Delaware | 6199 | 95-4766827 | ||
(State or other jurisdiction
of
incorporation or organization) |
(Primary standard industrial
classification code number) |
(I.R.S. employer
identification no.) |
Laird H. Simons III, Esq.
|
William V. Fogg, Esq. | |
William L. Hughes, Esq.
|
Daniel A. OShea, Esq. | |
James D. Evans, Esq.
|
Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP | |
Fenwick & West LLP
|
Worldwide Plaza | |
801 California Street
|
825 Eighth Avenue | |
Mountain View, CA 94041
|
New York, NY 10019 | |
(650) 988-8500
|
(212) 474-1000 |
Large accelerated filer
o
|
Accelerated filer o | Non-accelerated filer þ | Smaller reporting company o | |||
(Do not check if a smaller reporting company) |
The
information in this preliminary prospectus is not complete and
may be changed. The selling stockholders may not sell these
securities until the registration statement filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This
preliminary prospectus is not an offer to sell these securities,
and neither we nor the selling stockholders are soliciting an
offer to buy these securities, in any state where the offer or
sale is not permitted.
|
Per Share | Total | |||||||
Initial public offering price
|
$ | $ | ||||||
Underwriting discounts and commissions
|
$ | $ | ||||||
Proceeds to the selling stockholders, before expenses
|
$ | $ |
J.P. Morgan | Morgan Stanley |
Deutsche Bank Securities
|
Piper Jaffray | UBS Investment Bank |
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F-1 |
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Innovative Product and Marketing Expertise.
We
are an innovator in the development, merchandising and marketing
of prepaid financial services. We believe we were the first
company to combine the products, technology platform and
distribution channel required to make retailer-distributed GPR
cards a viable product offering. Our consumer focus has led us
to enhance our product packaging and product displays in retail
locations to educate consumers and promote our products and
services more effectively. We believe that we have the strongest
brand in the prepaid financial services industry, and we
continue to build brand awareness using national television
advertising.
Leading Retail Distribution.
We have
established a nationwide retail distribution network, consisting
of approximately 50,000 retail store locations, which gives us
access to the vast majority of the U.S. population.
According to a Scarborough Research survey, which was conducted
between August 2008 and September 2009, at least 93%
of U.S. adult respondents had shopped at one or more of the
stores of our current retail distributors within the prior
twelve months.
Leading Reload Network in the United
States.
We believe our Green Dot Network is the
leading reload network for prepaid cards in the United States.
We also believe that it can be expanded and adapted to many new
and evolving applications in the electronic payments industry.
Proprietary Technology.
Green PlaNET, our
centralized processing platform, includes a variety of
proprietary software applications that, together with
third-party applications, run our front-end, back-end,
anti-fraud, regulatory compliance and customer service
processing systems. It enables us to develop, distribute and
support a variety of products and services effectively. This
platform also enables our cards and Green Dot Network to
interoperate with Visa, MasterCard and other payment or funds
transfer networks, allowing our cardholders to make purchases
and complete other transactions.
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Business Model with Powerful Network
Effects.
The combination of our broad group of
products and services, large portfolio of active cards,
nationwide footprint of retail distributors and proprietary
technology creates powerful network effects. Growth in the
number of our product and service offerings or network
participants enhances the value we deliver to all network
participants. For example, we are able to attract retail
distributors because of the large number of consumers who
actively use our reload network. We believe the breadth and
depth of our network would be difficult to replicate and
represents a significant competitive advantage, as well as a
barrier to entry for potential competitors.
Vertical Integration.
We believe that we are
more vertically integrated than our competitors, based on our
distribution capabilities, processing platform, program
management skills and proprietary reload network. Whereas we
have built our offerings primarily around our own
internally-developed capabilities, none of our competitors has
been able to offer products and services similar to ours without
collaborating with third parties to provide one or more of the
essential features of prepaid financial service offerings, such
as program management or the reload network. Our vertical
integration has allowed us to reduce costs across our operations
and, we expect, will continue to provide us with opportunities
to reduce operational costs in the future. It also enables us to
scale our business quickly in response to rising demand and to
ensure high-quality service for our customers.
Strong Regulatory and Compliance
Infrastructure.
We employ a proactive approach to
licensing, regulatory and compliance matters, which we believe
provides us with an important competitive advantage. We believe
that this has helped us develop strong relationships with
leading retailers and financial institutions and has prepared us
well for changes in the regulatory environment.
Increasing the Number of Network
Participants.
We intend to enhance the network
effects in our business model in the following ways:
attracting new users by introducing new products, improving
current products and promoting our products;
expanding and strengthening our distribution by establishing
relationships with additional high-quality retail chains and
accelerating our entry into new distribution channels; and
adding businesses that accept reloads or payments through, and
applications for, the Green Dot Network by continuing to enroll
additional third-party prepaid card program providers in our
reload network and to identify additional uses for our reload
networks cash transfer technology.
Increasing Revenue per Customer.
We intend to
pursue greater revenue per customer by improving cardholder
retention, increasing card usage and increasing adoption of
optional revenue-generating services.
Improving Operating Efficiencies.
We intend to
leverage our growing scale and vertical integration to generate
incremental operating efficiencies, which will provide us with
the flexibility to engage in new marketing programs, reduce
pricing and make other investments in our business to maintain
our leadership position.
Broadening Brand and Product Awareness.
