a de minimis award to
Mr. Tolly, as reflected in the 2008 Grants of
Plan-Based Awards table later in this Proxy Statement). In
lieu of additional awards, the Committee and the Board approved
the NEOs participation in the stock option exchange
program (the Exchange Program) adopted in February
2008. Under the Exchange Program, Company employees who held
stock options with exercise prices ranging from $17.90 to $23.87
per share could exchange those options for an equivalent number
of replacement options with an exercise price as of May 22,
2008, the closing date of the exchange offer. The Committee and
the Board implemented the Exchange Program because many of the
Companys key managers held stock options with exercise
prices that substantially exceeded the market price of the
Companys Common Stock. The Committee and the Board
believed that these underwater stock options no
longer provided the long-term incentive and retention objectives
they were intended to provide when granted. The Exchange Program
was intended to remedy this situation by allowing key managers
to exchange their underwater options for replacement
stock options at the then current market price.
Implementation of the Exchange Program facilitated the
Companys ability to provide long-term incentive and
retention awards to key managers without the dilution resulting
from new equity awards. The Exchange Program was approved by the
Companys stockholders at the 2008 annual meeting. The
replacement options were granted at an exercise price of $7.15
per share (the closing price on May 22, 2008) and vest
in equal installments over approximately three years. The
replacement options granted to Mr. Sherman vest over
approximately two years, which was the vesting period applicable
to his replaced underwater options. Under the
Exchange Program, an aggregate of 580,700 options held by the
NEOs were exchanged for an equivalent number of new options at
$7.15 per share. The value of the replacement options granted to
the NEOs under this program is below the median of annual equity
award values of our peer group. The incremental value of these
replacement options is reflected in the 2008 Grants of
Plan-Based Awards table later in this Proxy Statement.
Table of Contents
The Corporation seeks to maintain an egalitarian culture in its
facilities and operations. The Corporation does not provide its
officers with parking spaces or separate dining or other
facilities. Corporation-provided air travel for officers is for
business purposes only. The Corporations health care,
insurance, 401(k) plan, and other welfare and employee-benefit
programs are the same for all eligible employees, including the
NEOs, except that employees making over $100,000 annually make
higher monthly contributions for their health insurance
benefits. The Corporation has no outstanding loans of any kind
to any of its executive officers.
Perquisites for our executives, including the named executive
officers, are very limited. Other than allowances to the
executives for automobiles, our executives are eligible for the
same benefits as all other employees. The perquisites and other
benefits provided to our named executive officers are set forth
in the All Other Compensation column of the
Summary Compensation Table later in this Proxy
Statement.
The Board believes that severance benefits are necessary in
order to attract and retain the caliber and quality of executive
that Builders FirstSource needs in its most senior positions.
The Corporation has entered into employment agreements with
Messrs. Sherman, Horn, Tolly, and McAleenan. The terms of
these agreements are described under the caption
Employment Agreements later in this Proxy Statement.
These agreements provide the Corporation with protection in the
form of restrictive covenants, including non-competition,
non-solicitation, and confidentiality covenants. The Board
considered the advisability of using employment agreements with
its executive officers and determined that they are in the best
interests of the Corporation insofar as they permit the
Corporation to achieve its goals of attracting and retaining the
best possible executive talent while obtaining post employment
non-competition and non-solicitation covenants from executive
officers.
Under the terms of their employment agreements,
Messrs. Sherman, Horn, Tolly, and McAleenan are entitled to
certain severance benefits in the event their employment is
terminated by the Corporation without cause or by
the NEO under certain circumstances, as described in the
employment agreements. These severance benefits include salary
continuation for a period of one year (for Messrs. Horn,
Tolly, and McAleenan) and up to two years for Mr. Sherman
(depending on the expiration date of the then-current term of
his agreement), continuation of health and welfare benefits
during this period, and a payment equal to the average annual
bonus amount paid to the executive for the prior two fiscal
years (for Messrs. Horn, Tolly, and McAleenan). These
severance benefits are described under the caption
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in
Control later in this Proxy Statement.
The Corporation does not provide any retirement programs or
benefits to its NEOs other than its 401(k) program, which is
available to all employees. This is consistent with our emphasis
on direct compensation and our philosophy of maintaining an
egalitarian culture.
The only new equity awards that were granted to our NEOs in 2008
were in connection with the Exchange Program (except for a de
minimis award to Mr. Tolly), as discussed above. In prior
years, the Boards practice has been to grant annual equity
awards to our NEOs following the release of earnings in
February. We do not engage in the practice of timing grants with
the release of non-public information. We utilize the closing
price on the grant date to establish the exercise price of stock
options under our equity plans.
The Board of Directors has carefully considered the implications
of Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code. The Board
of Directors believes tax deductibility of compensation is an
important consideration. Accordingly, the Board of Directors,
where possible and considered appropriate, strives to preserve
Table of Contents
corporate tax deductions, including the deductibility of
compensation to NEOs. Amounts paid under the Corporations
2005 Equity Incentive Plan and the Management Incentive Plan
following the Corporations initial public offering and
prior to this annual meeting will not be subject to the
Section 162(m) deduction limitations.
The Board of Directors also reserves flexibility, where it is
deemed necessary and in the best interests of the Corporation
and its stockholders to continue to attract and retain the best
possible executive talent, to approve compensation arrangements
that are not necessarily fully tax deductible to the
Corporation. In this regard, certain portions of compensation
paid to the NEOs may not be deductible for federal income tax
purposes under Section 162(m). The Board of Directors will
continue to review the Corporations executive compensation
practices to determine which elements of executive compensation
qualify as performance-based compensation under the
Code.
Summary
Compensation Table
The following table sets forth the cash and other compensation
that we paid to our NEOs, or that was otherwise earned by our
NEOs, for their services in all capacities during 2008, 2007,
and 2006.
The supplemental tables presented in the footnotes to the
Summary Compensation Table are provided as additional
information for our stockholders and are not intended as a
substitute for the information presented in the Summary
Compensation Table, which is required by SEC rules.
No stock awards were granted to the NEOs in 2008, other than a
grant of 6,850 shares to Mr. Tolly. The 2007 and 2008
restricted share expense for Mr. Sherman relates to an
award granted to him in 2007, which is the only grant of
restricted shares Mr. Sherman has received since beginning
employment with the Corporation in September 2001.
FAS 123R Expense vs. Market Value of Stock
Awards. Due to the decline in the price of our
Common Stock, the annual expense that would be recognized if the
value of the restricted stock awards was calculated as of
December 31, 2008 is significantly less than the amount
reflected in the Stock Awards column for 2008. If
the restricted stock awards reflected in this column were valued
based on the market value of our Common Stock as of
December 31, 2008, rather than on the grant date in
accordance with FAS 123R, the annual accounting expense
would differ as shown in the following supplemental table.
Table of Contents
(Supplemental Table)
Except for a grant of 14,600 options to Mr. Tolly, the only
option awards that were granted to the NEOs in 2008 were made in
connection with a stock option exchange program (the
Exchange Program, as described in more detail below)
under which the Corporations employees, including the
NEOs, were given the opportunity to exchange on a one-for-one
basis certain underwater options for new options
having an exercise price equal to the fair market value of the
Common Stock as of the date of the exchange.
FAS 123R Expense vs. Market Value of Option
Awards. Due to the decline in the value of our
Common Stock, the option awards for which expenses are shown in
this column are out of the money and have no
intrinsic value (calculated as the difference between the price
of our Common Stock as of the market close on December 31,
2008 ($1.53 per share) and the option exercise price), as
reflected in the supplemental table below. If, instead, the
valuation for annual expense for the same options was calculated
as if those options were granted on December 31, 2008 using
similar assumptions as used when the options were granted, the
expense associated with the options would be very significantly
lower, as reflected in the supplemental table below. For
example, as shown below, if the total value of options granted
to Mr. Sherman was calculated in accordance with the
Black-Scholes model as if the options were granted on
December 31, 2008, the annual expense would be $101,927.
Table of Contents
Employer Contributions to 401(k) Plan. Each of
Messrs. Horn, Tolly, McAleenan, and Schenkel received a 50%
match for their contributions up to 6% of their annual
compensation.
Auto Allowance. Messrs. Horn, McAleenan,
and Schenkel each received a car allowance. We value auto
allowances based on the actual payments made to the executives.
2008
Grants of Plan-Based Awards
The following table below sets forth the individual grants of
plan-based awards made to each of our NEOs during 2008.
Table of Contents
We have employment agreements with Messrs. Sherman, Horn,
Tolly, and McAleenan that include the terms described below.
Additional information regarding the severance benefits provided
under the employment agreements may be found under
Potential Payments Upon Termination or Change in
Control.
Mr. Sherman. Mr. Shermans
employment agreement was entered into on September 1, 2001
and amended on June 1, 2005 and October 29, 2008. His
agreement has a two-year term, with automatic renewals each year
commencing on the first anniversary of the effective date of the
employment agreement, unless either party provides at least
90 days notice of non-renewal. Mr. Shermans
employment agreement sets his base salary at $600,000, subject
to annual review and increase as deemed appropriate by the Board
of Directors. At his request, Mr. Shermans base
salary has remained unchanged since September 2001.
Mr. Shermans employment agreement also provides that
Mr. Sherman will be eligible for an annual cash incentive
bonus of up to 133% of his base salary, as determined by the
Board of Directors. The Board of Directors may increase the
amount of Mr. Shermans bonus if it deems such an
increase appropriate. Pursuant to his employment agreement,
Mr. Sherman is entitled to fully participate in all
(i) health and dental benefits and insurance programs,
(ii) life and short- and long-term disability benefits and
insurance programs, and (iii) defined contribution and
equity compensation programs, all as available to senior
executive officers of the Corporation generally.
Messrs. Horn, Tolly, and McAleenan. The
employment agreements with Messrs. Horn, Tolly, and
McAleenan were entered into on January 15, 2004 and amended
on October 29, 2008. Each of these agreements has a
one-year term, with automatic one-year renewals commencing on
the first anniversary of the effective date of the employment
agreement, unless either party provides at least 90 days
notice of non-renewal. For 2008, the minimum base salaries of
Messrs. Horn, Tolly, and McAleenan were $450,000, 450,000,
and $390,000, respectively. These amounts were increased from
$375,000, $400,000, and $360,000, respectively, effective on
February 4, 2008. The employment agreement of each of
Messrs. Horn, Tolly, and McAleenan provides for the payment
of an annual cash incentive bonus with a minimum target of 100%
of their salary. The employment agreements also provide that the
executives are entitled to fully participate in all
Table of Contents
(i) health and dental benefits and insurance programs,
(ii) life and short- and long-term disability benefits and
insurance programs, and (iii) defined contribution and
equity compensation programs, all as available to senior
executive officers of the Corporation generally.
In February 2008, as a result of the downturn in the
single-family homebuilding industry in 2006 and 2007 and the
resulting deterioration in the stock price of many companies
engaged in the industry over that period, including Builders
FirstSource, the Board determined that a significant number of
our key managers held stock options with exercise prices that
substantially exceeded the then current market price of our
Common Stock. The Board of Directors determined that those
options no longer provided the long-term incentive and retention
objectives they were intended to provide. As a result, the Board
approved an exchange offer intended to address that situation by
providing key managers with an opportunity to exchange their
underwater option grants (the Underwater Options)
for new option grants (the New Options). The Board
of Directors approved this exchange offer in lieu of granting
additional options in 2008 to the key managers who were eligible
optionholders (other than de minimis grants to a few key
managers). The exchange offer was approved by the stockholders
of the Company on May 22, 2008 (the New Option Grant
Date).
As a result of the exchange offer, 943,200 Underwater Options
with exercise prices ranging from $17.90 to $23.87 per share
were exchanged for New Options with an exercise price of $7.15
per share, the closing price of our Common Stock as reported on
the NASDAQ Stock Market on the New Option Grant Date. The
Underwater Options exchanged in the exchange offer included
330,000, 96,400, 53,600, 87,500, and 15,000 Underwater Options
held by Messrs. Sherman, Horn, Tolly, McAleenan, and
Schenkel, respectively. Regardless of the vesting status of the
Underwater Options, the New Options were unvested on the New
Option Grant Date and vest as follows (i) for Floyd
Sherman, our President and Chief Executive Officer, one-half of
his New Options become exercisable on each of February 26,
2009 and 2010 and (ii) for all of the other Eligible
Optionholders, including Messrs. Horn, Tolly, McAleenan,
and Schenkel, one-third of the New Options become exercisable on
each of February 26, 2009, 2010, and 2011. All the New
Options expire on May 22, 2018, regardless of the
expiration date of the options that were exchanged for them.
Except with regard to the new exercise price, vesting schedule,
and termination date, the terms of the New Options are
essentially identical to the terms of the Underwater Options.
Table of Contents
2008
Outstanding Equity Awards at Fiscal Year-End
The following table provides information concerning equity
awards that are outstanding as of December 31, 2008 for
each of our NEOs.
Table of Contents
The following table provides information regarding the vesting
of restricted stock awards held by our NEOs in 2008. No stock
options were exercised by our NEOs during 2008.
As described above in the narrative following the 2008
Grants of Plan-Based Awards table, we entered into
employment agreements with four of our NEOs, which, among other
things, provide benefits to such NEOs in the event of a
termination of employment under certain circumstances.
Table of Contents
Termination without
Cause. Mr. Shermans employment
agreement provides that if he is terminated by the Corporation
without cause (as defined in the employment
agreement) he will be entitled to payment of his annual base
salary and health and welfare benefits for the remainder of the
term of the employment agreement.
Termination by Reason of Executives Death or
Disability. The agreement also provides that,
upon Mr. Shermans termination of employment by reason
of his death or disability, Mr. Sherman (or his
beneficiaries) will be entitled to continuation of his base
salary and health benefits for one year after his date of
termination. In the event of Mr. Shermans disability,
this amount will be reduced by the proceeds of any short-
and/or
long-term disability payments he receives under the
Corporations plans.
