Slot
Maker Warns of Loss
During a road show last week
to promote an upcoming stock offering, Las Vegas-based
Progressive Gaming International Corp. told
Wall Street it was revising its third-quarter
estimates to reflect a loss of 9 cents per share
rather than earnings of 9 cents.
The news, announced
in a filing with the Securities and Exchange
Commission, sent shares of the equipment provider
tumbling downward almost 30 percent on the Nasdaq
National Market over two days of trading.
Progressive
Gaming said its estimated results for the quarter
ended Sept. 30 would be revenue of $17.8 million,
down from the previous prediction of $23.8 million,
and cash flow of $1 million, down from the previously
predicted $5.5 million.
Cash
flow is generally defined as earnings before
interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization.
The
company plans to announces its official third-quarter
results next week.
Early
Monday morning, Progressive Gaming executives
worked to repair investor confidence in the
company. They held a conference call before
markets opened to further explain the revision
of the earnings estimate. However, the call
was conducted without the usual question-and-answer
session.
Progressive
Gaming Chairman Russ McMeekin said the company's
growing dependence on fees from licensing products
and intellectual property has changed its accounting
procedures and practices.
"Our
core business models and strategies are intact,"
McMeekin said during the call. "Our growth
initiatives are heavily focused on driving growth
in long-term recurring revenues and making these
revenues a greater contributor to the overall
revenue base."
He
said approximately 60 percent of the company's
overall revenue comes from licensing and the
remaining 40 percent comes from sales.
Progressive
Gaming shares kept sliding Monday, closing at
$9.22, down 63 cents or 6.4 percent. Last week,
Progressive's stock price dropped $3.75 on Thursday
and ended the week at $9.85.
On
an average day, about 450,000 shares of Progressive
Gaming are traded. On Thursday, more than 6.67
million shares changed hands. On Friday, 2.49
million shares were traded. A more back-to-earth
825,000 shares were traded Monday.
The
SEC filing by the company, which manufactures
gaming management systems and slot machines,
surprised some Wall Street analysts.
"The
stock was down mainly due to lack of communication
from Progressive Gaming and investor worries,"
Jefferies & Co. gaming analyst Aimee Marcel
said in an advisory note. "We believe (the
company) can get the (equity) offering done,
but if it does not, we will have to substantially
lower our estimates and (stock price) target."
The
18-cent earnings-per- share swing was based
on Progressive Gaming not being able to recognize
approximately $6 million in revenue and $1.5
million in costs related to two software licensing
transactions that came near the end of the quarter.
Company auditors caught the accounting error.
The
company called the deals "complex"
in the brief SEC filing and tried to explain
them further on the conference call.
Progressive
Chief Financial Officer Michael Sicuro said
the transactions involved "high-value"
intellectual property.
"The
terms and conditions contained highly competitive
information, as do many of these transactions
that we execute in monetizing cash," Sicuro
said. "As a result, we don't and we won't
disclose the details of these transactions,
including the parties that are involved. What
we can discuss, though, is that these transactions,
included a license of software that will yield
$4.5 million, or approximately 17 cents per
share of cash, over the term of the agreements."
Sicuro
said the transactions were a one-time accounting
event and shouldn't affect the company's previous
earnings guidance for 2006. Company executives
also said the changed third quarter estimates
should not impact Progressive's previously announced
deal with rival equipment manufacturers International
Game Technology and Shuffle Master to co-develop
a table games management system.
"The
cash licensing deals in our pipeline for (the
fourth quarter of 2005) are not expected to
have the characteristics that, in our opinion,
may have caused the above transactions to not
be reflected in our (profits and losses),"
Sicuro said.
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