We
intend to broaden awareness of the Green Dot brand and our
products and services through national television advertising,
online advertising and ongoing enhancements to our packaging and
merchandising.
Acquiring a Bank and Complementary
Businesses.
We intend to pursue acquisitions that
will help us achieve our strategic objectives, particularly
those designed to improve operating
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our growth rates may decline in the future;
operating revenues derived from sales at Walmart and our other
three largest retail distributors represented 63%, 8%, 7% and
5%, respectively, of our total operating revenues during the
three months ended March 31, 2010, and the loss of
operating revenues from any of these retail distributors would
adversely affect our business;
our future success depends upon our retail distributors
active and effective promotion of our products and services, but
their interests and operational decisions might not always align
with our interests;
the industry in which we compete is highly competitive and has a
number of major participants, which could adversely affect our
operating revenue growth; and
we operate in a highly regulated environment; failure to comply
with applicable laws or regulations, or changes in those laws or
regulations that adversely affect our operating methods or
economics (e.g., reducing interchange rates), could negatively
impact our business.
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Class A common stock offered by the selling stockholders
shares
Class A common stock to be outstanding after this offering
shares
Class B common stock to be outstanding after this offering
shares(1)
Total Class A and Class B common stock to be
outstanding after this offering
shares
Voting rights
We have two classes of authorized common stock
Class A common stock and Class B common stock. The
rights of the holders of our Class A and Class B
common stock are virtually identical, except with respect to
voting and conversion. The holders of our Class B common
stock are entitled to ten votes per share, and the holders of
our Class A common stock are entitled to one vote per
share. The holders of our Class A common stock and
Class B common stock will vote together as a single class
on all matters submitted to a vote of our stockholders, unless
otherwise required by law. Each share of our Class B common
stock is convertible into one share of our Class A common
stock at any time and will convert automatically upon certain
transfers or the date that the total number of shares of
Class B common stock outstanding represents less than 10%
of the total number of shares of Class A and Class B
common stock outstanding. See Description of Capital
Stock.
Use of proceeds
The selling stockholders are selling all of the shares in this
offering. We will not receive any proceeds from the sale of
shares by the selling stockholders. See Use of
Proceeds.
Dividends
We have never declared or paid any cash dividends on our capital
stock, and we do not currently intend to pay any cash dividends
on our Class A common stock for the foreseeable future.
NYSE symbol
GDOT
(1)
The shares of our Class B common stock outstanding after
this offering will represent
approximately % of the total number
of shares of our Class A and Class B common stock
outstanding after this offering
and % of the combined voting power
of our Class A and Class B common stock outstanding
after this offering.
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shares
of our Class B common stock issuable upon the exercise of
stock options outstanding as of March 31, 2010 with a
weighted average exercise price of
$ per share (other
than shares
that we expect to be sold in this offering by certain selling
stockholders upon the exercise of vested stock options and the
conversion of the shares received into Class A common
stock);
4,567,242 shares of our Class B common stock issuable
upon the exercise of warrants outstanding as of March 31,
2010 with a weighted average exercise price of $22.32 per share,
including a warrant to purchase up to 4,283,456 shares that
is exercisable only upon the achievement of performance goals
specified in our arrangement with PayPal, Inc.;
89,000 shares of our Class B common stock issuable
upon the exercise of stock options granted after March 31,
2010 with an exercise price of $32.23 per share; and
2,200,000 shares of our Class A common stock reserved
for issuance under our 2010 Equity Incentive Plan and our 2010
Employee Stock Purchase Plan, each of which will become
effective on the first day that our Class A common stock is
publicly traded and contains provisions that will automatically
increase its share reserve each year, as more fully described in
Executive Compensation Employee Benefit
Plans.
the automatic conversion of all outstanding shares of our
preferred stock into 24,941,521 shares of our Class B
common stock and the conversion by the selling stockholders
of shares
of our Class B common stock into a like number of shares of
our Class A common stock, in each case immediately prior to
the completion of this offering;
the filing of our amended and restated certificate of
incorporation and the effectiveness of our amended and restated
bylaws, which will occur immediately following the completion of
the offering; and
no exercise by the underwriters of their option to purchase up
to an
additional shares
of our Class A common stock from the selling stockholders
in this offering.
