Form 8-K/A

 

 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

WASHINGTON, DC 20549

 

 

FORM 8-K/A

AMENDMENT NO. 1

 

 

CURRENT REPORT

PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE

SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

Date of report (Date of earliest event reported): September 9, 2009

 

 

Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.

(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)

 

 

 

Massachusetts   000-23599   04-2741391

(State or Other Jurisdiction

of Incorporation)

  (Commission File Number)  

(IRS Employer

Identification No.)

201 Riverneck Road, Chelmsford, Massachusetts 01824

(Address of Principal Executive Offices) (Zip Code)

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (978) 256-1300

Not Applicable

(Former Name or Former Address, if Changed Since Last Report)

 

 

Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions (see General Instruction A.2. below):

 

¨ Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)

 

¨ Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)

 

¨ Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))

 

¨ Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

 

 

 


EXPLANATORY NOTE

Mercury Computer Systems, Inc. (the “Company”) is filing this Amendment No. 1 on Form 8-K/A (“Amendment No. 1”) to correct certain errors in Exhibit 99.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on September 9, 2009 (the “Original 8-K”). The purpose of this Amendment No. 1 is to file a corrected version of the presentation management made on September 9, 2009 at the Kaufman Brothers 12th Annual Investor Conference. Specifically, slide number 28 (titled “Q1 ’10 Guidance”) in the Exhibit 99.1 filed with the Original 8-K contained certain errors in the guidance for the quarter ending September 30, 2009. The Exhibit 99.1 to this Amendment No. 1 contains the correct guidance for the quarter ending September 30, 2009. The Company confirms that the guidance included in Exhibit 99.1 to this Amendment No. 1 is the same guidance contained in the Company’s earning release dated August 4, 2009 and discussed on the earnings release conference call on August 4, 2009.

 

Item 7.01 Regulation FD Disclosure.

This information is being furnished pursuant to Item 7.01 of this Amendment No. 1 and shall not be deemed to be “filed” for the purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or otherwise subject to the liabilities of that section and will not be incorporated by reference into any registration statement filed by the Company under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, unless specifically identified as being incorporated therein by reference. This Amendment No. 1 will not be deemed an admission as to the materiality of any information in this Amendment No. 1 that is being disclosed pursuant to Regulation FD.

Please refer to page 2 of Exhibit 99.1 for a discussion of certain forward-looking statements included therein and the risks and uncertainties related thereto, as well as the use of non-GAAP financial measures included therein.

 

Item 9.01 Financial Statements and Exhibits.

 

(d) Exhibits

 

Exhibit No.

  

Description

99.1    Presentation materials dated September 9, 2009 (filed herewith).


SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.

 

Dated: September 10, 2009     MERCURY COMPUTER SYSTEMS, INC.
    By:  

/s/    Alex A. Van Adzin

      Alex A. Van Adzin
     

Vice President, General Counsel,

and Corporation Secretary


EXHIBIT INDEX

 

Exhibit No.

  

Description

99.1    Presentation materials dated September 9, 2009 (filed herewith).
Presentation Materials
www.mc.com
Kaufman Brothers
12th Annual Investor
Conference
Mark Aslett
President & CEO
Bob Hult
SVP, CFO
September 9, 2009
©
2009
Mercury
Computer
Systems,
Inc.
www.mc.com
Exhibit 99.1


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Forward-Looking Safe Harbor Statement
This presentation contains certain forward-looking statements, as that term is defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of
1995, including those relating to anticipated fiscal 2009 business performance and beyond. You can identify these statements by our use
of the words "may," "will," "should," "plans," "expects," "anticipates," "continue," "estimate," "project," "intend," and similar expressions.
These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected or
anticipated. Such risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, general economic and business conditions, including unforeseen
weakness in the Company's markets, effects of continued geopolitical unrest and regional conflicts, competition, changes in technology
and methods of marketing, delays in completing engineering and manufacturing programs, changes in customer order patterns, changes
in product mix, continued success in technological advances and delivering technological innovations, continued funding of defense
programs, the timing of such funding, changes in the U.S. Government's interpretation of federal procurement rules and regulations,
market acceptance of the Company's products, shortages in components, production delays due to performance quality issues with
outsourced components, the inability to fully realize the expected benefits from acquisitions or delays in realizing such benefits, challenges
in
integrating
acquired
businesses
and
achieving
anticipated
synergies,
and
difficulties
in
retaining
key
customers.
These
risks
and
uncertainties also include such additional risk factors as are discussed in the Company's recent filings with the U.S. Securities and
Exchange
Commission,
including
its
Annual
Report
on
Form
10-K
for
the
year
ended
June
30,
2009.
The
Company
cautions
readers
not
to place undue reliance upon any such forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date made. The Company undertakes no
obligation to update any forward-looking statement to reflect events or circumstances after the date on which such statement is made.
Use
of
Non-GAAP
(Generally
Accepted
Accounting
Principles)
Financial
Measures
In addition to reporting financial results in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, or GAAP, the Company provides
non-GAAP financial measures adjusted to exclude certain specified charges, which the Company believes are useful to help investors
better understand its past financial performance and prospects for the future. However, the presentation of non-GAAP financial measures
is not meant to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for financial information provided in accordance with GAAP. Management
believes these non-GAAP financial measures assist in providing a more complete understanding of the Company's underlying operational
results and trends, and management uses these measures, along with their corresponding GAAP financial measures, to manage the
Company's business, to evaluate its performance compared to prior periods and the marketplace, and to establish operational goals. A
reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures discussed in this presentation is contained in the Company’s Fourth Quarter of
Fiscal
Year
2009
earnings
release,
which
can
be
found
on
our
website
at
www.mc.com/mediacenter/pressreleaseslist.aspx.
1