Restrictive Covenants. During his
employment with the Corporation and for one year thereafter,
Mr. Sherman may not disclose confidential information and
may not directly or indirectly compete with the Corporation. In
addition, Mr. Sherman may not solicit any employees of the
Corporation or any of its subsidiaries during his employment
with the Corporation and for two years thereafter.
Termination by the Corporation without Cause; Certain
Terminations by the Executive; Non-Renewal of Employment
Agreement; Mutual Consent to
Termination. Under each of these employment
agreements, in the event that (i) the executives
employment is terminated by us without cause (as
defined in the employment agreement), (ii) the executive
terminates his employment because of a material adverse
diminution in job title or responsibilities or a relocation of
his principal place of employment more than 100 miles from
its current location without his consent, (iii) we notify
the executive of our intent not to renew the employment
agreement and the executive delivers a notice of
resignation (as defined in the employment agreement)
within 90 days of receipt of the notice of non-renewal, or
(iv) the executives employment is terminated by
mutual consent and the parties enter into an agreement whereby
the executive agrees to be bound by the post-termination
restrictive covenants in the agreement (described below), the
executive will be entitled to continuation of his base salary
and health benefits for one year after the date of termination
plus payment of an amount equal to his average bonus
compensation (defined in the employment agreements as an
amount equal to the average of the annual bonus amounts earned
by the executive under the Corporations annual incentive
plan during the two most recent fiscal years ended prior to the
executives date of termination).
Termination by Reason of Executives Death or
Disability. The agreements also provide that,
upon the executives termination of employment by reason of
his death or disability, the executive (or his beneficiaries)
will be entitled to continuation of his base salary and health
benefits for one year after the date of termination. In the
event of executives disability, this amount will be
reduced by the proceeds of any short-
and/or
long-term disability payments the executive receives under the
Corporations plans.
Restrictive Covenants. During the
executives employment with us and for one year thereafter,
the executive may not disclose confidential information and may
not directly or indirectly compete with the Corporation. In
addition, the executive may not solicit any employees of the
Corporation or any of its subsidiaries during his employment
with us and for two years thereafter.
The following table summarizes the value of the termination
payments and benefits that our NEOs would receive if they had
terminated employment on December 31, 2008 under the
circumstances shown. The
Table of Contents
amounts shown in the table exclude distributions under our
401(k) retirement plan and any additional benefits that are
generally available to all of our salaried employees.
Table of Contents
The following table sets forth the cash and other compensation
paid by the Corporation to the members of the Board of Directors
of the Corporation for all services in all capacities during
2008.
The following table shows: (i) the aggregate grant date
fair value of restricted shares received by
Messrs. Christophe, Griffin, and Steinke in 2008 and
(ii) the total number of restricted shares held as of
December 31, 2008:
The independent members of our Board of Directors who are not
affiliated with Building Products, LLC are compensated pursuant
to the Amended and Restated Independent Director Compensation
Policy adopted by the Board. Such independent directors receive:
(i) an annual cash retainer of $50,000, payable quarterly,
and (ii) an annual cash retainer of $5,000 for service as
the chairperson of a committee of the Board. Independent
directors do not receive separate per meeting fees. These
independent directors also receive annual restricted stock
awards. The number of shares in these awards is determined by
dividing a dollar value ($50,000 per year) by the fair market
value of our Common Stock on the date of grant.
However, under the prior independent director compensation plan
that was in effect before August 1, 2006, for the first
three years of service, each such independent director received,
in addition to certain cash
Table of Contents
compensation, an initial annual grant of restricted shares
determined by dividing a dollar amount ($60,000) by the fair
market value of our Common Stock on the date of grant. In order
to have the approximate effect of a grant of $20,000 per year in
restricted stock for each of the first three years of service on
the Board, this grant vested equally over three years on the
anniversary of the grant date, with each such vesting being
contingent on the directors continued service on the
Board. To compensate for these existing grants when the current
independent director compensation plan was implemented,
directors who received an initial grant of restricted shares at
the time their Board service began with a value of $60,000 that
vested evenly over three years (as described above) will only
receive an annual grant of restricted shares with a value of
$30,000 until the initial grant has fully vested.
We have not paid, and do not intend to pay, compensation to
individuals serving on our Board or its committees who are
employees of the Corporation, affiliates of Building Products,
LLC, or not deemed independent.
The Compensation Committee consists of Messrs. Christophe,
Frank, and Kruse. No member of the Compensation Committee was an
officer or employee of Builders FirstSource or any of its
subsidiaries during the last fiscal year or at any other time or
had any relationship with the Corporation requiring disclosure
under Item 404 of
Regulation S-K.
No member of the Compensation Committee was an executive officer
of another entity on whose compensation committee or board of
directors an executive officer of the Corporation served.
Additionally, no executive officer of the Corporation served as
a member of the board of directors or compensation committee of
another entity, one of whose executive officers served on the
Compensation Committee or the Board of Builders FirstSource.
Table of Contents
OWNERSHIP
OF SECURITIES
Securities
Owned by Directors, Executive Officers, and Certain Beneficial
Owners
The following table sets forth certain information regarding the
beneficial ownership, as of December 14, 2009, of our
common stock by (i) each person known to us (based upon
their Schedule 13D and 13G filings with the SEC) to hold
greater than 5% of the total number of outstanding shares and
(ii) each current director or named executive officer and
all the current directors (including director nominees) and
executive officers as a group. The number of shares beneficially
owned by each person or group as of December 14, 2009
includes shares of common stock that such person or group had
the right to acquire on or within 60 days after
December 14, 2009, including upon the exercise of options.
All such information is estimated and subject to change. Each
outstanding share of common stock entitles its holder to one
vote on all matters submitted to a vote of our stockholders.
Ownership of our common stock is shown in terms of
beneficial ownership. Amounts and percentages of
common stock beneficially owned are reported on the basis of
regulations of the SEC governing the determination of beneficial
ownership of securities. Under the rules of the SEC, a person is
deemed to be a beneficial owner of a security if
that person has or shares voting power, which
includes the power to vote or to direct the voting of such
security, or investment power, which includes the
power to dispose of or to direct the disposition of such
security. A person is also deemed to be a beneficial owner of
any securities of which he has a right to acquire beneficial
ownership within 60 days. More than one person may be
considered to beneficially own the same shares. In the table
below, unless otherwise noted, a person has sole voting and
dispositive power for those shares shown as beneficially owned
by such person.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Messrs. Seaver and Kent are the managers of SCM, which is
the general partner of SRV.
On February 27, 2006, JLL and Warburg Pincus each acquired
50% of the limited liability company interests of Building
Products, LLC. Building Products, LLC (on behalf of JLL)
acquired shares of our common stock in a private purchase on
December 6, 2006. Warburg Pincus acquired shares of our
common stock in the open market on November 30, 2006,
December 1, 2006, December 4, 2006, March 14,
2007, February 27, 2008, February 28, 2008,
February 29, 2008, March 3, 2008, March 4, 2008,
March 5, 2008, March 6, 2008, March 7, 2008,
March 10, 2008, March 11, 2008, and March 12,
2008. Accordingly, as of
Table of Contents
December 14, 2009, JLL and Warburg Pincus may be deemed to
beneficially own 24.6% and 24.9% of our common stock,
respectively.
The Amended and Restated Limited Liability Company Agreement of
Building Products, LLC, as further amended on December 6,
2006, provides, among other things, that each of JLL and Warburg
Pincus holds such number of interests in Building Products, LLC
as equals the number of shares of our common stock deemed to be
beneficially owned by JLL or Warburg Pincus, as applicable. As a
member of Building Products, LLC, each of JLL and Warburg Pincus
is deemed to hold the number of shares of our common stock it
held on February 27, 2006, plus any shares of our common
stock acquired by Building Products, LLC on behalf of such
member and any shares of our common stock contributed to
Building Products, LLC by such member, less any shares of our
common stock transferred from Building Products, LLC on behalf
of such member. Each of JLL and Warburg Pincus directs the
voting of the securities of the Corporation beneficially owned
by it as it sees fit, without any agreement, arrangement, or
understanding between them regarding the voting of the subject
securities of the Corporation. In furtherance thereof, Building
Products, LLC has delivered to each of JLL and Warburg Pincus an
irrevocable proxy, coupled with an interest, to vote on all
matters submitted to stockholders of the Corporation, such
number of shares of our common stock as is equal to the total
number of shares of our common stock held by Building Products,
LLC, multiplied by each of the members respective
percentage ownership interest in Building Products, LLC. Neither
JLL nor Warburg Pincus may direct the disposition of the shares
of the other party. Each party may transfer and cause Building
Products, LLC to transfer the shares of our common stock that it
beneficially owns, subject to certain volume limitations and
other provisions.
Furthermore, under the terms of the Amended and Restated Limited
Liability Company Agreement, Building Products, LLC will use its
commercially reasonable efforts to cause the Board of Directors
of the Corporation to include designees of each of JLL and
Warburg Pincus, and each of JLL and Warburg Pincus will select
such designees as it deems appropriate, without any agreement,
arrangement, or understanding between them to work collectively
to achieve the appointment of the parties designees to our
Board of Directors.
Table of Contents
Pursuant to SEC
Rule 14a-8,
to be considered for inclusion in the Corporations Proxy
Statement for the 2010 annual meeting, any stockholder proposal
submitted must be received by the Corporate Secretary not later
than December 10, 2009. In addition, subject to SEC
Rule 14a-8,
our By-laws provide that no business may be brought by a
stockholder before an annual meeting of stockholders unless the
stockholder (i) is a stockholder of record on the date of
the notice of meeting (or any supplement thereto) provided by or
at the direction of the Board of Directors (or any duly
authorized committee thereof) and is entitled to notice of and
to vote at such annual meeting as of such record date,
(ii) has delivered to the Corporate Secretary within the
time limits described in the By-laws a written notice containing
the information specified in the By-laws, and (iii) such
notice is in the proper form as set forth in Article II,
Section 5 of the By-laws. Accordingly, in order for a
stockholders proposal (other than one included in the
Proxy Statement pursuant to SEC
Rule 14a-8)
to be considered timely and to be brought during the 2010 annual
meeting pursuant to the Corporations By-laws, the required
written notice must be received by the Corporate Secretary on or
after January 22, 2010 but no later than February 21,
2010. A copy of the By-laws may be obtained on the Governance
section of our website at www.bldr.com or by written
request to the Corporate Secretary, Builders FirstSource, Inc.,
2001 Bryan Street, Suite 1600, Dallas, Texas 75201, United
States of America.
To reduce the expenses of delivering duplicate proxy materials,
we may take advantage of the SECs householding
rules that permit us to deliver only one set of proxy materials
to stockholders who share an address, unless otherwise
requested. If you share an address with another stockholder and
received only one set of proxy materials, you may request a
separate copy of these materials at no cost to you by calling
our Legal Department at
(214) 880-3500,
by e-mail at
inforequest@bldr.com, or by written request to the Corporate
Secretary, Builders FirstSource, Inc., 2001 Bryan Street
Suite 1600, Dallas, Texas 75201. For future annual
meetings, you may request a separate set of proxy materials or
request that we send only one set of proxy materials to you if
you are receiving multiple copies, by calling or writing to us
at the phone number and address given above.
Stockholders may help us to reduce printing and mailing costs
further by opting to receive future proxy materials by
e-mail. This
Proxy Statement and our 2008 Annual Report on
Form 10-K
are available on our website at www.bldr.com. Instead of
receiving future copies of our proxy materials by mail, most
stockholders can elect to receive an
e-mail that
will provide electronic links to them. Opting to receive your
proxy materials online will save us the cost of producing and
mailing documents to your home or business and also will give
you an electronic link to the proxy voting site.
Stockholders of Record. If you vote on the
internet at www.proxyvote.com, simply follow the prompts
for enrolling in the electronic proxy delivery service.
Beneficial Owners. If you hold your shares in
a brokerage account, you may also have the opportunity to
receive copies of these documents electronically. Please check
the information provided in the proxy materials mailed to you by
your bank or other holder of record regarding the availability
of this service.
We are subject to the information reporting requirements of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the Exchange
Act), and, in accordance with these requirements, we are
required to file periodic reports and other information with the
SEC. The reports and other information filed by us with the SEC
may be inspected and copied at the public reference facilities
maintained by the SEC as described below.
You may copy and inspect any materials that we file with the SEC
at the SECs Public Reference Room at
100 F Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. Please call
the SEC at
1-800-SEC-0330
for further information about the operation of the public
reference rooms. The SEC also maintains an internet website at
http://www.sec.gov
that contains our filed reports, proxy and information
statements, and other information that we file
Table of Contents
electronically with the SEC. Additionally, we make these filings
available, free of charge, on our website at www.bldr.com
as soon as reasonably practicable after we electronically
file such materials with, or furnish them to, the SEC. The
information on our website, other than these filings, is not,
and should not be, considered part of this Proxy Statement, is
not incorporated by reference into this document, and should not
be relied upon in connection with making any investment decision
with respect to our common stock.
If you would like to request documents from us, please do so by
January 7, 2010, to receive them before the special
meeting. If you request any documents from us, we will mail them
to you by first class mail, or another equally prompt method, as
promptly as reasonably possible after we receive your request.
We disclose important information to you by referring you to
documents that we have previously filed with the SEC or
documents that we will file with the SEC in the future. The
information incorporated by reference is considered to be part
of this Proxy Statement. Information in documents that we file
later with the SEC will automatically update and supersede
information in this Proxy Statement. We incorporate by reference
into this Proxy Statement the documents listed below, and any
future filings made by us with the SEC under Section 13(a),
13(c), 14 or 15(d) or the Exchange Act until we close this
offering, including all filings made after the date of the
initial registration statement and prior to the effectiveness of
the registration statement. We hereby incorporate by reference
the following documents; provided, however, that we are not
incorporating any information contained in any Current Report on
Form 8-K
that is furnished but not filed with the SEC:
Any statement contained in a document incorporated or deemed to
be incorporated by reference in this Proxy Statement is modified
or superseded for purposes of the Proxy Statement to the extent
that a statement contained in this Proxy Statement or in any
other subsequently filed document which also is or is deemed to
be incorporated by reference herein modifies or supersedes such
statement. Any statement so modified or superseded does not,
except as so modified or superseded, constitute a part of this
Proxy Statement.