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Three Months
Year Ended July 31,
Five Months Ended
Ended March 31,
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
December 31, 2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
(Unaudited)
(In thousands, except per share amounts)
$
21,771
$
36,359
$
45,717
$
91,233
$
119,356
$
50,895
$
31,185
$
42,158
12,064
20,616
25,419
45,310
62,396
30,509
15,744
22,782
5,705
9,975
12,488
31,583
53,064
31,353
13,811
27,879
39,540
66,951
83,624
168,126
234,816
112,757
60,740
92,819
19,148
28,660
38,838
69,577
75,786
31,333
20,016
26,039
11,584
18,499
20,610
28,303
40,096
26,610
9,410
16,260
6,990
8,547
9,809
21,944
32,320
17,480
7,700
14,680
6,521
10,077
13,212
19,124
22,944
14,020
5,206
11,755
44,243
65,783
82,469
138,948
171,146
89,443
42,332
68,734
(4,703
)
1,168
1,155
29,178
63,670
23,314
18,408
24,085
300
301
771
665
396
115
47
72
(474
)
(823
)
(625
)
(247
)
(1
)
(2
)
(23
)
(4,877
)
645
1,301
29,596
64,065
23,427
18,455
24,134
111
(3,346
)
12,261
26,902
9,764
7,749
11,319
(4,877
)
535
4,647
17,335
37,163
13,663
10,706
12,815
(367
)
(5,157
)
(13,650
)
(29,000
)
(9,170
)
(7,227
)
(8,444
)
$
(4,877
)
$
168
$
(510
)
$
3,685
$
8,163
$
4,493
$
3,479
$
4,371
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Three Months
Year Ended July 31,
Five Months Ended
Ended March 31,
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
December 31, 2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
(Unaudited)
(In thousands, except per share amounts)
$(0.48
)
$0.02
$(0.05
)
$0.34
$0.68
$0.37
$0.29
$0.34
$(0.48
)
$0.01
$(0.05
)
$0.26
$0.52
$0.29
$0.22
$0.27
10,228
10,873
11,100
10,757
12,036
12,222
12,041
12,913
10,228
13,194
11,100
14,154
15,712
15,425
15,501
15,982
$1.01
$0.37
$0.34
$0.91
$0.34
$0.31
36,978
37,164
37,855
40,654
40,367
40,924
(1)
Includes stock-based compensation
expense of $0, $0, $156,000, $1.2 million and
$2.5 million for the years ended July 31, 2005, 2006,
2007, 2008 and 2009, respectively, $6.8 million for the
five months ended December 31, 2009 and $0.6 million
and $1.8 million for the three months ended March 31,
2009 and 2010, respectively.
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Five Months
Three Months
Ended
Ended
Year Ended July 31,
December 31,
March 31,
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2009
2010
(Dollars in thousands)
428,737
721,561
894,295
2,167,004
3,106,923
2,105,908
1,790,069
2,262,854
4,055,775
4,992,956
9,153,119
14,084,458
8,188,264
5,929,861
289,086
428,300
625,165
1,270,072
2,056,828
2,685,975
3,373,396
$414,910
$801,956
$1,134,175
$2,831,278
$4,702,914
$2,734,087
$2,845,653
(1)
Represents the total number of GPR
cards in our portfolio that have had a purchase, reload or ATM
withdrawal transaction during the previous
90-day
period.
(2)
Represents the total dollar volume
of funds loaded to our GPR card and reload products in the
specified period.
As of
March 31, 2010
(In thousands)
$
102,538
30,792
194,911
30,792
108,590
86,321
(1)
Includes $5.4 million of
restricted cash. We maintain restricted deposits in bank
accounts to support our line of credit.
(2)
Our retail distributors collect
customer funds for purchases of new cards and reloads and then
remit these funds directly to bank accounts established on
behalf of those customers by the banks that issue our cards. Our
retail distributors remittance of these funds takes an
average of three business days. Settlement assets represent the
amounts due from our retail distributors for customer funds
collected at the point of sale that have not yet been remitted
to the card issuing banks. Settlement obligations represent the
amounts that are due from us to the card issuing banks for funds
collected but not yet remitted by our retail distributors and
not funded by our line of credit. We have no control over or
access to customer funds remitted by our retail distributors to
the card issuing banks. Customer funds therefore are not our
assets, and we do not recognize them in our consolidated
financial statements.
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prepaid card program managers, such as First Data Corporation
(or First Data), Netspend Corporation (or Netspend), AccountNow,
Inc. (or AccountNow), PreCash Inc. (or PreCash) and UniRush, LLC
(or Rush Card);
reload network providers, such as Visa, Inc. (or Visa),
MasterCard International Incorporated (or MasterCard), The
Western Union Company (or Western Union) and MoneyGram
International, Inc. (or MoneyGram); and
prepaid card distributors, such as InComm and Blackhawk Network,
Inc. (or Blackhawk).
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increased regulatory and compliance requirements, including, if
we complete our pending bank acquisition, capital requirements
applicable to us and our acquired subsidiary bank;
implementation or remediation of controls, procedures and
policies at the acquired company;
diversion of management time and focus from operation of our
then-existing business to acquisition integration challenges;
coordination of product, sales, marketing and program and
systems management functions;
transition of the acquired companys users and customers
onto our systems;
retention of employees from the acquired company;
integrating employees from the acquired company into our
organization;
integration of the acquired companys accounting,
information management, human resource and other administrative
systems and operations generally with ours;
liability for activities of the acquired company prior to the
acquisition, including violations of law, commercial disputes,
and tax and other known and unknown liabilities; and
litigation or other claims in connection with the acquired
company, including claims brought by terminated employees,
customers, former stockholders or other third parties.
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prepare and distribute periodic reports and other stockholder
communications in compliance with our obligations under the
federal securities laws and the NYSE rules;
define and expand the roles and the duties of our board of
directors and its committees;
institute more comprehensive compliance, investor relations and
internal audit functions;
evaluate and maintain our system of internal control over
financial reporting, and report on managements assessment
thereof, in compliance with the requirements of Section 404 of
the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and related rules and regulations of the
SEC and the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board; and
involve and retain outside legal counsel and accountants in
connection with the activities listed above.
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issuing additional shares of our Class A common stock or
other equity securities;
issuing debt securities; or
borrowing funds under a credit facility.