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Introduction
Founded in 1981
HQ in Massachusetts;
R&D in MA, VA, AL
550+ employees
Leading provider of high-
performance embedded
computer systems
Focused on robust
defense ISR market
FY2009 revenues of $189M
NASDAQ: MRCY
2
Note:
Excludes $2M interco
eliminations


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Completed the turnaround phase
Refocused the business back to the economic core
Completed the divestiture of all non-core assets
Improved the underlying operations of the business
Returned the company to profitability
Developed a strong position in the Defense ISR space
Growing services and systems integration business: ACS
Defense, Mercury Federal Systems
Pursuing complementary acquisitions
3
Become the government’s trusted partner for next-generation
ISR signal processing and computing solutions


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
5 key business growth drivers
4
Product
Portfolio
Refresh
Application
Expansion
Platform
Penetration
Customer
Expansion
Expand Total
Addressable
Market to $3.5B
Increased
System Content
Platform
Penetration
Application
Expansion
Expand Total
Addressable
Market to $30B
Defense
Electronics
Market
Focus on
Persistent ISR
Growth in
Federal Services
Filed $100M
Universal Shelf
Complementary
ISR Businesses
Semiconductor  
Market
Rebound


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
ACS 5-year design win value increased 22% overall in
FY09 with 51% growth in Defense
5
Defense Highlights
Aegis –
Naval BMD, C4I
Missile Defense –
Ground Radar
Argon –
Naval SIGINT
Predator –
Airborne Radar
JCREW –
Ground SIGINT
Rivet Joint –
Airborne SIGINT
Gorgon Stare –
Airborne ISR
NASP –
Airborne Sonar
Guardrail –
Airborne SIGINT
Commercial Highlights
KLA Tencor –
Semiconductor
Hughes –
Satellite Comms
Rapiscan –
Baggage Scanning
L3 –
Baggage Scanning
ASML –
Semiconductor


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
rd
Services and Systems Integration drove significant
revenue growth in its first full year of operation
Expand ACS total
addressable market
From startup in FY08, FY09
bookings growth +106%,
revenue growth +157%
FY09 proved the business
model and potential
Enables substitute and 3
party technologies e.g. blade
computing
Enables faster time to
revenue on programs and
increased deal sizes
6


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Success in Services & System Integration –
Radar Digital Processor
Project Requirement:
Phased Array Radar for Ground
Missile Defense
Initial Deal:
$18M booking
1/3 hardware / software
1/3 engineering services
1/3 systems integration
Advanced processing technology:
OpenVPX™
embedded
computing
7
Total Opportunity Potential:
65 new/upgrades through 2013; $30M over 5 years


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Strong revenue ($5.7M) and
bookings ($11.9M) in FY09
Concurrently, generating
new opportunities for ACS
9 active engagements;
3 direct prime contracts
Recognized by the DoD as
advanced processing
architects for next-gen
airborne ISR systems          
Mercury Federal Systems (MFS) delivered significant
first year bookings and revenue
8


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
MFS Success Story –
Wide Area Airborne Surveillance
Project Requirement:
Concurrent near real-time
situational  awareness for
MQ-9 Reaper UAV
(Gorgon  Stare)
Initial Deal:
$7M bookings
1/2 hardware / software
1/2 engineering services
Advanced processing technology:
Embedded GPUs w/IO
9
Total Opportunity Potential: ~ $20M


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
25% bookings and 13% FY07-FY09 revenue CAGR
Strong revenue growth in Radar, Electronic Warfare (EW)
Persistent ISR EO market growing opportunity
Strength in ACS defense markets
10
“C4ISR”