We will provide without charge to each person, including any
beneficial owner, to whom this Proxy Statement is delivered,
upon written or oral request, a copy of any or all of the
foregoing documents incorporated herein by reference (other than
exhibits unless such exhibits are specifically incorporated by
reference in such documents). Requests for such documents should
be made to us at the following address or telephone number:
Builders FirstSource, Inc.
2001 Bryan Street, Suite 1600 Dallas, Texas 75201 (214) 880-3500 Attention: Corporate Secretary
Table of Contents
The Board of Directors knows of no other matters to be acted
upon at the meeting, but if any matters properly come before the
meeting that are not specifically set forth on the proxy card
and in this Proxy Statement, it is intended that the persons
voting the proxies will vote in accordance with their best
judgments.
By Order of the Board of Directors,
Donald F. McAleenan
Corporate Secretary
December 15, 2009
Builders FirstSource, Inc. and the Builders FirstSource logo are
trademarks or service marks of an affiliate of Builders
FirstSource, Inc.
©
2009 Builders FirstSource, Inc. All rights reserved.
Table of Contents
Annex A
INVESTMENT
AGREEMENT
This INVESTMENT AGREEMENT (this Agreement),
dated as of October 23, 2009, is made by and among JLL
Partners Fund V, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership
(JLL Fund V), and Warburg Pincus Private
Equity IX, L.P., a Delaware limited partnership
(Warburg Pincus) (each of JLL Fund V and
Warburg Pincus, an Investor, and
collectively, the Investors), and Builders
FirstSource, Inc., a Delaware corporation (the
Company). Capitalized terms used in this
Agreement have the meanings assigned thereto in the sections
indicated on Schedule I hereto.
WHEREAS, as part of the Recapitalization (as defined below) of
the Company, the Company proposes to distribute, at no charge,
to each holder of record on a record date to be set by the Board
of Directors of the Company (the Record Date)
of shares of common stock, par value $0.01 per share, of the
Company (the Common Stock) transferable
rights (the Rights) to subscribe for and
purchase a number of shares of Common Stock that, if exercised
in full, will provide gross proceeds to the Company of
$205.0 million (the Aggregate Offering
Amount) (the Rights
Offering); and
WHEREAS, each holder of a Right will be entitled (the
Basic Subscription Privilege) to purchase up
to its pro rata portion of 58,571,428 shares of
Common Stock (the Offered Shares), at a price
of $3.50 per share (as adjusted for any stock split,
combination, reorganization, recapitalization, stock dividend,
stock distribution or similar event, the Subscription
Price); and
WHEREAS, each holder of a Right (other than the Investors) that
exercises in full its Basic Subscription Privilege will be
entitled (the Over-Subscription Privilege) to
subscribe for additional shares of Common Stock at the
Subscription Price, to the extent that holders of Rights do not
subscribe for and purchase all of the Offered Shares available
under the Basic Subscription Privilege; and
WHEREAS, as part of the Recapitalization, the Company intends
(i) to offer new second lien debt securities having the terms
set forth on Exhibit A hereto (New
Notes) and cash from a portion of the gross proceeds
of the Rights Offering in exchange for the outstanding Second
Priority Senior Secured Floating Rate Notes due 2012 of the
Company (the Notes) in transactions exempt
from the registration requirements of the Securities Act of
1933, as amended (the Securities Act),
pursuant to Section 4(2) thereunder and (ii) under certain
circumstances, to provide holders of outstanding Notes the right
to exchange outstanding Notes for shares of Common Stock at an
exchange price equal to the Subscription Price in transactions
exempt from the registration requirements of the Securities Act,
substantially on the terms set forth in that certain Support
Agreement, dated as of the date hereof, between the Company and
certain holders of outstanding Notes signatory thereto
(collectively, the Debt Exchange and,
together with the Rights Offering, the
Recapitalization); and
WHEREAS, in order to facilitate the Rights Offering, the
Investors and the Company wish to enter into this Agreement,
pursuant to which and upon the terms and subject to the
conditions set forth herein, (i) to the extent that the gross
proceeds of the Rights Offering are less than
$75.0 million, the Company shall have the right to require
the Investors to purchase, upon expiration of the Rights
Offering, at the Subscription Price, a number of Offered Shares
not subscribed for and purchased by holders of Rights upon
exercise thereof under the Basic Subscription Privilege and
Over-Subscription Privilege such that the total gross proceeds
of the Rights Offering equal $75.0 million; and (ii) to the
extent that the Rights Offering is not fully subscribed, the
Investors shall agree to exchange the Notes held indirectly by
such Investors for shares of Common Stock at an exchange price
equal to the Subscription Price, to the extent of such
deficiency and subject to the rights of other holders of Notes
that participate in such exchange; and
WHEREAS, the Special Committee of the Board of Directors of the
Company (the Special Committee) has received
an opinion from its financial advisor, Moelis & Company
LLC, that the terms of the Rights Offering are fair from a
financial point of view to the holders of Common Stock other
than the Investors and has, based upon such opinion and other
factors, unanimously recommended the Rights Offering, the Debt
Table of Contents
Exchange, this Agreement, and the transactions contemplated
hereby to the Board of Directors of the Company (the
Board) for approval; and
WHEREAS, the Board has unanimously approved the Rights Offering,
the Debt Exchange, this Agreement, and the transactions
contemplated hereby and recommended that stockholders of the
Company vote in favor of the issuance of shares of Common Stock
in the Rights Offering and Debt Exchange pursuant to the terms
hereof.
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual promises,
agreements, representations, warranties and covenants contained
herein, each of the parties hereto hereby agrees as follows:
1. Rights Offering; Use of Proceeds.
(a) On the terms and subject to the conditions set forth
herein, the Company shall distribute, at no charge, to the
holder of record of each share of Common Stock as of the Record
Date (each, an Eligible Holder) a number of
Rights per share of Common Stock equal to 58,571,428 divided by
the number of shares of Common Stock outstanding as of the close
of business on the Record Date (the Rights
Ratio); provided that Rights will be rounded to
the nearest whole number so that the Subscription Price
multiplied by the aggregate number of Offered Shares will not
exceed the Aggregate Offering Amount. Each whole Right will
entitle the holder thereof to purchase at the Subscription Price
one share of Common Stock. Each such Right shall be transferable
separately from the underlying shares of Common Stock on account
of which such Right was distributed. Eligible Holders and
holders to whom Rights have been validly transferred are
collectively referred to as Holders, each
individually being a Holder.
(b) The Rights (including under both the Basic Subscription
Privilege and the Over-Subscription Privilege) may be exercised
during a period (the Rights Exercise Period)
commencing on the date on which the Rights are issued to
Eligible Holders (the Rights Offering Commencement
Date) and ending at 5:00 p.m. Eastern
Standard Time on a Business Day (the Expiration
Time) that shall not be less than thirty
(30) days after the Rights Offering Commencement Date,
subject to extension at the discretion of the Special Committee;
provided, however, that the Rights Exercise Period
shall not be more than forty (40) days without the prior
written consent of the Investors. Business
Day has the meaning ascribed to such term in
Rule 14d-1(g)
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended and in
effect on the date hereof (the Exchange Act).
(c) Each Holder that wishes to exercise all or a portion of
its Rights under the Basic Subscription Privilege shall
(i) during the Rights Exercise Period return a duly
executed document to a subscription agent selected by the
Company (the Subscription Agent) electing to
exercise all or a portion of the Rights held by such Holder and
(ii) pay in immediately available funds an amount equal to
the full Subscription Price for the number of shares of Common
Stock that such Holder elects to purchase pursuant to the
instructions set forth in the Rights Offering Registration
Statement and related materials by the Expiration Time to an
escrow account established for the Rights Offering. On the
Closing Date, subject to the satisfaction (or waiver of) the
conditions to the Rights Offering, the Company shall issue to
each Holder that validly exercised its Rights under the Basic
Subscription Privilege the number of Offered Shares to which
such Holder is entitled based on such exercise. The obligation
of the Company to consummate the Rights Offering shall be
subject to the conditions set forth in Section 8(c)
(which may not be waived, in whole or in part, by the Company
without the prior written consent of the Investors).
(d) Each Holder (other than the Investors) that exercises
in full its Basic Subscription Privilege will be entitled under
the Over-Subscription Privilege to subscribe for additional
shares of Common Stock at the Subscription Price pursuant to the
instructions set forth in the Rights Offering Registration
Statement and related materials to the extent that other Holders
elect not to exercise all of their respective Rights to
subscribe for and purchase all of the Offered Shares under the
Basic Subscription Privilege; provided that no Holder
shall be entitled to purchase more Offered Shares under the
Over-Subscription Privilege than such Holder subscribed for
under the Basic Subscription Privilege. If the number of Offered
Shares remaining after the exercise of Rights under the Basic
Subscription Privilege (the Remaining Offered
Shares) is not sufficient to satisfy all requests for
Offered Shares under the Over-Subscription Privilege,
Table of Contents
the Holders that exercised their Rights under the
Over-Subscription Privilege will be allocated such Remaining
Offered Shares as follows: the number of Remaining Offered
Shares allotted to each Holder participating in the
Over-Subscription Privilege shall be the product (rounded to the
nearest whole number so that the Subscription Price multiplied
by the aggregate number of Offered Shares does not exceed the
Aggregate Offering Amount) obtained by multiplying the number of
Offered Shares such Holder subscribed for under the
Over-Subscription Privilege by a fraction the numerator of which
is the number of Remaining Offered Shares and the denominator of
which is the total number of Offered Shares sought to be
subscribed for under the Over-Subscription Privilege by all
Holders participating in such Over-Subscription Privilege.
(e) The first $75.0 million of gross proceeds from the
sale of the Offered Shares pursuant to the Rights Offering or
the sale of the Unsubscribed Shares (as defined below) to the
Investors pursuant to the Put Option (as defined below) will be
used by the Company for general corporate purposes and to pay
all fees and expenses associated with the Recapitalization as
provided in Section 2(h) and all Transaction
Expenses (as defined below) as provided in
Section 2(i). The remaining proceeds, if any, from
the sale of the Offered Shares pursuant to the Rights Offering
will be used to repurchase outstanding Notes pursuant to the
Debt Exchange on the terms set forth in the Support Agreement,
dated as of the date hereof, between the Company and certain
holders of outstanding Notes signatory thereto (the
Support Agreement) and the Note Offering
Materials (as defined below). Holders of outstanding Notes that
participate in the Debt Exchange will be permitted to make an
election to exchange, at par, the issued and outstanding Notes
held by them (i) for up to $145.0 million aggregate
principal amount of New Notes (as that amount may be reduced
pursuant to subsection (A) below); (ii) for up to
$130.0 million in cash from a portion of the gross proceeds
of the Rights Offering (as that amount may be reduced pursuant
to subsections (B) and (C) below); or (iii) for a
combination of New Notes and cash (subject to reduction as
provided below). Allocations of New Notes and cash requested by
participants in the Debt Exchange will be made only after the
Exchange Deficiency (as defined below), if any, shall have been
satisfied by the exchange of outstanding Notes for shares of
Common Stock pursuant to subsections (B) and
(C) below. Amounts of New Notes and cash to which holders
of Notes participating in the Debt Exchange will be entitled
shall be subject to the following provisions:
(A) To the extent that less than one hundred percent (100%)
of the outstanding Notes are validly exchanged in the Debt
Exchange, then the amount of New Notes available for exchange in
the Debt Exchange shall be reduced on a dollar-for-dollar basis
by the aggregate principal amount of Notes that are not so
exchanged. New Notes and cash will be allocated to participants
in the Debt Exchange pro rata in proportion to the
amounts of New Notes and cash requested by participants in such
Debt Exchange.
(B) If the Company receives less than $205.0 million
of gross proceeds from the Rights Offering, participants in the
Debt Exchange will also be permitted to elect to exchange, and
the Investors will be required pursuant to
Section 2(c) to exchange, to the extent of the
excess of the Aggregate Offering Amount over the gross proceeds
actually obtained by the Company in the Rights Offering and from
the purchase of the Unsubscribed Shares by the Investors
pursuant to this Agreement (such amount, the Exchange
Deficiency), Notes held by them for shares of Common
Stock (in lieu of New Notes and cash) at an exchange price equal
to the Subscription Price, with allocations of available shares
of Common Stock to be made pro rata in proportion to the
aggregate principal amount of Notes validly exchanged in the
Debt Exchange by such holders of Notes (including by the
Investors pursuant to Section 2(c)) for shares of
Common Stock.
(C) To the extent the aggregate principal amount of Notes
so exchanged for shares of Common Stock pursuant to
subsection (B) above is less than the full amount of the
Exchange Deficiency, including after any exchange of Notes for
shares of Common Stock by the Investors pursuant to
Section 2(c) and by other holders of outstanding
Notes that have elected to receive shares of Common Stock in the
Debt Exchange, all holders of outstanding Notes participating in
the Debt Exchange and electing to receive New Notes or cash in
the Debt Exchange will receive, in exchange for Notes validly
exchanged in the Debt Exchange, shares of Common Stock at an
exchange price
Table of Contents
equal to the Subscription Price pro rata in proportion to
the amount of Notes validly exchanged by them in the Debt
Exchange for consideration other than shares of Common Stock.
2. Requirement to Purchase Unsubscribed Shares;
Exchange Shares; Fees and Expenses.
(a) Upon the terms and subject to the conditions set forth
in this Agreement, to the extent that the gross proceeds from
the sale of the Offered Shares pursuant to the Rights Offering
(including upon exercise of Rights under the Over-Subscription
Privilege) are less than $75.0 million, the Company shall
have the right, upon delivery to the Investors of a Notice of
Offering Results pursuant to Section 2(b), to
require (the Put Option) each Investor to
purchase on the Closing Date, and each Investor agrees to
purchase on the Closing Date, at the Subscription Price, fifty
percent (50%) of that positive number of Offered Shares issuable
pursuant to Rights, if any, equal to
(i) 21,428,572 shares of Common Stock minus
(ii) the number of shares of Common Stock validly
subscribed for and purchased under the Basic Subscription
Privilege and the Over-Subscription Privilege (such shares of
Common Stock equal to such difference, in the aggregate, the
Unsubscribed Shares).