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price and volume fluctuations in the overall stock market from
time to time;
significant volatility in the market prices and trading volumes
of financial services company stocks;
actual or anticipated changes in our results of operations or
fluctuations in our operating results;
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actual or anticipated changes in the expectations of investors
or the recommendations of any securities analysts who follow our
Class A common stock;
actual or anticipated developments in our business or our
competitors businesses or the competitive landscape
generally;
the publics reaction to our press releases, other public
announcements and filings with the SEC;
litigation involving us, our industry or both or investigations
by regulators into our operations or those of our competitors;
new laws or regulations or new interpretations of existing laws
or regulations applicable to our business;
changes in accounting standards, policies, guidelines,
interpretations or principles;
general economic conditions; and
sales of shares of our Class A common stock by us or our
stockholders.
the timing and volume of purchases, use and reloads of our
prepaid cards and related products and services;
the timing and success of new product or service introductions
by us or our competitors;
seasonality in the purchase or use of our products and services;
reductions in the level of interchange rates that can be charged;
fluctuations in customer retention rates;
changes in the mix of products and services that we sell;
changes in the mix of retail distributors through which we sell
our products and services;
the timing of commencement, renegotiation or termination of
relationships with significant retail distributors;
the timing of commencement, renegotiation or termination of
relationships with significant network acceptance members;
changes in our or our competitors pricing policies or
sales terms;
the timing of commencement and termination of major advertising
campaigns;
the timing of costs related to the development or acquisition of
complementary businesses;
the timing of costs of any major litigation to which we are a
party;
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the amount and timing of operating costs related to the
maintenance and expansion of our business, operations and
infrastructure;
our ability to control costs, including third-party service
provider costs;
volatility in the trading price of our Class A common
stock, which may lead to higher stock-based compensation
expenses or fluctuations in the valuations of vesting
equity; and
changes in the regulatory environment affecting the banking or
electronic payments industries generally or prepaid financial
services specifically.
No shares will be eligible for sale in the public market
immediately upon completion of this offering;
shares
will be eligible for sale in the public market upon the
expiration of
lock-up
and/or
market standoff agreements, subject in some cases to the volume
and other restrictions
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of Rule 144 and Rule 701 promulgated under the Securities
Act of 1933, as amended, or the Securities Act; and
The remainder of the shares will be eligible for sale in the
public market from time to time thereafter upon the lapse of our
right of repurchase with respect to any unvested shares.
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provide our Class B common stock with disproportionate
voting rights (see Concentration of ownership
among our existing directors, executive officers and principal
stockholders may prevent new investors from influencing
significant corporate decisions above);
provide for non-cumulative voting in the election of directors;
provide for a classified board of directors;
authorize our board of directors, without stockholder approval,
to issue preferred stock with terms determined by our board of
directors and to issue additional shares of our Class A and
Class B common stock;
limit the voting power of a holder, or group of affiliated
holders, of more than 24.9% of our common stock to 14.9%;
provide that only our board of directors may set the number of
directors constituting our board of directors or fill vacant
directorships;
prohibit stockholder action by written consent and limit who may
call a special meeting of stockholders; and
require advance notification of stockholder nominations for
election to our board of directors and of stockholder proposals.
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35
53
120
124
125
F-9
our expectations regarding our operating revenues, expenses,
effective tax rates and other results of operations;
our anticipated capital expenditures and our estimates regarding
our capital requirements;
our liquidity and working capital requirements;
our need to obtain additional funding and our ability to obtain
future funding on acceptable terms;
the impact of seasonality on our business;
the growth rates of the markets in which we compete;
our anticipated strategies for growth and sources of new
operating revenues;
maintaining and expanding our customer base and our
relationships with retail distributors and network acceptance
members;
our ability to anticipate market needs and develop new and
enhanced products and services to meet those needs;
our current and future products, services, applications and
functionality and plans to promote them;
anticipated trends and challenges in our business and in the
markets in which we operate;
the evolution of technology affecting our products, services and
markets;
our ability to retain and hire necessary employees and to staff
our operations appropriately;
management compensation and the methodology for its
determination;
our ability to find future acquisition opportunities on
favorable terms or at all and to manage any acquisitions;
our ability to complete our pending bank acquisition and our
expectations regarding the benefits of doing so;
our efforts to make our business more vertically integrated;
our ability to compete in our industry and innovation by our
competitors;
our ability to stay abreast of new or modified laws and
regulations that currently apply or become applicable to our
business;
estimates and estimate methodologies used in preparing our
consolidated financial statements and determining option
exercise prices; and
the future trading prices of our Class A common stock and
the impact of any securities analysts reports on these
prices.
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an actual basis; and
a pro forma basis to give effect to (i) the issuance of
2,208,552 shares of Class A common stock in May 2010
and (ii) the automatic conversion of all outstanding shares
of our preferred stock into 24,941,521 shares of our
Class B common stock immediately prior to the completion of
this offering.
March 31, 2010
Actual
Pro Forma(1)
(In thousands)
$
102,538
$
102,538
$
$
31,322
13
38
14,745
46,042
40,241
40,241
86,321
86,321
$
86,321
$
86,321
(1)
Excludes the impact of option exercises at the closing of this
offering, including our associated tax withholding obligation,
by the selling stockholders, who we expect will exercise options
to
purchase shares
of Class B common stock, with a weighted average exercise
price of $ per share, in order to
sell the underlying shares of Class A common stock in this
offering.
(2)
Includes $5.4 million of restricted cash. We maintain
restricted deposits in bank accounts to support our line of
credit.