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Growing and evolving our defense core
Commercial item and Open System Architectures
Highly penetrated across many programs and platforms –
presents good upgrade opportunities and lower risk
Design win-led –
refresh product portfolio
Tactically penetrate more programs on new and existing
platforms on land, air, and sea
Expand presence in defense application segments, such as
Electronic Warfare (EW) and EO/IR (Electro Optical/Infra-Red)
Growth in complementary Services and Systems Integration
Revolutionize embedded sensor processing with the Converged
Sensor Network™
vision
11


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
12
12
Global Hawk
Predator/Reaper
Rivet Joint
Gorgon Stare
F-16
F-35 JSF
BAMS
MESA
P8-MMA
MP-RTIP
Guardrail
JCREW
Software Defined
Jammer
RDP -
Ground Missile
Defense Radar
THAAD
LRR
SVDF
DASR
Soothsayer
Aegis
SSEE(F)
Sampson
CADF
Deepwater
Artisan
Key defense platforms and programs driving growth
Representative Program List


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Military electronics is a market sweet spot
13
Retrofit and upgrades remain
strong for legacy programs
Increased need for EW;
Intelligence, Surveillance,
Reconnaissance assets
Networked nodal platforms, 
virtualized sensors
Next-gen onboard processing,
exploitation and dissemination
architecture critical
Sources : The Military Electronics Briefing, 2008 Ed. , The TEAL
Group, Frost & Sullivan, U.S C4ISR Market 2007


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
To the warfighter, time to information is critical
to address the growing gap between:
14
What’s analyzed?
What’s collected?
100GB per mission
100TB per mission
Force Protection
Mission Critical
Real-time
Forensics
Last 18 hours
Recent minutes
For decision makers who need timely,
actionable, and relevant information
What’s
actionable?
?


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
15
Airborne ISR R&D costs
Signal Processing /
Systems Integration
Platform
Sensor
Datalink
Ground
Station
10%
40%
30%
5%
15%
45%
10%
15%
10%
10%
5%
5%
Datalink
Platform
Sensor
Ground Station
Application Acceleration/
Systems Integration
Warfighter
Terminals
Warfighter
Terminals
Broadcast
Provision
Broadcast Provision
Budget priorities being realigned to maintain technology edge
Source:  DoD
Budget Request FY93 and FY2008
1993
2008
Mercury’s
Opportunity


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Mercury's new Converged Sensor Network™
(CSN™)
vision for persistent ISR
A revolutionary open architecture that combines
16
Video
Radar
SIGINT
Signal
Processing
Image
Processing
Signal
Processing
Data
Exploitation
Information
Dissemination
SAN
Global
Information
Grid
Become the government’s trusted partner for next-generation
ISR platform signal processing and computing
Multi-Sensor
Signal
Processing
Information
Management
Technologies
Transformational
Access to
Information in the
Tactical Edge


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Government/DoD
frustration leads to Defense
procurement reform
Today’s Model
Government frustrated
with current prime model
Platform-centric approach
Proprietary closed system
architectures
Significant cost overruns
Significant schedule slips
Emerging Model
Commercial items built on open
platform-independent
architectures
Best of breed model emerging –
proven on sensor side, eg FLIR
Likely to occur for ISR signal
processing and computing
Lower cost –
pay once for
common architecture across
multiple platforms, eg MP-RTIP
QRC –
Fast time to deployment
and lower risk
17
Budget pressure and significant schedule slippage is leading
to Defense procurement reforms that could benefit Mercury


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
ACS Defense and MFS –
a hybrid business model
ACS Defense
Total addressable market
commercial item defense
electronics ($3B annually)
Commercial item products
with increased services
Board-level design wins
Develop everything on our
own nickel
Long payback period –
high risk
with Mercury Federal
Total addressable military
electronics market ($30B
annually)
Consult on overall ISR signal
processing architecture with
the government
Platform-level design wins
Paid to develop elements
that do not exist
Lower risk, faster returns
18


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Become the government’s trusted partner for next-generation
ISR signal processing and computing solutions
Turnaround phase complete –
focus on growth
Focus on robust Defense ISR market segment
Grow ACS defense business by targeting upgrades,
new platforms and expanding application segments
Grow beyond commercial item boards through
complementary Services and Systems Integration –
Converged Sensor Network
vision
Mercury Federal a means to grow and evolve business
model and expand our total addressable market
Pursue complementary ISR acquisitions
19


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Financial Overview


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
21
FY07 –
FY09: Restored profitability
21
Notes:
1)All historical income statement figures are as reported in the Company’s earnings press release at the end of the applicable fiscal year
and have not been restated for operations that have been discontinued subsequent to that time.