(b) The Company hereby agrees and undertakes to notify the
Investors as promptly as practicable and, in any event, by
10:00 a.m., Eastern Time, on the first Business Day after
the Expiration Time by electronic or facsimile transmission of
(i) the aggregate number of Rights validly exercised by
Holders under the Basic Subscription Privilege and
Over-Subscription Privilege pursuant to the Rights Offering as
of the Expiration Time and the aggregate Subscription Price
therefor, (ii) the number of Unsubscribed Shares, if any,
(iii) the aggregate principal amount of Notes validly
submitted for exchange in the Debt Exchange as of the Expiration
Time, and (iv) the allocations of New Notes, cash, and
shares of Common Stock requested by participants in such Debt
Exchange (such notification, the Notice of Offering
Results). Not later than 5:00 p.m., Eastern Time,
on the second (2nd) Business Day following the Expiration Time,
notwithstanding the expiration of the Rights Offering and the
Debt Exchange and subject to the Investors receipt of the
Notice of Offering Results, each Investor shall be required, and
the Company shall permit each Investor, to make an election
whether or not it wishes to exercise its Rights pursuant to the
Basic Subscription Privilege to subscribe for and purchase all
or any portion of its pro rata portion of the Offered
Shares pursuant to the Rights Offering (any such Offered Shares,
the Investor Offered Shares).
(c) Upon the terms and subject to the conditions set forth
in this Agreement, each Investor shall exchange, or cause to be
exchanged, the outstanding Notes indirectly held by it (such
Notes, the Investor Notes) in the Debt
Exchange for shares of Common Stock at an exchange price equal
to the Subscription Price, and, to the extent that there is an
Exchange Deficiency, the Company shall, on the Closing Date,
exchange the Investor Notes for shares of Common Stock at an
exchange price equal to the Subscription Price. Such Investor
Notes shall be exchanged by the Company on the Closing Date for
shares of Common Stock only to the extent of any Exchange
Deficiency; provided that the aggregate principal amount
of Investor Notes exchanged by each such Investor shall not
exceed $48.909 million; and provided further that
allocations of available shares of Common Stock to be issued to
satisfy the Exchange Deficiency will be made pro rata in
proportion to the aggregate principal amount of Notes validly
exchanged in the Debt Exchange by holders of Notes (including by
the Investors pursuant to this Section 2(c)) for
shares of Common Stock; and provided further that, to the
extent the number of shares of Common Stock available for
exchange in the Debt Exchange (after giving effect to any
proration of such available shares of Common Stock) is
insufficient for all of the Investor Notes to be exchanged for
shares of Common Stock, such Investor Notes that cannot be
exchanged for shares of Common Stock in accordance with this
Section 2(c) shall be exchanged for, and the
Investors shall elect to receive with respect thereto, either
New Notes, cash, or a combination thereof. All such shares of
Common Stock received in exchange for outstanding Notes pursuant
to this Agreement and the transactions contemplated herein are
referred to as the Exchange Shares, and those
Exchange Shares received by the Investors in exchange for
outstanding Investor Notes are referred to as the
Investor Exchange Shares.
(d) Each Investor shall have the right to arrange for one
or more of its respective Affiliates (each, an
Affiliated Purchaser) to purchase all or any
portion of such Investors portion of Unsubscribed Shares,
Table of Contents
on the terms and subject to the conditions in this Agreement, by
written notice to the Company at least one (1) Business Day
prior to the Settlement Date, which notice shall be signed by
the applicable Investor and each Affiliated Purchaser and shall
contain a confirmation by the Affiliated Purchaser of the
accuracy with respect to it of the representations set forth in
Section 4. In no event will any such arrangement
relieve such Investor of its obligations under this Agreement.
The term Affiliate has the meaning ascribed
to such term in
Rule 12b-2
under the Exchange Act.
(e) The closing of the purchase of the Offered Shares
(including the Investor Offered Shares, if any) to be purchased
in the Rights Offering, the exchange of outstanding Notes
pursuant to the Debt Exchange, the issuance of any Exchange
Shares (including any Investor Exchange Shares) pursuant to this
Agreement, and, if necessary, the purchase of the Unsubscribed
Shares to be purchased by the Investors or their Affiliated
Purchasers hereunder will occur at 10:00 a.m., Eastern
Standard Time, on the fourth (4th) Business Day following the
later of the Expiration Time and the satisfaction of the
conditions set forth in Section 8 (or waiver thereof
by the party or parties entitled to waive such conditions) (the
Closing Date), or such other time as shall be
agreed upon by the Company and the Investors. Delivery of the
Unsubscribed Shares and Investor Offered Shares will be made by
the Company on the Closing Date in book-entry form to the
accounts of the Investors (or to such other accounts, including
the account of an Affiliated Purchaser, as the Investors may
designate in accordance with this Agreement) against payment by
the Investors of the Subscription Price therefor by wire
transfer of immediately available funds to the account
designated in writing by the Company. The Investor Exchange
Shares will be delivered by the Company on the Closing Date in
book-entry form to the accounts of the Investors (or to such
other accounts, including the account of an Affiliated
Purchaser, as the Investors may designate in accordance with
this Agreement). On the Closing Date, the Company will also
deliver to the Investors a certificate, dated as of the Closing
Date, of the transfer agent of the Company confirming the
issuance to the Investors of the Unsubscribed Shares, if any,
the Investor Offered Shares, if any, and the Investor Exchange
Shares, if any, and all other documents and certificates
required to be delivered to the Investor pursuant to
Section 8(a).
(f) All Unsubscribed Shares, Investor Offered Shares, and
Investor Exchange Shares will be delivered with any and all
issue, stamp, transfer, sales and use, or similar taxes or
duties payable in connection with such delivery duly paid by the
Company.
(g) The Company shall notify, or cause the Subscription
Agent to notify, the Investors on each Friday during the Rights
Exercise Period and on each Business Day during the five
Business Days prior to the Expiration Time (and any extensions
thereto), or more frequently if reasonably requested by the
Investors, of the aggregate number of Rights known by the
Company or the Subscription Agent to have been validly exercised
pursuant to the Rights Offering as of the close of business on
the preceding Business Day or the most recent practicable time
before such request, as the case may be. The Company shall also
notify, or cause the exchange agent selected by the Company to
notify, the Investors on each Friday during the thirty
(30) days that precede the closing of the Debt Exchange and
on each Business Day during the five Business Days prior to the
closing of the Debt Exchange, or more frequently if reasonably
requested by the Investors, of the aggregate principal amount of
Notes known by the Company or such exchange agent to have been
validly submitted for exchange in the Debt Exchange and the
allocations of New Notes, cash, and shares of Common Stock
requested by participants in such Debt Exchange as of the close
of business on the preceding Business Day or the most recent
practicable time before such request, as the case may be.
(h) The Company shall pay all of its own fees and expenses
associated with the Recapitalization, including, without
limitation, filing and printing fees, fees and expenses of any
subscription and information agents, its counsel and financial
advisor and accounting fees and expenses, costs associated with
clearing the Offered Shares for sale under applicable state
securities laws, and listing fees.
(i) On the Closing Date, the Company shall promptly
reimburse or pay, as the case may be, the reasonable, documented
out-of-pocket costs and expenses incurred by each Investor and
its Affiliated Purchasers, if any, in connection with the
Recapitalization, including reasonable fees, out-of-pocket costs
Table of Contents
and expenses of Evercore Partners, Inc. and counsel to such
Investor (collectively, Transaction
Expenses). For the avoidance of doubt, the filing fee,
if any, required to be paid in connection with any filings
required to be made by the Investors or their Affiliates under
the HSR Act or any other competition laws or regulations shall
be paid by the Company on behalf of the Investors and their
Affiliates, as the case may be, when filings under the HSR Act
or any other competition laws or regulations are made, together
with all expenses of the Investors and their Affiliates incurred
to comply therewith and the fees, out-of-pocket costs and
expenses incurred by the Investor in connection with such
filings.
3. Representations and Warranties of the
Company. The Company represents and warrants
to, and agrees with each of the Investors, as set forth below.
Except for representations, warranties and agreements that are
expressly limited as to their date, each representation,
warranty and agreement is made as of the date hereof and as of
the Closing Date after giving effect to the transactions
contemplated hereby:
(a) Organization and
Qualification. The Company and each of its
Subsidiaries has been duly organized and is validly existing in
good standing under the laws of its respective jurisdiction of
incorporation, with the requisite power and authority to own its
properties and conduct its business as currently conducted. Each
of the Company and its Subsidiaries has been duly qualified as a
foreign corporation or organization for the transaction of
business and is in good standing under the laws of each other
jurisdiction in which the nature of its properties or business
requires such qualification, except to the extent that the
failure to be so qualified or be in good standing has not had
and would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in
the aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect. For the purpose of
this Agreement, Material Adverse Effect means
(i) any material adverse effect on the business, condition
(financial or otherwise) or results of operations of the Company
or its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole, or (ii) any material
adverse effect on the ability of the Company, subject to the
approvals and other authorizations set forth in
Section 3(g), to consummate the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement, provided, however, that any
effect caused by or resulting from the following shall not
constitute, or be taken into account in determining whether
there has been, or will be, a Material Adverse Effect on or with
respect to the Company: (I) general changes or developments
in the industry in which the Company and its Subsidiaries
operate, (II) political instability, acts of terrorism or
war, (III) any change affecting the United States economy
generally or the economy of any region in which the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries conducts business that is material to
the business of the Company and its Subsidiaries, (IV) any
change in the price or trading volume of the Companys
outstanding securities (it being understood that the facts or
occurrences giving rise to or contributing to such change in
stock price or trading volume may be deemed to constitute, or be
taken into account in determining whether there has been, or
will be, a Material Adverse Effect), (V) any failure, in
and of itself, by the Company to meet any internal or published
projections, forecasts, or revenue or earnings predictions for
any period ending on or after the date of this Agreement (it
being understood that the facts or occurrences giving rise to or
contributing to such failure may be deemed to constitute, or be
taken into account in determining whether there has been, or
will be, a Material Adverse Effect), (VI) the announcement
of the execution of this Agreement, or the pendency of the
consummation of the Recapitalization, or the performance of this
Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby, including
compliance with the covenants set forth herein, or
(VII) any change in any applicable law, rule or regulation
or United States generally accepted accounting principles or
interpretation thereof after the date hereof, unless and to the
extent, in the case of clause (I), (II), (III), and
(VII) above, such effect has had or would reasonably be
expected to have a materially disproportionate adverse effect on
the business, condition (financial or otherwise) or results of
operations of the Company and its Subsidiaries, taken as a
whole, relative to other affected persons. For the purposes of
this Agreement, a Subsidiary of any person
means, with respect to such person, any corporation, limited
liability company, partnership, joint venture or other legal
entity of which such person (either alone or through or together
with any other subsidiary), owns, directly or indirectly, more
than 50% of the stock or other equity interests, has the power
to elect a majority of the board of directors or similar
governing body, or has the power to direct the business and
policies.
Table of Contents
(b) Corporate Power and
Authority. The Company has the requisite
corporate power and authority to enter into, execute, and
deliver this Agreement and each other agreement, document, and
instrument to which it will be a party or which it will execute
and deliver in connection with the transactions contemplated by
this Agreement (this Agreement and such other agreements,
documents, and instruments collectively, the
Transaction Agreements) and, subject to
receipt of Stockholder Approval (as defined below), to perform
its obligations hereunder and thereunder, including the issuance
of the Rights, the Offered Shares (including the Unsubscribed
Shares), and any Exchange Shares, the exchange of outstanding
Notes pursuant to the Debt Exchange, and the payment of the
Transaction Expenses. Subject to receipt of Stockholder
Approval, the Company has taken all necessary corporate action
required for the due authorization of the Transaction
Agreements, including the issuance of the Rights, the Offered
Shares (including the Unsubscribed Shares), and any Exchange
Shares and the exchange of Notes pursuant to the Debt Exchange.
Based upon the unanimous recommendation of the Special
Committee, the Board has determined to recommend that
stockholders of the Company vote in favor of the issuance of the
Offered Shares in the Rights Offering, the issuance and sale of
the Unsubscribed Shares to the Investors pursuant to the terms
hereof, and the issuance of Exchange Shares in the Debt Exchange
pursuant to the terms hereof.
(c) Execution and Delivery;
Enforceability. This Agreement and each other
Transaction Agreement will be, at or prior to the Closing Date,
duly and validly executed and delivered by the Company, and each
such Transaction Agreement constitutes, or, when executed and
delivered, will constitute, a valid and binding obligation of
the Company, enforceable against the Company in accordance with
its terms, except as may be limited by the effect of bankruptcy,
insolvency, reorganization, moratorium, fraudulent conveyance,
or similar laws affecting the enforcement of creditors
rights generally, and subject to principles of equity and public
policy.
(d) Authorized and Issued Capital
Stock. The authorized capital stock of the
Company consists of (i) 200,000,000 shares of Common
Stock and (ii) 10,000,000 shares of preferred stock,
par value $0.01 per share (Preferred Stock).