5,684,079 shares of our Class B common stock issuable
upon the exercise of stock options outstanding as of
March 31, 2010 with a weighted average exercise price of
$8.46 per share
(including shares
that we expect to be sold in this offering by certain selling
stockholders upon the exercise of vested stock options with a
weighted average exercise price of
$ per share and conversion of the
shares received into Class A common stock);
4,567,242 shares of our Class B common stock issuable
upon the exercise of warrants outstanding as of March 31,
2010 with a weighted average exercise price of $22.32 per share,
including a warrant to purchase up to 4,283,456 shares that
is exercisable only upon the achievement of performance goals
specified in our arrangement with PayPal, Inc.;
89,000 shares of our Class B common stock issuable
upon the exercise of stock options granted after March 31,
2010 with an exercise price of $32.23 per share; and
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2,200,000 shares of our Class A common stock reserved
for issuance under our 2010 Equity Incentive Plan and our 2010
Employee Stock Purchase Plan, each of which will become
effective on the first day that our Class A common stock is
publicly traded and contains provisions that will automatically
increase its share reserve each year, as more fully described in
Executive Compensation Employee Benefit
Plans 2010 Equity Incentive Plan.
32
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there would be an additional $ per
share of dilution to new investors;
our existing stockholders, including the holders of these
options and warrants, would own %
and our new investors would own %
of the total number of shares of our Class A and
Class B common stock outstanding upon the completion of
this offering; and
our existing stockholders, including the holders of these
options and warrants, would have
paid % of total consideration, at
an average price per share of $ ,
and our new investors would have
paid % of total consideration.
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Five Months Ended
Three Months Ended
Year Ended July 31,
December 31,
March 31,
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
(Unaudited)
(In thousands, except per share amounts)
$
21,771
$
36,359
$
45,717
$
91,233
$
119,356
$
50,895
$
31,185
$
42,158
12,064
20,616
25,419
45,310
62,396
30,509
15,744
22,782
5,705
9,975
12,488
31,583
53,064
31,353
13,811
27,879
39,540
66,951
83,624
168,126
234,816
112,757
60,740
92,819
19,148
28,660
38,838
69,577
75,786
31,333
20,016
26,039
11,584
18,499
20,610
28,303
40,096
26,610
9,410
16,260
6,990
8,547
9,809
21,944
32,320
17,480
7,700
14,680
6,521
10,077
13,212
19,124
22,944
14,020
5,206
11,755
44,243
65,783
82,469
138,948
171,146
89,443
42,332
68,734
(4,703
)
1,168
1,155
29,178
63,670
23,314
18,408
24,085
300
301
771
665
396
115
47
72
(474
)
(823
)
(625
)
(247
)
(1
)
(2
)
(23
)
(4,877
)
645
1,301
29,596
64,065
23,427
18,455
24,134
111
(3,346
)
12,261
26,902
9,764
7,749
11,319
(4,877
)
535
4,647
17,335
37,163
13,663
10,706
12,815
(367
)
(5,157
)
(13,650
)
(29,000
)
(9,170
)
(7,227
)
(8,444
)
$
(4,877
)
$
168
$
(510
)
$
3,685
$
8,163
$
4,493
$
3,479
$
4,371
$(0.48
)
$0.02
$(0.05
)
$0.34
$0.68
$0.37
$0.29
$0.34
$(0.48
)
$0.01
$(0.05
)
$0.26
$0.52
$0.29
$0.22
$0.27
10,228
10,873
11,100
10,757
12,036
12,222
12,041
12,913
10,228
13,194
11,100
14,154
15,712
15,425
15,501
15,982
34
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Five Months Ended
Three Months Ended
Year Ended July 31,
December 31,
March 31,
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
(Unaudited)
(In thousands, except per share amounts)
$1.01
$0.37
$0.34
$0.91
$0.34
$0.31
36,978
37,164
37,855
40,654
40,367
40,924
$(3,492
)
$3,214
$4,835
$34,825
$70,731
$32,350
$20,122
$27,490
As of
As of
As of July 31,
December 31,
March 31,
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
(Unaudited)
(In thousands)
$
15,619
$
16,670
$
14,991
$
41,613
$
41,931
$
71,684
$
102,538
8,590
12,868
15,412
17,445
35,570
42,569
30,792
30,436
42,626
56,441
97,246
123,269
183,108
194,911
7,355
8,933
12,916
17,445
35,570
42,569
30,792
6,769
5,030
2,446
25,271
37,004
45,237
65,962
81,031
111,744
108,590
22,336
26,816
5,165
5,623
(11,130
)
4,468
42,238
71,364
86,321
(1)
Includes stock-based compensation
expense of $0, $0, $156,000, $1.2 million and
$2.5 million for the years ended July 31, 2005, 2006,
2007, 2008 and 2009, respectively, $6.8 million for the
five months ended December 31, 2009 and $0.6 million
and $1.8 million for the three months ended March 31,
2009 and 2010, respectively.
(2)
We anticipate that our investor and
analyst presentations will include Adjusted EBITDA, which we
currently define as net income plus net interest expense
(income), income tax expense (benefit), depreciation and
amortization, and stock-based compensation expense and which is
a financial measure that is not calculated in accordance with
GAAP. We also anticipate that our investor and analyst
presentations will include additional non-GAAP financial
measures entitled Adjusted Total Operating Revenues and Adjusted
Net Income, which are discussed at the end of this footnote (2).