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Strong growth in bookings and backlog
FY07-FY09:
Total Company
11% Bookings CAGR
18% Backlog CAGR
Defense
28% Bookings CAGR
28% Backlog CAGR
22
22
Note:
Historical figures adjusted for discontinued operations
Bookings
Total Company $M
Ending Backlog
170
199
210
70
78
98
0
25
50
75
100
125
150
175
200
225
FY07
FY08
FY09
Defense
$107
Defense
$145
Defense
$174
Defense
$58
Defense
$67
Defense
$94


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Improved working capital efficiencies
Supply chain  
transformation
-
Operational efficiencies
-
Manufacturing lead times
-
Cost of quality
-
Competitive advantage
for Mercury and
customers
-
Inventory reduced $7.4M
in FY09
Customer satisfaction
-
DSO slightly above model
-
End-of-quarter
shipment skew
23
23


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
24
Repaid debt and improved cash balance
24
Note:
Convertible
Debt
$125
ARS settlement at par ($50M) with UBS 6/30/10


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Strong and unencumbered balance sheet
Divested all non-core businesses
Repaid $125M convert debt in Q3/Q4 FY09
Zero cost ARS loan of $33M
$50M ARS balance repaid at par 6/30/10
25
FY09
Cash and Marketable Securities
92
Total Current Assets
146
Total Assets
219
Debt
33
Total Liabilities
74
Shareholders' Equity
145


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
26
Notes:
Target Business Model assumes organic growth. ACS /MFS approx 90%/10% revenue split
Adj
EBITDA adjusts for Depreciation 2-3%
Stock Based Comp, not included in Non-GAAP target model, is approximately 2-3% of revenue
Target
Business
Model
Robust target business model


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Last 8 quarter’s revenues and EPS exceeded
or met the top end of guidance  (Non-GAAP)
27
2008
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Reported
Guidance
Reported
Guidance
Reported
Guidance
Reported
Guidance
Revenue
($M)
49.2
48.0
52.6
51.0
56.5
53.0-55.0
55.2
53.0-56.0
EPS
($)
0.09
(0.08)
0.04
(0.05)
0.04
(0.04)-
0.00
0.01
(0.05)-
0.01
2009
Q1
Q2
Q3
Q4
Reported
Guidance
Reported
Guidance
Reported
Guidance
Reported
Guidance
Revenue
($M)
49.1
47.0-49.0
50.7
47.0-
49.0
50.6
48.0-50.0
48.4
46.0-
48.0
EPS
($)
0.07
(0.07)-
(0.03)
0.03
(0.05)-
0.00
0.20
0.05-0.09
0.13
0.05-
0.08


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Q1’10 Guidance
28
Quarter Ending September 30, 2009
Low
High
Revenue
$43
$45
GAAP EPS
$0.03
$0.08
Adj
EBITDA
$3.5
$5.0
Note –
Adj
EBITDA adjustments:
Stock Compensation
1.0
1.0
Interest Expense
0.1
0.1
Interest Income
(0.2)
(0.2)
Taxes
0.2
0.6
Amortization
0.4
0.4
Depreciation
1.3
1.3


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Financial Summary
Returned to profitability
11% bookings and 18% backlog growth (CAGR)
Improved working capital efficiencies
Healthy cash flows from operations
Strong and unencumbered balance sheet
Robust target business model 17-18% Adj. EBITDA
$100M shelf registration effective
29


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
www.mc.com
NASDAQ: MRCY
Thank You


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
Appendix


©
2009 Mercury Computer Systems, Inc.
www.mc.com
32
GAAP to Non-GAAP Reconciliation
Notes:
1) All historical income statement figures are as reported in the Company’s earnings press release at the end of
the applicable fiscal period
Year
Year
Year
Ended
Ended
Ended
June 30, 2007
June 30, 2008
June 30, 2009
GAAP net income (loss) from continuing operations
(37.8)
$        
(35.4)
$        
7.9
$              
Adjustment to exclude stock-based compensation
10.6
10.4
4.6
Adjustment to exclude inventory write-down
-
0.8
-
Adjustment to exclude in-process research and development
3.1
-
-
Adjustment to exclude amortization of acquired intangible assets
7.2
7.3
2.4
Adjustment to exclude impairment of goodwill and long-lived assets
0.1
18.0
-
Adjustment to exclude restructuring
5.5
5.2
1.7
Adjustment to exclude gain on sale of long-lived assets
-
(3.2)
-
Adjustment for tax impact
5.2
0.2
(5.6)
Non-GAAP net income (loss) from continuing operations
(6.1)
$          
3.3
$           
11.0
$            
Net income (loss) per share from continuing operations --
Diluted
GAAP
(1.78)
$        
(1.64)
$        
0.35
$            
Non-GAAP
(0.29)
$        
0.15
$         
0.49
$            
Weighted average shares --
Diluted:
GAAP
21.2
21.6
22.4
Non-GAAP
21.2
22.0
22.4