Sharechat Logo

Tech company Endace back in Kiwi hands, repays $1.9 mln govt funding

Friday 11th March 2016

Text too small?

Endace, which develops technology that measures, monitors and protects high-speed networks, is back in New Zealand hands after a management-led buyout from its American parent Emulex.

The firm has also reached a settlement to return $1.9 million of around $13.6 million research and development funding provided in recent years.

The loss-making company, which is understood to have laid off 100 people or around two-thirds of its staff late last year, was being asked to make the repayment under Callaghan Innovation’s clawback provisions.

Ownership has now transferred to New Zealand company Echidna, which is two-thirds owned by Endace chief executive Stuart Wilson and one-third by chief financial officer Andrew Harsant. It’s understood little money exchanged hands but the new owners have taken on the vendor’s associated corporate debt.

The settlement reached between Endace and Callaghan will see the technology company repay $1.9 million, which Callaghan's chief financial officer Richard Perry said is a sizable portion of recent grant funding from the Crown. Callaghan won’t say how much was originally sought.

Endace has had three separate government grants. The first was a $4.4 million investment grant from TechNZ in July 2010 and the second was a technology development grant in December 2010 worth up to $6.7 million over three years. That was granted at the tail end of the clawback provision period. It has also been paid $1.8 million under a growth grant awarded in October 2013, which had a potential total contract value of $6.8 million and has since been suspended.

The company also got a number of student grants to oversee post-graduate students doing R&D work where Perry said the majority of the benefit was to the student rather than the company.

Wilson, who has been with the company for more than a decade, said the team were excited to be part of a New Zealand-owned entity again.

“We have a team of really smart people round the world, many who have been with us since the very early days of Endace," Wilson said. “We’re continuing to invest strongly in R&D and new product development and we’ve got several new products lined up to launch over the next few months.”

In the most recent accounts made public for the company, Endace reported a net loss of US$22.5 million for the year ended June 29 2014, revenue of US$23 million, and R&D expenses of US$11.5 million.

Formed in 2001 to commercialise research out of University of Waikato, Endace was sold in 2013 to Californian networking solutions firm Emulex, which in turn, was sold in May last year to Nasdaq-listed Avago Technologies.

Singapore-based Avago, a global leader in the analogue semi-conductor market, decided Endace wasn’t part of its core business last year.

It valued Endace at just US$34 million, US$100 million less than it was sold to Emulex for just two years prior. When sold to Emulex, Endace had 117 out of 180 staff based in New Zealand, of whom 80 percent were focused on research.

That sale led to a spat between Endace co-founder Selwyn Pellett and Economic Development Minister Steven Joyce over the $11.1 million in taxpayer funding it had then received.  Pellett was concerned the company was being sold to overseas interests without having to repay the grants, even though he personally benefited from the grants as a shareholder.  

Clawback provisions were introduced two years ago to the criteria for R&D grants and remain in place for three years from the end of the grant contract.

Callaghan has used the clawback provisions on two others companies. It’s seeking $332,967 from Trends Publishing after it had an R&D grant suspended and is seeking $2.9 million from Paris-based gaming developer Gameloft, which shut down its New Zealand operations earlier this year.

BusinessDesk receives assistance from Callaghan Innovation to cover the commercialisation of innovation.

BusinessDesk.co.nz



  General Finance Advertising    

Comments from our readers

No comments yet

Add your comment:
Your name:
Your email:
Not displayed to the public
Comment:
Comments to Sharechat go through an approval process. Comments which are defamatory, abusive or in some way deemed inappropriate will not be approved. It is allowable to use some form of non-de-plume for your name, however we recommend real email addresses are used. Comments from free email addresses such as Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, etc may not be approved.

Related News:

EBOS announces appointment of new Chief Financial Officer
AM Best affirms Tower Limited's A- (Excellent) FSR
MCK enters into conditional agreement for Whangarei land
April 26th Morning Report
SPG - Change to Executive Team
BGI - Forgiveness of $200,000 of secured indebtedness
General Capital Subsidiary General Finance Market Update
AFT,Massey Ventures,Gilles McIndoe to develop scar treatmen
April 24th Morning Report
Cheers to many fewer grape harvest spills