The table below provides a reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA to
the most directly comparable financial measure calculated and
presented in accordance with GAAP. Adjusted EBITDA should not be
considered as an alternative to net income, operating income or
any other measure of financial performance calculated and
presented in accordance with GAAP. Our Adjusted EBITDA may not
be comparable to similarly titled measures of other
organizations because other organizations may not calculate
Adjusted EBITDA in the same manner as we do. We prepare Adjusted
EBITDA to eliminate the impact of items that we do not consider
indicative of our core operating performance. You are encouraged
to evaluate these adjustments and the reason we consider them
appropriate.
We believe Adjusted EBITDA is
useful to investors in evaluating our operating performance for
the following reasons:
Adjusted EBITDA is widely used by
investors to measure a companys operating performance
without regard to items, such as interest expense, income tax
expense, depreciation and amortization, and stock-based
compensation expense, that can vary substantially from company
to company depending upon their financing structure and
accounting policies, the book value of their assets, their
capital structures and the method by which their assets were
acquired;
securities analysts use Adjusted
EBITDA as a supplemental measure to evaluate the overall
operating performance of companies; and
we adopted a new accounting
standard for stock-based compensation effective August 1,
2006 and recorded stock-based compensation expense of
approximately $156,000, $1.2 million and $2.5 million
for the years ended July 31, 2007, 2008 and 2009,
respectively, $6.8 million for the five months ended
December 31, 2009 and $0.6 million and
$1.8 million for the three months ended March 31, 2009
and 2010, respectively. Prior to August 1, 2006, we
accounted for stock-based compensation using the intrinsic value
method under previously issued guidance, which resulted in zero
stock-based compensation expense. By comparing our Adjusted
EBITDA in different historical periods, our investors can
evaluate our operating results without the additional variations
caused by stock-based compensation expense, which is not
comparable from year to year due to changes in accounting
treatment, changes in the fair market value of our common stock
(which is influenced by external factors like the volatility of
public markets) and the financial performance of our peers, and
is not a key measure of our operations.
Our management uses Adjusted EBITDA:
as a measure of operating
performance, because it does not include the impact of items not
directly resulting from our core operations;
for planning purposes, including
the preparation of our annual operating budget;
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to allocate resources to enhance
the financial performance of our business;
to evaluate the effectiveness of
our business strategies; and
in communications with our board of
directors concerning our financial performance.
We understand that, although
Adjusted EBITDA is frequently used by investors and securities
analysts in their evaluations of companies, Adjusted EBITDA has
limitations as an analytical tool, and you should not consider
it in isolation or as a substitute for analysis of our results
of operations as reported under GAAP. Some of these limitations
are:
Adjusted EBITDA does not reflect
our capital expenditures or future requirements for capital
expenditures or other contractual commitments;
Adjusted EBITDA does not reflect
changes in, or cash requirements for, our working capital needs;
Adjusted EBITDA does not reflect
interest expense or interest income;
Adjusted EBITDA does not reflect
cash requirements for income taxes;
although depreciation and
amortization are non-cash charges, the assets being depreciated
or amortized will often have to be replaced in the future, and
Adjusted EBITDA does not reflect any cash requirements for these
replacements; and
other companies in our industry may
calculate Adjusted EBITDA differently than we do, limiting its
usefulness as a comparative measure.
The following table presents a
reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA (unaudited) to net income, the
most comparable GAAP financial measure, for each of the periods
indicated.
Five Months
Ended
Three Months
Year Ended July 31,
December 31,
Ended March 31,
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2009
2009
2010
(In thousands)
$
(4,877
)
$
535
$
4,647
$
17,335
$
37,163
$
13,663
$
10,706
$
12,815
174
522
(146
)
(418
)
(395
)
(113
)
(47
)
(49
)
111
(3,346
)
12,261
26,902
9,764
7,749
11,319
1,211
2,046
3,524
4,407
4,593
2,254
1,158
1,563
156
1,240
2,468
6,782
556
1,842
$
(3,492
)
$
3,214
$
4,835
$
34,825
$
70,731
$
32,350
$
20,122
$
27,490
As noted at the beginning of this
footnote (2), we anticipate that our investor and analyst
presentations will include not only Adjusted EBITDA (as
redefined below) but also two other non-GAAP financial
measures Adjusted Total Operating Revenues and
Adjusted Net Income. These additional non-GAAP financial
measures will be included for the reasons described below.
In May 2010, we entered into
an amended prepaid card program agreement with Walmart, our
largest retail distributor. As an incentive for entering into
this agreement, we issued Walmart 2,208,552 shares of our
Class A common stock. Accordingly, we expect to present the
impact of this equity issuance as contra-revenue. We are
currently evaluating the timing and recognition impact of this
equity issuance on our consolidated financial statements. The
impact may result in significant fluctuations in our monthly
operating revenues and net income.
Fluctuations in our total GAAP
operating revenues, and thus our GAAP net income, resulting from
the equity issuance would make comparisons between fiscal
periods difficult. In an effort to provide investors with useful
information to evaluate our operating performance, we plan to
include in our investor and analyst presentations a non-GAAP
financial measure entitled Adjusted Total Operating Revenues,
which we intend to define as total GAAP operating revenues less
noncash retail distributor incentive compensation that results
from the issuance of the stock award to Walmart. Thus, Adjusted
Total Operating Revenues will equal card revenues plus cash
transfer revenues plus interchange revenues less any retail
distributor incentive compensation paid in cash and will be
directly comparable to our historical GAAP line item entitled
total operating revenues.