As of September 30, 2009, (i) 36,120,251 shares
of Common Stock were issued and outstanding; (ii) no shares
of Common Stock were held in the treasury of the Company;
(iii) 2,581,501 shares of Common Stock were reserved
for future issuance pursuant to outstanding stock options and
other rights to purchase shares of Common Stock and vesting of
restricted stock units (each, an Option and,
collectively, the Options) granted under any
stock option or stock-based compensation plan of the Company or
otherwise (the Stock Plans); and (iv) no
shares of Preferred Stock were issued and outstanding. The
issued and outstanding shares of Common Stock of the Company and
each of its Subsidiaries have been duly authorized and validly
issued and are fully paid and nonassessable, and are not subject
to any preemptive rights. Except as set forth in this
Section 3(d), as of the date of this Agreement, no
shares of capital stock or other equity securities or voting
interest in the Company are issued, reserved for issuance or
outstanding. Since the date of this Agreement, no shares of
capital stock or other equity securities or voting interest in
the Company have been issued or reserved for issuance or become
outstanding, other than shares described in this
Section 3(d) that have been issued upon the exercise
of outstanding Options granted under the Stock Plans and other
than the Offered Shares, the Unsubscribed Shares, and the
Exchange Shares to be issued hereunder. Except as described in
this Section 3(d), and other than the Second Amended
and Restated Stockholders Agreement, dated as of June 2,
2005, neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries is party
to or otherwise bound by or subject to any outstanding option,
warrant, call, subscription or other right (including any
preemptive right), agreement or commitment that
(w) obligates the Company or any of its Subsidiaries to
issue, deliver, sell or transfer, or repurchase, redeem or
otherwise acquire, or cause to be issued, delivered, sold or
transferred, or repurchased, redeemed or otherwise acquired, any
shares of the capital stock of, or other equity or voting
interests in, the Company or any of its Subsidiaries or any
security convertible or exercisable for or exchangeable into any
capital stock of, or other equity or voting interest in, the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries, (x) obligates the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries to issue, grant, extend or
enter into any such option, warrant, call, right, security,
commitment, contract, arrangement or undertaking,
(y) restricts the transfer of any shares of capital stock
of the Company (other than pursuant to restricted stock award
agreements under the Stock Plans), or (z) relates to the
voting of any shares of
Table of Contents
capital stock of the Company. All issued and outstanding shares
of capital stock and equity interests (as applicable) of each
Subsidiary are owned beneficially and of record by the Company
or another Subsidiary, free and clear of any and all
liabilities, obligations, liens, security interests, mortgages,
pledges, charges, or similar encumbrances, other than as
provided under (1) the Loan and Security Agreement, dated
December 14, 2007, among the Company, the Borrowers party
thereto, the Guarantors party thereto, the Lenders party
thereto, Wachovia Bank, National Association, as Administrative
Agent and Collateral Trustee, UBS Securities LLC, as Syndication
Agent, General Electric Capital Corporation, as Documentation
Agent, and Wachovia Capital Markets, LLC and UBS Securities LLC,
as Joint Lead Bookrunners and (2) the Indenture, dated as
of February 11, 2005, among the Company, the Guarantors
party thereto, and Wilmington Trust Company, as Trustee,
governing the Notes (the Old Indenture).
(e) Issuance. The Offered Shares
to be issued and sold by the Company to Holders pursuant to the
Rights Offering, when such Offered Shares are issued and
delivered against payment therefor, will, upon receipt of
Stockholder Approval, be duly authorized, validly issued and
delivered and fully paid and nonassessable, free and clear of
all taxes, liens, preemptive rights, rights of first refusal,
subscription and similar rights. The Unsubscribed Shares, if
any, to be issued and sold by the Company to the Investors or
any Affiliated Purchaser hereunder, when such Unsubscribed
Shares are issued and delivered against payment therefor by the
Investors hereunder, and the Exchange Shares, if any, to be
issued by the Company in exchange for outstanding Notes pursuant
to the Debt Exchange will, upon receipt of approval of the
Companys stockholders, be duly authorized, validly issued
and delivered and fully paid and nonassessable, free and clear
of all taxes, liens, preemptive rights, rights of first refusal,
subscription and similar rights.
(f) No Conflict. The distribution
of the Rights, the sale, issuance and delivery of the Offered
Shares upon exercise of the Rights, the issuance and delivery of
the Unsubscribed Shares in accordance with the terms hereof, the
consummation of the Rights Offering by the Company, the issuance
and delivery of the Exchange Shares (including the Investor
Exchange Shares) pursuant to the Debt Exchange in accordance
with the terms hereof, the exchange of Notes and issuance of New
Notes and payment of cash in exchange therefor pursuant to the
Debt Exchange, and the execution and delivery by the Company of
the Transaction Agreements and performance of and compliance
with all of the provisions hereof and thereof by the Company and
the consummation of the transactions contemplated herein and
therein (i) will not conflict with, or result in a breach
or violation of, any of the terms or provisions of, or
constitute a default under (with or without notice or lapse of
time, or both), or result, in the acceleration of, or the
creation of any lien under, any indenture, mortgage, deed of
trust, loan agreement or other agreement or instrument to which
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries is a party or by which
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries is bound or to which any
of the property or assets of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries is subject, (ii) will not result in any
violation of the provisions of the Amended and Restated
Certificate of Incorporation or Amended and Restated By-laws of
the Company or any of the organizational or governance documents
of its Subsidiaries, and (iii) will not result in any
violation of, or any termination or impairment of any rights
under, any statute or any license, authorization, injunction,
judgment, order, decree, rule or regulation of any court or
governmental agency or body having jurisdiction over the Company
or any of its Subsidiaries or any of their properties, except in
any such case described in subclauses (i) and
(iii) for any conflict, breach, violation, default,
acceleration, lien, termination or impairment which would not
reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the
aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect.
(g) Consents and Approvals. No
consent, approval, authorization, order, registration or
qualification of or with any third party or any court or
governmental agency or body having jurisdiction over the Company
or any of its Subsidiaries or any of their properties is
required for the distribution of the Rights, the sale, issuance
and delivery of the Offered Shares upon exercise of the Rights,
the issuance and delivery of the Unsubscribed Shares in
accordance with the terms hereof, the consummation of the Rights
Offering by the Company, the issuance and delivery of the
Exchange Shares (including the Investor Exchange Shares)
pursuant to the Debt Exchange in accordance with the terms
hereof, the exchange of Notes and issuance of New Notes and
payment of cash in exchange therefor pursuant to the Debt
Table of Contents
Exchange, and the execution and delivery by the Company of the
Transaction Agreements and performance of and compliance by the
Company with all of the provisions hereof and thereof and the
consummation of the transactions contemplated herein and
therein, except (i) the registration under the Securities
Act of the issuance of the Rights and the Offered Shares
pursuant to the exercise of Rights, (ii) filings with
respect to and the expiration or termination of the waiting
period under the
Hart-Scott-Rodino
Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976, as amended (the HSR
Act), relating to the sale or issuance of Unsubscribed
Shares and Investor Exchange Shares to the Investors,
(iii) consents solicited by the Company from holders of
outstanding Notes to certain proposed amendments to the Old
Indenture that would eliminate certain restrictive covenants and
release all of the liens on the collateral securing the Notes,
and (iv) such consents, approvals, authorizations,
registrations or qualifications (y) as may be required
under state securities or Blue Sky laws in connection with the
purchase of the Unsubscribed Shares by the Investors, the
issuance of the Exchange Shares to holders of outstanding Notes,
or the distribution of the Rights and the sale of the Offered
Shares to Holders, or (z) pursuant to the rules of The
Nasdaq Stock Market, including the approval of the
Companys stockholders of the issuance and sale of the
Offered Shares in the Rights Offering, the issuance and sale of
the Unsubscribed Shares to the Investors pursuant to the terms
hereof, and the issuance of the Exchange Shares (including the
Investor Exchange Shares) to holders of outstanding Notes
pursuant to the Debt Exchange (such approval of such
transactions, Stockholder Approval).
(h) Arms Length. The Company
acknowledges and agrees that each Investor is acting solely in
the capacity of an arms length contractual counterparty to
the Company with respect to the transactions contemplated hereby
(including in connection with the negotiation of the terms of
the Recapitalization) and not as a financial advisor or a
fiduciary to, or an agent of, the Company or any other person or
entity. Additionally, the Investors are not advising the Company
or any other person or entity as to any legal, tax, investment,
accounting or regulatory matters in any jurisdiction. The
Company has consulted with its own advisors concerning such
matters and shall be responsible for making its own independent
investigation and appraisal of the transactions contemplated
hereby, and the Investors shall have no responsibility or
liability to the Company, its stockholders and directors not
affiliated with the Investors, or its officers, employees,
advisors or other representatives with respect thereto. Any
review by the Investors of the transactions contemplated hereby
or other matters relating to such transactions will be performed
solely for the benefit of the Investors and shall not be on
behalf of the Company, its stockholders and directors not
affiliated with the Investors, or its officers, employees,
advisors or other representatives and shall not affect any of
the representations or warranties contained herein or the
remedies of the Investors with respect thereto.
(i) Company SEC Documents. Since
December 31, 2007, the Company has filed or submitted all
required reports, schedules, forms, statements and other
documents (including exhibits and all other information
incorporated therein) (Company SEC Documents)
with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the
Commission). As of their respective dates,
each of the Company SEC Documents complied in all material
respects with the requirements of the Securities Act or the
Exchange Act, as applicable, and the rules and regulations of
the Commission promulgated thereunder applicable to such Company
SEC Documents. The Company has filed with the Commission all
material contracts (as such term is defined
in Item 601(b)(10) of
Regulation S-K
under the Exchange Act) that are required to be filed as
exhibits to the Company SEC Documents. No Company SEC Document
filed after December 31, 2007, when filed, or, in the case
of any Company SEC Document amended or superseded prior to the
date of this Agreement, then on the date of such amending or
superseding filing, contained any untrue statement of a material
fact or omitted to state a material fact required to be stated
therein or necessary to make the statements therein, in light of
the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading.
Any Company SEC Documents filed with the Commission after the
date hereof but prior to the Closing Date, when filed, will not
contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state
a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to
make the statements therein, in light of the circumstances under
which they are made, not misleading.
Table of Contents
(j) Financial Statements. The
financial statements and the related notes of the Company and
its consolidated Subsidiaries included or incorporated by
reference in the Company SEC Documents, and to be included or
incorporated by reference in the Rights Offering Registration
Statement and the Rights Offering Prospectus, comply or will
comply, as the case may be, in all material respects with the
applicable requirements of the Securities Act, the Exchange Act,
and the rules and regulation of the Commission thereunder, as
applicable, and fairly present in all material respects the
financial position, results of operations and cash flows of the
Company and its Subsidiaries as of the dates indicated and for
the periods specified, subject, in the case of the unaudited
financial statements, to the absence of disclosures normally
made in footnotes and to customary year-end adjustments that are
not and shall not be material; such financial statements have
been prepared in conformity with U.S. generally accepting
accounting principles applied on a consistent basis throughout
the periods covered thereby (except as disclosed in the Company
SEC Documents filed before the date of this Agreement), and the
supporting schedules included or incorporated by reference in
the Company SEC Documents, and to be included or incorporated by
reference in the Rights Offering Registration Statement, the
Rights Offering Prospectus, and the Proxy Statement, fairly
present the information required to be stated therein; and the
other financial information included or incorporated by
reference in the Company SEC Documents, and to be included or
incorporated by reference in the Rights Offering Registration
Statement, the Rights Offering Prospectus, and the Proxy
Statement, has been or will be derived from the accounting
records of the Company and its Subsidiaries and presents fairly
or will present fairly the information shown thereby; and the
pro forma financial information and the related notes included
or incorporated by reference in the Company SEC Documents, and
to be included or incorporated by reference in the Rights
Offering Registration Statement, the Rights Offering Prospectus,
and the Proxy Statement, have been or will be prepared in all
material respects in accordance with the applicable requirements
of the Securities Act and the Exchange Act, as applicable, and
the assumptions underlying such pro forma financial information
are reasonable and are set forth in the Company SEC Documents
and will be set forth in the Rights Offering Registration
Statement, the Rights Offering Prospectus, and the Proxy
Statement.
(k) Rights Offering Registration Statement and Rights
Offering Prospectus. The Rights Offering
Registration Statement and any post-effective amendment thereto,
as of the Securities Act Effective Date, and each Issuer Free
Writing Prospectus, at the time of use thereof, will comply in
all material respects with the Securities Act and the rules and
regulations promulgated thereunder and will not contain any
untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material
fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the
statements therein not misleading; and as of the applicable date
of the Rights Offering Prospectus and any amendment or
supplement thereto and as of the Closing Date, the Rights
Offering Prospectus will not contain any untrue statement of a
material fact or omit to state a material fact required to be
stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein, in
the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not
misleading. At the time of its distribution and at the
Expiration Time, the Investment Decision Package will not
contain an untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state
a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to
make the statements therein, in the light of the circumstances
under which they were made, not misleading. Each Preliminary
Rights Offering Prospectus, at the time of filing thereof, will
comply in all material respects with the Securities Act and the
rules and regulations promulgated thereunder and will not
contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state
a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to
make the statements therein, in the light of the circumstances
under which they were made, not misleading. The Proxy Statement,
at the time of filing thereof, will comply in all material
respects with the Exchange Act and the rules and regulations
promulgated thereunder and will not contain any untrue statement
of a material fact or omit to state a material fact required to
be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein,
in the light of the circumstances under which they were made,
not misleading. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Company makes
no representation and warranty with respect to any statements or
omissions made in reliance on and in conformity with information
relating to the Investors furnished to the Company in writing by
the Investors expressly for use in the Rights Offering
Registration Statement, the Rights Offering Prospectus, and the
Proxy Statement and any amendment or supplement thereto.