We also plan to disclose a non-GAAP
financial measure entitled Adjusted Net Income, which will
represent the net income that we would have earned had no
stock-based compensation, including retail distributor incentive
compensation and employee and director stock-based compensation
expenses, been recognized.
Finally, beginning in the three
months ended June 30, 2010, we intend to redefine the
calculation methodology for the Adjusted EBITDA numbers that are
analogous to those computed for this prospectus to include not
only the adjustments identified in the first sentence of this
footnote (2) but also the adjustments to those items
resulting from the exclusion of any noncash retail distributor
incentive compensation. We intend to provide more detailed
explanations regarding these non-GAAP financial measures and
their intended uses, together with reconciliation tables between
Adjusted Total Operating Revenues and total operating revenues,
Adjusted Net Income and net income, and Adjusted EBITDA and net
income, in our
Form 10-Q
for the quarter ended June 30, 2010 and in our subsequent
periodic reports.
In addition, there is a possibility
that the warrant to purchase Class B common stock described
under Description of Capital Stock
Warrants below will vest and become exercisable upon the
achievement of certain performance goals by PayPal. If
36
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this warrant vests, we will need to
determine its fair value on the vesting date using a Black
Scholes model and the price of our Class A common stock and
record that value as an additional contra-revenue item. In that
case, we will also eliminate all effects of that noncash
incentive compensation from the non-GAAP measures described
above.
(3)
Includes $6,025, $2,025, $2,285,
$2,328, $15,367, $15,381 and $5,405 of restricted cash as of
July 31, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009, December 31,
2009 and March 31, 2010, respectively.
(4)
Our retail distributors collect
customer funds for purchases of new cards and reloads and then
remit these funds directly to bank accounts established on
behalf of those customers by the banks that issue our cards. Our
retail distributors remittance of these funds takes an
average of three business days. Settlement assets represent the
amounts due from our retail distributors for customer funds
collected at the point of sale that have not yet been remitted
to the card issuing banks. Settlement obligations represent the
amounts that are due from us to the card issuing banks for funds
collected but not yet remitted by our retail distributors and
not funded by our line of credit. We have no control over or
access to customer funds remitted by our retail distributors to
the card issuing banks. Customer funds therefore are not our
assets, and we do not recognize them in our consolidated
financial statements.
37
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FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
38
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39
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40
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41
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Three Months Ended March 31,
2009
2010
Percentage of Total
Percentage of Total
Amount
Operating Revenues
Amount
Operating Revenues
(Dollars in thousands)
$
31,185
51.3
%
$
42,158
45.4
%
15,744
25.9
22,782
24.6
13,811
22.7
27,879
30.0
$
60,740
100.0
%
$
92,819
100.0
%
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Three Months Ended March 31,
2009
2010
Percentage of Total
Percentage of Total
Amount
Operating Revenues
Amount
Operating Revenues
(Dollars in thousands)
$
20,016
33.0
%
$
26,039
28.1
%
9,410
15.5
16,260
17.5
7,700
12.7
14,680
15.8
5,206
8.6
11,755
12.7
$
42,332
69.8
%
$
68,734
74.1
%
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Three Months
Ended March 31,
2009
2010
35.0
%
35.0
%
6.1
6.0
4.5
0.9
1.4
42.0
%
46.9
%
44
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Five Months Ended December 31,
2008
2009
Percentage of Total
Percentage of Total
Amount
Operating Revenues
Amount
Operating Revenues
(Dollars in thousands)
$
46,460
52.2
%
$
50,895
45.1
%
24,391
27.4
30,509
27.1
18,212
20.4
31,353
27.8
$
89,063
100.0
%
$
112,757
100.0
%
45
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Five Months Ended December 31,
2008
2009
Percentage of Total
Percentage of Total
Amount
Operating Revenues
Amount
Operating Revenues
(Dollars in thousands)
$
35,001
39.3
%
$
31,333
27.8
%
15,409
17.3
26,610
23.6
11,765
13.2
17,480
15.5
9,463
10.6
14,020
12.4
$
71,638
80.4
%
$
89,443
79.3
%
46
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Five Months
Ended December 31,
2008
2009
35.0
%
35.0
%
5.9
6.7
1.1
42.0
%
41.7
%
Year Ended July 31,
2008
2009
Percentage of Total
Percentage of Total
Amount
Operating Revenues
Amount
Operating Revenues
(Dollars in thousands)
$
91,233
54.3
%
$
119,356
50.8
%
45,310
26.9
62,396
26.6
31,583
18.8
53,064
22.6
$
168,126
100.0
%
$
234,816
100.0
%
47
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Year Ended July 31,
2008
2009
Percentage of Total
Percentage of Total
Amount
Operating Revenues
Amount
Operating Revenues
(Dollars in thousands)
$
69,577
41.4
%
$
75,786
32.3
%
28,303
16.8
40,096
17.1
21,944
13.0
32,320
13.7
19,124
11.4
22,944
9.8
$
138,948
82.6
%
$
171,146
72.9
%
48