Table of Contents
For the purposes of this Agreement, (i) the term
Rights Offering Registration Statement means
the Registration Statement on
Form S-1
or
Form S-3
to be filed with the Commission relating to the Rights Offering,
including all exhibits thereto, as amended as of the Securities
Act Effective Date, and any post-effective amendment thereto
that becomes effective; (ii) the term Rights
Offering Prospectus means the final prospectus
contained in the Rights Offering Registration Statement at the
Securities Act Effective Date (including information, if any,
omitted pursuant to Rule 430A and subsequently provided
pursuant to Rule 424(b) under the Securities Act), and any
amended form of such prospectus provided under Rule 424(b)
under the Securities Act or contained in a post-effective
amendment to the Rights Offering Registration Statement;
(iii) the term Investment Decision
Package means the Rights Offering Prospectus, together
with any Issuer Free Writing Prospectus used by the Company to
offer the Offered Shares to Holders pursuant to the Rights
Offering, (iv) the term Issuer Free Writing
Prospectus means each issuer free writing
prospectus (as defined in Rule 433 of the rules
promulgated under the Securities Act) prepared by or on behalf
of the Company or used or referred to by the Company in
connection with the Rights Offering, (v) the term
Preliminary Rights Offering Prospectus means
each prospectus included in the Rights Offering Registration
Statement (and any amendments thereto) before it becomes
effective, any prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to
Rule 424(a) under the Securities Act and the prospectus
included in the Rights Offering Registration Statement, at the
time of effectiveness that omits information permitted to be
excluded under Rule 430A under the Securities Act;
(vi) the term Securities Act Effective
Date means the date and time as of which the Rights
Offering Registration Statement, or the most recent
post-effective amendment thereto, was declared effective by the
Commission; and (vii) the term Proxy
Statement means the proxy statement, and all
amendments or supplements thereto, if any, soliciting the
approval of the Companys stockholders of the issuance and
sale of the Offered Shares pursuant to the Rights Offering, the
issuance and sale of the Unsubscribed Shares to the Investors
pursuant to the terms hereof, and the issuance of the Exchange
Shares (including the Investor Exchange Shares) to holders of
outstanding Notes pursuant to the Debt Exchange in accordance
with the rules of The Nasdaq Stock Market, including a
recommendation of the Board that the stockholders vote to
approve the issuance and sale of the Unsubscribed Shares to the
Investors pursuant to the terms hereof and the issuance of the
Investor Exchange Shares to the Investors pursuant to the terms
hereof, if any.
(l) Private Placement Materials for Debt
Exchange. At the time of its distribution and
at the Expiration Time, any confidential private placement
memorandum, including supplements and amendments thereto, or
similar private placement materials relating to the Debt
Exchange and solicitation of consents to certain proposed
amendments to the Old Indenture (the Note Offering
Materials) that are used by the Company will not
contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state
a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to
make the statements therein, in the light of the circumstances
under which they were made, not misleading.
(m) Absence of Certain
Changes. Since June 30, 2009, other than
as disclosed in the Company SEC Documents filed before the date
hereof, and except for actions required to be taken pursuant to
the Transaction Agreements, (i) there has not been any
change in the capital stock of the Company or its Subsidiaries
from that set forth in Section 3(d) (other than an
aggregate of 25,596 shares of restricted Common Stock
granted to certain members of the Companys Board on
August 1, 2009, under the Companys 2005 Equity
Incentive Plan) or any material change in long-term debt of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries, or any dividend or
distribution of any kind declared, set aside for payment, paid
or made by the Company on any class of capital stock; and
(ii) the Company has been operated in the ordinary course
of business, consistent with past practice, and no event, fact
or circumstance has occurred that has had or would reasonably be
expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Material
Adverse Effect.
(n) No Brokers Fees. Except
for Moelis & Company LLC, neither the Company nor any
of its Subsidiaries is a party to any contract, agreement or
understanding with any person (other than this Agreement) that
would give rise to a valid claim against the Investors for a
financial advisory fee, brokerage commission, finders fee
or like payment in connection with the Recapitalization, the
Rights
Table of Contents
Offering, including the issuance of the Offered Shares upon
exercise of Rights, the issuance and sale of the Unsubscribed
Shares in accordance with the terms hereof, or the issuance of
the Exchange Shares, or the Debt Exchange.
4. Representations and Warranties of the
Investors Each Investor individually
represents and warrants and agrees with the Company as set forth
below as to such Investor. Each such representation, warranty
and agreement is made as of the date hereof and as of the
Closing Date.
(a) Formation. Such Investor has
been duly formed and is validly existing as a limited
partnership in good standing under the laws of the jurisdiction
of its formation.
(b) Power and Authority. Such
Investor has the requisite limited partnership power and
authority to enter into, execute and deliver this Agreement and
the other Transaction Agreements and to perform its obligations
hereunder and thereunder and has taken all necessary limited
partnership action required for the due authorization of the
Transaction Agreements.
(c) Execution and Delivery. This
Agreement and each other Transaction Agreement will be, at or
prior to the Closing Date, duly and validly executed and
delivered by such Investor and constitutes, or, when executed
and delivered, will constitute, a valid and binding obligation
of such Investor, enforceable against such Investor in
accordance with its terms, except as may be limited by the
effect of bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization, moratorium,
fraudulent conveyance, or similar laws affecting the enforcement
of creditors rights generally, and subject to principles
of equity and public policy.
(d) No Registration. Such Investor
understands that the Unsubscribed Shares and Investor Exchange
Shares have not been registered under the Securities Act by
reason of a specific exemption from the registration provisions
of the Securities Act, the availability of which depends upon,
among other things, the bona fide nature of the investment
intent and the accuracy of such Investors representations
as expressed herein or otherwise made pursuant hereto.
(e) Investment Intent. Except as
provided in Section 2(d) hereof, such Investor is
acquiring its portion of the Unsubscribed Shares and the
Investor Exchange Shares for investment for its own account, not
as a nominee or agent, and not with the view to, or for resale
in connection with, any distribution thereof not in compliance
with applicable securities laws, and such Investor has no
present intention of selling, granting any participation in, or
otherwise distributing the same, except in compliance with
applicable securities laws.
(f) Securities Laws
Compliance. The Unsubscribed Shares, Investor
Offered Shares, and Investor Exchange Shares will not be offered
for sale, sold or otherwise transferred by such Investor except
pursuant to a registration statement or in a transaction exempt
from, or not subject to, registration under the Securities Act
and any applicable state securities laws.
(g) Sophistication. Such Investor
has such knowledge and experience in financial and business
matters that it is capable of evaluating the merits and risks of
its investment in the Unsubscribed Shares and Investor Exchange
Shares being acquired hereunder. Such Investor understands and
is able to bear any economic risks associated with such
investment (including, without limitation, the necessity of
holding its portion of the Unsubscribed Shares and Investor
Exchange Shares for an indefinite period of time). Without
derogating from or limiting the representations and warranties
of the Company, such Investor acknowledges that it has been
afforded the opportunity to ask questions and receive answers
concerning the Company and to obtain additional information that
it has requested to verify the information contained herein.
(h) Legended Securities. Such
Investor understands and acknowledges that, upon the original
issuance thereof and until such time as the same is no longer
required under any applicable requirements of the Securities Act
or applicable state securities laws, the Company and its
transfer agent shall make such notation in the stock book and
transfer records of the Company as may be necessary to record
that the Unsubscribed Shares and Investor Exchange Shares have
not been registered under the Securities Act and that the
Unsubscribed Shares, Investor Offered Shares, and Investor
Exchange Shares may not be
Table of Contents
resold without registration under the Securities Act or pursuant
to an exemption from the registration requirements thereof.
(i) No Conflict. The purchase of
its portion of the Unsubscribed Shares by such Investor, the
acquisition of its portion of the Investor Exchange Shares by
such Investor, any purchase of the Investor Offered Shares by
such Investor, the execution and delivery by such Investor of
each of the Transaction Agreements to which it is a party and
the performance of and compliance with all of the provisions
hereof and thereof by the Investor, and the consummation of the
transactions contemplated herein and therein (i) will not
conflict with, or result in a breach or violation of, any of the
terms or provisions of, or constitute a default under (with or
without notice or lapse of time, or both), or result, in the
acceleration of, or the creation of any lien under, any
indenture, mortgage, deed of trust, loan agreement or other
agreement or instrument to which the Investor is a party or by
which the Investor is bound or to which any of the property or
assets of the Investor or any of its Subsidiaries is subject,
(ii) will not result in any violation of the provisions of
the certificate of limited partnership, limited partnership
agreement, or similar governance documents of the Investor, and
(iii) will not result in any material violation of, or any
termination or material impairment of any rights under, any
statute or any license, authorization, injunction, judgment,
order, decree, rule or regulation of any court or governmental
agency or body having jurisdiction over the Investor or any of
its properties, except in any such case described in
subclauses (i) and (iii) for any conflict, breach,
violation, default, acceleration or lien which would not
reasonably be expected, individually or in the aggregate, to
prohibit, materially delay or materially and adversely affect
such Investors performance of its obligations under this
Agreement.
(j) Consents and Approvals. No
consent, approval, authorization, order, registration or
qualification of or with any court or governmental agency or
body having jurisdiction over such Investor or any of its
properties is required to be obtained or made by such Investor
for the purchase of its portion of the Unsubscribed Shares, any
purchase of the Investor Offered Shares, and the acquisition of
its portion of the Investor Exchange Shares in accordance with
the terms hereof and the execution and delivery by such Investor
of this Agreement or the other Transaction Agreements to which
it is a party and performance of and compliance by such Investor
with all of the provisions hereof and thereof and the
consummation of the transactions contemplated herein and
therein, except filings with respect to and the expiration or
termination of the waiting period under the HSR Act relating to
the purchase of Unsubscribed Shares, any purchase of the
Investor Offered Shares, and the acquisition of the Investor
Exchange Shares and except for any consent, approval,
authorization, order, registration or qualification which, if
not made or obtained, would not reasonably be expected,
individually or in the aggregate, to prohibit, materially delay
or materially and adversely affect such Investors
performance of its obligations under this Agreement.
(k) Arms Length. Such
Investor acknowledges and agrees that the Company is acting
solely in the capacity of an arms length contractual
counterparty to such Investor with respect to the transactions
contemplated hereby (including in connection with the
negotiation of the terms of the Recapitalization). Additionally,
without derogating from or limiting the representations and
warranties of the Company, such Investor is not relying on the
Company for any legal, tax, investment, accounting or regulatory
advice, except as specifically set forth in this Agreement.
Without derogating from or limiting the representations and
warranties of the Company, such Investor has consulted with its
own advisors concerning such matters and shall be responsible
for making its own independent investigation and appraisal of
the transactions contemplated hereby.
(l) Information
Furnished. Information relating to such
Investor furnished to the Company in writing by such Investor
expressly for use in the SEC Transaction Documents (as defined
below) will not contain an untrue statement of a material fact
or omit to state a material fact required to be stated therein
or necessary to make the statements therein not misleading.
5. Additional Covenants of the
Company. Without derogating from the
obligations of the Company set forth elsewhere in this
Agreement, the Company agrees with each of the Investors as set
forth below.
(a) Registration Statements and Proxy
Statement.
Table of Contents
(i) As promptly as practicable following the date of this
Agreement, the Company shall prepare and file (y) the
Rights Offering Registration Statement and (z) a
preliminary Proxy Statement.
(ii) The Proxy Statement and the Rights Offering
Registration Statement (the SEC Transaction
Documents) filed with the Commission shall be
consistent in all material respects with the last forms of such
documents provided to the Investors and their respective counsel
to review prior to the filing thereof. The Company shall:
(x) provide the Investors with a reasonable opportunity to
review any SEC Transaction Document that is amended after the
date hereof prior to its filing with the Commission and shall
duly consider in good faith any comments of the Investors and
their respective counsel; (y) advise the Investors promptly
of the time when each of the SEC Transaction Documents has been
filed and when the Rights Offering Registration Statement has
become effective or any Rights Offering Prospectus or Rights
Offering Prospectus supplement has been filed and shall furnish
the Investors with copies thereof; and (z) advise the
Investors promptly after it receives notice of any comments or
inquiries by the Commission (and furnish the Investors with
copies of any correspondence related thereto), of the issuance
by the Commission of any stop order or of any order preventing
or suspending the use of any SEC Transaction Document, of the
initiation or threatening of any proceeding for any such
purpose, or of any request by the Commission for amending or
supplementing any SEC Transaction Document or for additional
information, and in each such case, provide the Investors with a
reasonable opportunity to review any such comments, inquiries,
request or other communication from the Commission and to review
any responses thereto and any amendment or supplement to any SEC
Transaction Document before any filing with the Commission, and
to duly consider in good faith any comments of the Investors and
their respective counsel and in the event of the issuance of any
stop order or of any order preventing or suspending the use of
any SEC Transaction Document or suspending any such
qualification, to use promptly its reasonable best efforts to
obtain its withdrawal.
(iii) The Company shall use its reasonable best efforts to
have the Proxy Statement and the Rights Offering Registration
Statement cleared or declared effective, as the case may be, by
the Commission as promptly as practicable after they are filed
with the Commission. The Company shall take all action as may be
necessary or advisable so that the Rights Offering and the
issuance and sale of the Unsubscribed Shares, the issuance of
the Exchange Shares, and the other transactions contemplated by
this Agreement may be effected in accordance with the applicable
provisions of the Securities Act and the Exchange Act and any
state or foreign securities or Blue Sky laws.
(iv) The Company shall cause the Proxy Statement to be
mailed to the Companys stockholders as promptly as
practicable after the Proxy Statement is cleared by the
Commission. Subject to applicable law, the Board shall set the
Record Date and determine the Rights Ratio, and the Company
shall take all action necessary, in accordance with and subject
to the General Corporation Law of the State of Delaware and the
Companys Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation
and Amended and Restated By-laws, to duly call, give notice of
and convene and hold, as promptly as practicable, a special
meeting of its stockholders to consider and vote upon the
issuance and sale of the Offered Shares pursuant to the Rights
Offering, the issuance and sale of the Unsubscribed Shares to
the Investors pursuant to the terms hereof, and the issuance of
the Exchange Shares (including the Investor Exchange Shares) to
holders of outstanding Notes pursuant to the Debt Exchange, to
the extent required by applicable law or regulations or the
rules of The Nasdaq Stock Market. The Company shall use its
reasonable best efforts to obtain the requisite stockholder
approval of such issuance and sale of the Offered Shares
pursuant to the Rights Offering, issuance and sale of the
Unsubscribed Shares to the Investors pursuant to the terms
hereof, and issuance of the Exchange Shares (including the
Investor Exchange Shares), if any, to holders of outstanding
Notes pursuant to the Debt Exchange.
(v) If at any time prior to the Expiration Time, any event
occurs as a result of which the Investment Decision Package, as
then amended or supplemented, would include an untrue statement
of a material fact or omit to state any material fact necessary
in order to make the statements therein, in the light of the
circumstances under which they were made, not misleading, or if
it shall be
Table of Contents
necessary to amend or supplement the Investment Decision Package
to comply with applicable law, the Company will promptly notify
the Investors of any such event and prepare an amendment or
supplement to the Investor Decision Package that is reasonably
acceptable in form and substance to the Investors that will
correct such statement or omission or effect such compliance.
(b) Private Placement Materials for Debt
Exchange. As promptly as practicable
following the date of this Agreement, the Company shall prepare
and disseminate to Holders (as that term is defined
in the Support Agreement) and such other holders of outstanding
Notes as the Company may determine from time to time, in
accordance with applicable law, the Note Offering Materials
consistent with the terms of the Debt Exchange as set forth in
the Support Agreement. If at any time prior to the Expiration
Time, any event occurs as a result of which the such Note
Offering Materials, as then amended or supplemented, would
include an untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state
any material fact necessary in order to make the statements
therein, in the light of the circumstances under which they were
made, not misleading, or if it shall be necessary to amend or
supplement such Note Offering Materials to comply with
applicable law, the Company will promptly notify the Investors
of any such event and prepare an amendment or supplement to such
Note Offering Materials that is reasonably acceptable in form
and substance to the Investors that will correct such statement
or omission or effect such compliance.
(c) Listing. The Company shall use
its commercially reasonable efforts to list and maintain the
listing of the Common Stock, including the Offered Shares and
the Exchange Shares, on the Nasdaq Global Select Market and to
list and maintain the listing of the Rights on the Nasdaq Global
Select Market.
(d) Rule 158. The Company
will generally make available to the Companys security
holders as soon as practicable an earnings statement of the
Company covering a twelve-month period beginning after the date
of this Agreement, which shall satisfy the provisions of
Section 11(a) of the Securities Act.
(e) HSR. The Company shall use its
reasonable best efforts to seek all approvals or consents that
are necessary or advisable under the HSR Act so that any
applicable waiting period shall have expired or been terminated
thereunder with respect to the issuance to the Investors of the
Unsubscribed Shares, Investor Offered Shares, and Investor
Exchange Shares hereunder and shall not take any action that is
intended or reasonably likely to materially impede or delay the
ability of the parties to obtain any necessary approvals
required for the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
(f) No Stabilization. The Company
will not take, directly or indirectly, any action designed to or
that would reasonably be expected to cause or result in any
stabilization or manipulation of the price of the shares of
Common Stock.
(g) Ordinary Course of Business; Actions Regarding
Conditions. During the period from the date
of this Agreement to the Closing Date, the Company shall conduct
its business, and shall cause its Subsidiaries to conduct their
business, in the ordinary course and consistent with the
Companys and its Subsidiaries past practice; and the
Company for itself and on behalf of its Subsidiaries agrees to
use its commercially reasonable efforts to preserve
substantially intact their business organizations and goodwill,
to keep available the services of those of their present
officers, employees, and consultants who are integral to the
operation of their businesses as presently conducted, and to
preserve their present relationships with significant customers
and suppliers and with other persons with whom they have
significant business relations; and the Company shall not take
any action or omit to take any action that would reasonably be
expected to result in the Companys failure to satisfy the
conditions to the Agreement set forth in Section 8.
(h) Reasonable Best Efforts. The
Company shall use its reasonable best efforts (and shall cause
its Subsidiaries to use their respective reasonable best
efforts) to take or cause to be taken all actions, and do or
cause to be done all things, reasonably necessary, proper or
advisable on its or their part under this
Table of Contents
Agreement and applicable laws to cooperate with the Investors
and to consummate and make effective the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement and the Recapitalization,
including:
(i) preparing and filing as promptly as practicable all
documentation to effect all necessary notices, reports and other
filings and to obtain as promptly as practicable all consents,
registrations, approvals, permits and authorizations necessary
or advisable to be obtained from any third party or governmental
entity;
(ii) defending any lawsuits or other actions or
proceedings, whether judicial or administrative, challenging
this Agreement or any other agreement contemplated by this
Agreement or the Recapitalization or the consummation of the
transactions contemplated hereby and thereby, including seeking
to have any stay or temporary restraining order entered by any
court or other governmental entity vacated or reversed; and
(iii) executing, delivering and filing, as applicable, any
additional ancillary instruments, documents, or agreements
necessary to consummate the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement and the other Transaction Agreements and to fully
carry out the purposes of this Agreement and the transactions
contemplated hereby and thereby, including, without limitation,
a Registration Rights Agreement (the Registration
Rights Agreement) between the Company and the
Investors, in the form attached hereto as Exhibit B.
6. Additional Covenants of the Investors.
Each Investor agrees with the Company:
(a) Information. To provide the
Company with such information as the Company reasonably requests
regarding such Investor for inclusion in the SEC Transaction
Documents.
(b) HSR Act. To use reasonable
best efforts to obtain all authorizations, approvals and
consents that are necessary or advisable under the HSR Act so
that any applicable waiting period shall have expired or been
terminated thereunder and any applicable notification,
authorization, approval or consent shall have been made or
obtained with respect to the purchase of Unsubscribed Shares,
Investor Offered Shares, and Investor Exchange Shares hereunder,
and not to take any action that is intended or reasonably likely
to materially impede or delay the ability of the parties to
obtain any necessary approvals required for the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement; provided, however,
that, notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein,
such Investor (and its ultimate parent entities, as such term is
used in the HSR Act) shall not be required to disclose to any
other party to this Agreement any information contained in its
HSR Notification and Report Form which such party, in its sole
and reasonable discretion, deems confidential.
(c) Reasonable Best Efforts. Such
Investor shall use its reasonable best efforts to take all
actions, and do all things, reasonably necessary, proper or
advisable on its part under this Agreement and applicable laws
to cooperate with the Company and to consummate and make
effective the transactions contemplated by this Agreement,
including executing, delivering and filing, as applicable, any
additional ancillary instruments or agreements necessary to
consummate the transactions contemplated by this Agreement and
the Recapitalization and to fully carry out the purposes of this
Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby and thereby,
including:
(i) preparing and filing as promptly as practicable all
documentation to effect all necessary notices, reports and other
filings and to obtain as promptly as practicable all consents,
registrations, approvals, permits and authorizations necessary
or advisable to be obtained from any third party or governmental
entity;
(ii) cause the shares of Common Stock beneficially owned by
such Investor to be voted in favor of the issuance and sale of
the Offered Shares pursuant to the Rights Offering, issuance and
sale of the Unsubscribed Shares to the Investors pursuant to the
terms hereof, and the issuance of the Exchange Shares (including
the Investor Exchange Shares) to holders of outstanding Notes
pursuant to the Debt Exchange at the special meeting of
stockholders called therefor;
Table of Contents
(iii) defending any lawsuits or other actions or
proceedings to which such Investor has been named a party,
whether judicial or administrative, challenging this Agreement
or the Recapitalization or any other agreement contemplated by
this Agreement or the consummation of the transactions
contemplated hereby and thereby, including seeking to have any
stay or temporary restraining order entered by any court or
other governmental entity vacated or reversed; and
(iv) executing, delivering and filing, as applicable, any
additional ancillary instruments, documents, or agreements
necessary to consummate the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement and the other Transaction Agreements and to fully
carry out the purposes of this Agreement and the transactions
contemplated hereby and thereby, including, without limitation,
the Registration Rights Agreement.
(d) No Transfer of Rights. During
the Rights Exercise Period, such Investor will not, without the
prior written consent of the Special Committee, sell, assign,
transfer, convey, hypothecate, pledge, encumber, grant a
security interest in or otherwise dispose of (whether by
operation of law or otherwise), in whole or in part, or directly
or indirectly enter into, or cause to become subject to, any
option, warrant, purchase right, or other contract or commitment
that could require such Investor to sell, assign, transfer,
convey, hypothecate, pledge, encumber, grant a security interest
in, or otherwise dispose of (whether by operation of law or
otherwise), in whole or in part (Transfer),
any Rights distributed, directly or indirectly, to such Investor
by the Company pursuant to the Rights Offering; provided,
however, that such Investor may Transfer all or any
portion of its Rights to one or more Affiliates, which shall
agree in writing to take such Rights subject to, and to comply
with, the terms of this Agreement.
(e) No Transfer of Notes and Common
Stock. Until the earlier to occur of the
Closing Date or the termination of this Agreement pursuant to
Section 11(a), such Investor will not, without the
prior written consent of the Special Committee, Transfer any
Notes or shares of Common Stock held, directly or indirectly, by
such Investor; provided, however, that such
Investor may Transfer all or any portion of its Notes and shares
of Common Stock to one or more Affiliates, which shall agree in
writing to take such securities subject to, and to comply with,
the terms of this Agreement.
(f) No Stabilization. Such Investor will not take,
directly or indirectly, any action designed to or that would
reasonably be expected to cause or result in any stabilization
or manipulation of the price of the Shares.
7. Additional Joint Covenant of Company and the
Investors. Without limiting the generality of the
undertakings pursuant to Sections 5(e) and 6(b), each of
the Company and each Investor agree to use its respective
reasonable best efforts to take, or cause to be taken, all
action and to do, or cause to be done, all things necessary
under the HSR Act to consummate and make effective the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement and the other
Transaction Agreements, including furnishing all information
required by applicable law in connection with approvals of or
filings with any governmental authority, and filing, or causing
to be filed, as promptly as practicable, any required
notification and report forms under other applicable competition
laws with the applicable governmental antitrust authority. Each
party shall consult with each other party as to the appropriate
time of filing such notifications and shall agree upon the
timing of such filings. Subject to appropriate confidentiality
safeguards, each party shall (i) respond promptly to any
request for additional information made by the antitrust agency;
(ii) promptly notify counsel to each other party of, and if
in writing, furnish counsel to each other party with copies of
(or, in the case of material oral communications, advise the
other party orally of) any communications from or with the
antitrust agency in connection with any of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement; (iii) not participate in
any meeting with the antitrust agency unless it consults with
counsel to each other party in advance and, to the extent
permitted by the agency, give each other party a reasonable
opportunity to attend and participate thereat; (iv) furnish
counsel to each other party with copies of all correspondence,
filings and communications between it and the antitrust agency
with respect to any of the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement; and (v) furnish counsel to each other party with
such necessary information and reasonable assistance as may be
reasonably necessary in connection with the preparation of
necessary filings or submission of information to the antitrust
agency. Each party shall use
Table of Contents
its reasonable best efforts to cause the waiting periods under
the applicable competition laws to terminate or expire at the
earliest possible date after the date of filing.
Notwithstanding anything in this Agreement to the contrary,
nothing shall require any Investor or its Affiliates or the
Company or its Subsidiaries to dispose of any of its or its
respective Subsidiaries or its Affiliates assets or
to limit its freedom of action with respect to any of its or its
respective Subsidiaries businesses, or to consent to any
disposition of the Companys or its Subsidiaries
assets or limits on the Companys or its Subsidiaries
freedom of action with respect to the conduct of any of its or
its Subsidiaries businesses, or to commit or agree to any
of the foregoing, and nothing in this Agreement shall authorize
the Company or any of the Companys Subsidiaries to commit
or agree to any of the foregoing, to obtain any consents,
approvals, permits or authorizations to remove any impediments
to the transactions contemplated hereby or by any other
Transaction Agreement relating to antitrust or competition laws
or to avoid the entry of, or to effect the dissolution of, any
injunction, temporary restraining order or other order in any
action relating to antitrust or competition laws.
8. Conditions to the Obligations of the Parties.
(a) Conditions to the Investors Obligations under
this Agreement. The obligations of each Investor hereunder
to consummate the transactions contemplated hereby shall be
subject to the satisfaction prior to the Closing Date of each of
the following conditions (which may be waived in whole or in
part by such Investor in its sole discretion):
(i) Registration Statement Effectiveness. The Rights
Offering Registration Statement shall have been declared
effective by the Commission and shall continue to be effective
and no stop order shall have been entered by the Commission with
respect thereto.
(ii) Rights Offering. The Rights Offering shall have
been conducted in all material respects in accordance with this
Agreement and shall have been consummated without the waiver of
any condition thereto.
(iii) Debt Exchange. The Debt Exchange shall have
been consummated in all material respects in accordance with
this Agreement without the waiver of any condition thereto.
(iv) Antitrust Approvals. All terminations or
expirations of waiting periods imposed under the HSR Act, shall
have occurred and all other notifications, consents,
authorizations and approvals required to be made or obtained
from any competition or antitrust authority shall have been made
or obtained for the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
(v) Consents. All material governmental and
third-party notifications, filings, consents, waivers and
approvals required for the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement shall have been made or received.
(vi) Stockholder Approval. Stockholder Approval
shall have been received.
(vii) No Legal Impediment to Issuance. No action
shall have been taken, no statute, rule, regulation, or order
shall have been enacted, adopted, or issued by any federal,
state, or foreign governmental or regulatory authority, and no
judgment, injunction, decree or order of any federal, state or
foreign court shall have been issued that, in each case,
prohibits the implementation of the Rights Offering or the Debt
Exchange, the issuance and sale of the Unsubscribed Shares and
the Investor Offered Shares to the Investors, the issuance of
Exchange Shares (including the Investor Exchange Shares) for
outstanding Notes, or the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement or the Recapitalization or
materially impairs the benefit of implementation thereof, and no
action or proceeding by or before any federal, state, or foreign
governmental or regulatory authority shall be pending or
threatened wherein an adverse judgment, decree, or order would
be reasonably likely to result in the prohibition of or material
impairment of the benefits of the implementation of the Rights
Offering or the Debt Exchange, the issuance and sale of the
Unsubscribed Shares and the Investor Offered Shares to the
Investors, the issuance of Exchange
Table of Contents
Shares (including the Investor Exchange Shares) for outstanding
Notes, or the consummation of the transactions contemplated by
this Agreement or the Recapitalization.
(viii) Representations and Warranties. The
representations and warranties of Company contained in this
Agreement shall be true and correct (disregarding all
qualifications and exceptions contained therein relating to
materiality, Material Adverse Effect or similar qualifications,
other than such qualifications contained in
Sections 3(i) and 3(j)) as of the date hereof
and as of the Closing Date after giving effect to the
transactions contemplated hereby with the same effect as if made
on and as of the Closing Date (except for representations and
warranties made as of a specified date, which shall be true and
correct only as of the specified date), except where the failure
to be so true and correct, individually or in the aggregate, has
not had, and would not reasonably be expected to have, a
Material Adverse Effect, other than with respect to the
representations in Sections 3(b), 3(c),
3(d), 3(e), and 3(m)(ii), which shall be
true and correct in all respects.
(ix) Covenants. The Company shall have performed and
complied in all material respects with all of its covenants and
agreements contained in this Agreement and in any other
Transaction Agreement required to be performed or complied with
on or prior to the Closing Date.
(x) Registration Rights Agreement. The Company shall
have executed and delivered to the Investors the Registration
Rights Agreement.
(xi) Debt Exchange. At least ninety-five percent
(95%) of the aggregate principal amount of outstanding Notes
shall have been validly exchanged in the Debt Exchange.
(xii) Settlement. The settlement of the action
described on Schedule II hereto, on the terms set forth in
the Memorandum of Understanding described on Schedule II
hereto, shall have received final approval by the Delaware Court
of Chancery, and such action shall have been dismissed with
prejudice pursuant to such approval.
(xiii) Nasdaq. The Offered Shares and Exchange
Shares shall have been approved for listing on the Nasdaq Global
Select Market, subject to official notice of issuance.
(b) Conditions to the Companys Obligations under
this Agreement. The right of the Company to require the
Investors to purchase the Unsubscribed Shares and the obligation
of the Company to issue the Investor Exchange Shares to the
Investors in exchange for outstanding Notes are subject to the
following conditions (which may be waived in whole or in part by
the Company in its sole discretion), provided that the failure
of a condition set forth in Section 8(b)(v) to be
satisfied may not be asserted by the Company if such failure
results from a breach by the Company of an obligation hereunder:
(i) Antitrust Approvals. All terminations or
expirations of waiting periods imposed under the HSR Act, shall
have occurred and all other notifications, consents,
authorizations and approvals required to be made or obtained
from any competition or antitrust authority shall have been made
or obtained for the transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
(ii) Consents. All material governmental and
third-party notifications, filings, consents, waivers and
approvals required for the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement shall have been made or received.
(iii) No Legal Impediment to Issuance. No action
shall have been taken, no statute, rule, regulation, or order
shall have been enacted, adopted, or issued by any federal,
state, or foreign governmental or regulatory authority, and no
judgment, injunction, decree or order of any federal, state or
foreign court shall have been issued that, in each case,
prohibits the implementation of the Rights Offering or the Debt
Exchange, the issuance and sale of the Unsubscribed Shares and
the Investor Offered Shares to the Investors, the issuance of
Exchange Shares (including the Investor Exchange Shares) for
outstanding Notes, or the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement or the Recapitalization or
materially impairs the benefit of implementation thereof, and no
action or proceeding by or before any federal, state, or foreign
governmental or regulatory authority shall be pending or
threatened wherein an adverse judgment, decree, or order would
be
Table of Contents
reasonably likely to result in the prohibition of or material
impairment of the benefits of the implementation of the Rights
Offering or the Debt Exchange, the issuance and sale of the
Unsubscribed Shares and the Investor Offered Shares to the
Investors, the issuance of Exchange Shares (including the
Investor Exchange Shares) for outstanding Notes, or the
consummation of the transactions contemplated by this Agreement
or the Recapitalization.
(iv) Representations and Warranties. The
representations and warranties of the Investors and any
Affiliated Purchaser contained in this Agreement or pursuant to
Section 2(d) shall be true and correct (disregarding
all qualifications and exceptions contained therein relating to
materiality or material adverse effect on the Investors
performance of their obligations or similar qualifications) as
of the date hereof and as of the Closing Date with the same
effect as if made on the Closing Date (except for the
representations and warranties made as of a specified date,
which shall be true and correct only as such specified date),
except with respect to each Investors representations in
all Sections other than Sections 4(b) and
4(c) where the failure to be so true and correct,
individually or in the aggregate, has not prohibited, materially
delayed, or materially and adversely affected, and would not
reasonably be expected to prohibit, materially delay, or
materially and adversely affect, the Investors performance
of their obligations under this Agreement.
(v) Covenants. The Investors shall have performed
and complied in all material respects with all of their
respective covenants and agreements contained in this Agreement
and in any other Transaction Agreement required to be performed
or complied with on or prior to the Closing Date, including,
without limitation, entering into the Registration Rights
Agreement.
(vi) Registration Statement Effectiveness. The
Rights Offering Registration Statement shall each have been
declared effective by the Commission and shall continue to be
effective and no stop order shall have been entered by the
Commission with respect thereto.
(vii) Rights Offering. The Rights Offering shall
have been consummated in all material respects in accordance
with this Agreement.
(viii) Debt Exchange. All conditions to the
Companys obligation to consummate the Debt Exchange shall
have been satisfied (or waived, to the extent permitted).
(ix) Settlement. The settlement of the action
described on Schedule II hereto, on the terms set forth in
the Memorandum of Understanding described on Schedule II
hereto, shall have received final approval by the Delaware Court
of Chancery, and such action shall have been dismissed with
prejudice pursuant to such approval.
(x) Stockholder Approval. Stockholder Approval shall
have been received.
(c) Conditions to the Companys Obligations to
Complete the Rights Offering. The obligation of the Company
to consummate the Rights Offering shall be subject to the
satisfaction prior to the Closing Date of each of the following
conditions (which may not be waived, in whole or in part,
without the prior written consent of the Investors):
(i) Consents. All material governmental and
third-party notifications, filings, consents, waivers and
approvals required for the consummation of the Rights Offering
shall have been made or received.
(ii) No Legal Impediment to Issuance. No action
shall have been taken, no statute, rule, regulation, or order
shall have been enacted, adopted, or issued by any federal,
state, or foreign governmental or regulatory authority, and no
judgment, injunction, decree or order of any federal, state or
foreign court shall have been issued that, in each case,
prohibits the implementation of the Rights Offering and the
issuance and sale of the Offered Shares or materially impairs
the benefit of implementation thereof, and no action or
proceeding by or before any federal, state, or foreign
governmental or regulatory authority shall be pending or
threatened wherein an adverse judgment, decree, or order would
be reasonably likely to result in the prohibition of or material
impairment of
Table of Contents
the benefits of the implementation of the Rights Offering and
the issuance and sale of the Offered Shares.
(ii) (iii) Registration Statement Effectiveness. The
Rights Offering Registration Statement shall each have been
declared effective by the Commission and shall continue to be
effective and no stop order shall have been entered by the
Commission with respect thereto.
(iv) Debt Exchange. All conditions to the
Companys obligation to consummate the Debt Exchange shall
have been satisfied (or waived, to the extent permitted).
(v) Settlement. The settlement of the action
described on Schedule II hereto, on the terms set forth in
the Memorandum of Understanding described on Schedule II
hereto, shall have received final approval by the Delaware Court
of Chancery, and such action shall have been dismissed with
prejudice pursuant to such approval.
(vi) Stockholder Approval. Stockholder Approval
shall have been received.
(vii) Conditions under this Agreement. All
conditions set forth in Sections 8(a) and
8(b) (other than the conditions set forth in
Sections 8(a)(ii) and 8(b)(vii)) shall have
been satisfied (or waived, to the extent permitted thereby).
9. Indemnification and Contribution.
(a) Whether or not the Recapitalization is consummated or
this Agreement is terminated or the transactions contemplated
hereby, the Company (in such capacity, the Indemnifying
Party) shall indemnify and hold harmless the
Investors, their respective Affiliates (other than the Company),
and their respective officers, directors, members, partners,
employees, agents and controlling persons (each, an
Indemnified Person) from and against any and
all losses, claims, damages, liabilities and reasonable
expenses, joint or several, arising out of circumstances
existing on or prior to the Closing Date
(Losses) to which any such Indemnified Person
may become subject arising out of or in connection with any
claim, challenge, litigation, investigation or proceeding
(Proceedings) instituted by a third party
with respect to the Recapitalization, the Rights Offering, the
Debt Exchange, this Agreement or the other Transaction
Documents, the Rights Offering Registration Statement, any
Preliminary Rights Offering Prospectus, the Rights Offering
Prospectus, any Issuer Free Writing Prospectus, the Investment
Decision Package, the Note Offering Materials, any amendment or
supplement thereto, or the transactions contemplated by any of
the foregoing and shall reimburse such Indemnified Persons for
any reasonable legal or other reasonable out-of-pocket expenses
incurred in connection with investigating, responding to or
defending any of the foregoing; provided that the
foregoing indemnification will not apply to Losses to the extent
that they directly resulted from (a) any breach by such
Indemnified Person of this Agreement, (b) gross negligence
or willful misconduct on the part of such Indemnified Person, or
(c) statements or omissions in the Rights Offering
Registration Statement, any Preliminary Rights Offering
Prospectus, the Rights Offering Prospectus, any Issuer Free
Writing Prospectus, the Note Offering Materials, or any
amendment or supplement thereto made in reliance upon or in
conformity with information relating to such Indemnified Person
furnished to the Company in writing by or on behalf of such
Indemnified Person expressly for use in the Rights Offering
Registration Statement, any Preliminary Rights Offering
Prospectus, the Rights Offering Prospectus, any Issuer Free
Writing Prospectus, the Note Offering Materials, or any
amendment or supplement thereto. If for any reason the foregoing
indemnification is unavailable to any Indemnified Person (except
as set forth in the proviso to the immediately preceding
section) or insufficient to hold it harmless, then the
Indemnifying Party shall contribute to the amount paid or
payable by such Indemnified Person as a result of such Losses in
such proportion as is appropriate to reflect not only the
relative benefits received by the Indemnifying Party on the one
hand and such Indemnified Person on the other hand but also the
relative fault of the Indemnifying Party on the one hand and
such Indemnified Person on the other hand as well as any
relevant equitable considerations. The indemnity, reimbursement
and contribution obligations of the Indemnifying Party under
this Section 9 shall be in addition to any liability
that the Indemnifying Party may otherwise have to an Indemnified
Table of Contents
Person and shall bind and inure to the benefit of any
successors, assigns, heirs and personal representatives of the
Indemnifying Party and any Indemnified Person.
(b) Promptly after receipt by an Indemnified Person of
notice of the commencement of any Proceedings with respect to
which the Indemnified Person may be entitled to indemnification
hereunder, such Indemnified Person will, if a claim is to be
made hereunder against the Indemnifying Party in respect
thereof, notify the Indemnifying Party in writing of the
commencement thereof; provided that (i) the omission
so to notify the Indemnifying Party will not relieve the
Indemnifying Party from any liability that it may have hereunder
except to the extent it has been prejudiced by such failure and
(ii) the omission so to notify the Indemnifying Party will
not relieve it from any liability that it may have to an
Indemnified Person otherwise than on account of this
Section 9. In case any such Proceedings are brought
against any Indemnified Person and it notifies the Indemnifying
Party of the commencement thereof, the Indemnifying Party will
be entitled to participate therein, and, to the extent that it
may elect by written notice delivered to such Indemnified
Person, to assume the defense thereof, with counsel reasonably
satisfactory to such Indemnified Person; provided that if
the defendants in any such Proceedings include both such
Indemnified Person and the Indemnifying Party and such
Indemnified Person shall have concluded that there may be legal
defenses available to it that are different from or additional
to those available to the Indemnifying Party, such Indemnified
Person shall have the right to select separate counsel, which
selection shall be subject to the reasonable approval of the
Indemnifying Party, to assert such legal defenses and to
otherwise participate in the defense of such Proceedings on
behalf of such Indemnified Person. Upon receipt of notice from
the Indemnifying Party to such Indemnified Person of its
election so to assume the defense of such Proceedings and
approval by such Indemnified Person of counsel, the Indemnifying
Party shall not be liable to such Indemnified Person for
expenses incurred by such Indemnified Person in connection with
the defense thereof (other than reasonable costs of
investigation) unless (i) such Indemnified Person shall
have employed separate counsel in connection with the assertion
of legal defenses in accordance with the proviso to the
preceding sentence, (ii) the Indemnifying Party shall not
have employed counsel reasonably satisfactory to such
Indemnified Person to represent such Indemnified Person within a
reasonable time after notice of commencement of the Proceedings,
or (iii) the Indemnifying Party shall have authorized in
writing the employment of counsel for such Indemnified Person.
(c) The Indemnifying Party shall not be liable for any
settlement of any Proceedings effected without its written
consent (which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld). If
any settlement of any Proceeding is consummated with the written
consent of the Indemnifying Party or if there is a final
judgment for the plaintiff in any such Proceedings, the
Indemnifying Party agrees to indemnify and hold harmless each
Indemnified Person from and against any and all Losses by reason
of such settlement or judgment in accordance with, and subject
to the limitations of, the provisions of this
Section 9. The Indemnifying Party shall not, without
the prior written consent of an Indemnified Person (which
consent shall not be unreasonably withheld), effect any
settlement of any pending or threatened Proceedings in respect
of which indemnity has been sought hereunder by such Indemnified
Person unless (i) such settlement includes an unconditional
release of such Indemnified Person in form and substance
satisfactory to such Indemnified Person from all liability on
the claims that are the subject matter of such Proceedings and
(ii) such settlement does not include any statement as to
or any admission of fault, culpability or a failure to act by or
on behalf of any Indemnified Person.
10. Survival of Representations and Warranties. The
representations and warranties made in this Agreement will
survive the execution and delivery of this Agreement, and the
covenants shall survive in accordance with their specific terms.
11. Termination.
(a) This Agreement may be terminated and the transactions
contemplated hereby may be abandoned at any time prior to the
Closing Date:
(i) by mutual written consent of the Company and each
Investor;
Table of Contents
(ii) by either the Company or any Investor if the Closing
Date shall not have occurred by February 15, 2010;
provided, however, that the right to terminate
this Agreement under this Section 11(a)(ii) shall not be
available to any party whose failure to comply with any
provision of this Agreement has been the cause of, or resulted
in, the failure of the Closing Date to occur on or prior to such
date;
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||