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Year Ended July 31,
2008
2009
35.0
%
35.0
%
5.7
6.1
0.7
0.9
41.4
%
42.0
%
Year Ended July 31,
2007
2008
Percentage of Total
Percentage of Total
Amount
Operating Revenues
Amount
Operating Revenues
(Dollars in thousands)
$
45,717
54.7
%
$
91,233
54.3
%
25,419
30.4
45,310
26.9
12,488
14.9
31,583
18.8
$
83,624
100.0
%
$
168,126
100.0
%
49
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Year Ended July 31,
2007
2008
Percentage of Total
Percentage of Total
Amount
Operating Revenues
Amount
Operating Revenues
(Dollars in thousands)
$
38,838
46.5
%
$
69,577
41.4
%
20,610
24.6
28,303
16.8
9,809
11.7
21,944
13.0
13,212
15.8
19,124
11.4
$
82,469
98.6
%
$
138,948
82.6
%
50
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Year Ended July 31,
2007
2008
35.0
%
35.0
%
6.1
5.7
(288.9
)
(9.4
)
0.7
(257.2
)%
41.4
%
51
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For the Three Months Ended
Dec. 31,
March 31,
June 30,
Sep. 30,
Dec. 31,
March 31,
2008
2009
2009
2009
2009
2010
(In thousands)
$
28,450
$
31,185
$
30,977
$
30,849
$
30,779
$
42,158
14,997
15,744
16,383
17,256
19,132
22,782
11,340
13,811
15,530
17,213
19,651
27,879
54,787
60,740
62,890
65,318
69,562
92,819
20,509
20,016
15,232
17,182
19,689
26,039
9,415
9,410
10,751
12,666
18,470
16,260
6,895
7,700
9,441
9,951
10,943
14,680
5,772
5,206
5,928
7,587
8,779
11,755
42,591
42,332
41,352
47,386
57,881
68,734
12,196
18,408
21,538
17,932
11,681
24,085
80
47
68
64
77
72
(1
)
(3
)
(23
)
12,275
18,455
21,606
17,993
11,758
24,134
5,155
7,749
9,073
7,522
4,903
11,319
$
7,120
$
10,706
$
12,533
$
10,471
$
6,855
$
12,815
52
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As a Percentage of Total Operating Revenues
Dec. 31,
March 31,
June 30,
Sep. 30,
Dec. 31,
March 31,
2008
2009
2009
2009
2009
2010
51.9
%
51.4
%
49.2
%
47.2
%
44.3
%
45.4
%
27.4
25.9
26.1
26.4
27.5
24.6
20.7
22.7
24.7
26.4
28.2
30.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0
37.4
33.0
24.2
26.3
28.3
28.1
17.2
15.5
17.1
19.4
26.6
17.5
12.6
12.7
15.0
15.2
15.7
15.8
10.5
8.5
9.5
11.6
12.6
12.7
77.7
69.7
65.8
72.5
83.2
74.1
22.3
30.3
34.2
27.5
16.8
25.9
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.1
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
22.4
30.4
34.3
27.6
16.9
26.0
9.4
12.8
14.4
11.5
7.0
12.2
13.0
%
17.6
%
19.9
%
16.1
%
9.9
%
13.8
%
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54
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Five Months
Three Months
Year Ended July 31,
Ended December 31,
Ended March 31,
2007
2008
2009
2009
2010
(In thousands)
$
2,461
$
35,006
$
35,297
$
26,121
$
33,461
(4,558
)
(5,163
)
(19,400
)
(5,063
)
7,069
158
(3,264
)
(28,618
)
8,681
300
$
(1,939
)
$
26,579
$
(12,721
)
$
29,739
$
40,830
55
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56
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Payments Due by Period
Total
Less Than 1 Year
1-3 Years
3-5 Years
More Than 5 Years
(In thousands)
$
$
$
$
$
4,507
1,780
2,691
36
41,546
21,287
20,259
$
46,053
$
23,067
$
22,950
$
36
$
57
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(1)
Primarily future minimum payments under agreements with vendors
and our retail distributors. See note 14 of our notes to
consolidated financial statements.
58
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59
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Expected
Term of
Risk-Free
Option
Expected
Expected Stock
Interest Rate
(in Years)
Dividends
Price Volatility
1.9
%
6.08
56.0
%
3.1
6.08
57.0
2.9
6.08
56.0
2.5
6.08
46.0
2.5
5.80
52.3
2.6
5.87
47.6
Per Share
Per Share Estimated
Number of
Fair Value of
Weighted Average
Shares Subject to
Per Share Exercise
Our Common
Fair Value of
Options Granted
Price of Options
Stock
Options
50,000
$
10.84
$
10.84
$
5.83
85,800
15.65
15.65
8.80
127,500
17.19
17.19
9.50
1,261,750
20.01
20.01
9.47
130,500
25.00
25.00
12.79
89,000
32.23
32.23
15.40
60
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the per share value of any recent preferred stock financing and
the amount of convertible preferred stock liquidation
preferences;
any third-party trading activity in our common stock or
preferred stock;
the illiquid nature of our common stock and the opportunity for
any future liquidity events;
our current and historical operating performance and current
financial condition;
our operating and financial projections;
our achievement of company milestones;
the stock price performance of a peer group comprised of
selected publicly-traded companies identified as being
comparable to us; and
economic conditions and trends in the broad market for stocks.
the nature of our industry and current market conditions;
61
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the quality, reliability and verifiability of the data used in
each methodology;
the comparability of publicly held companies or transactions; and
any additional considerations unique to our company as of each
valuation date.
62
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63
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64
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65
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66
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Never-banked households in which no one has ever had
a bank account;
Previously-banked households in which at least one
member has previously had a bank account, but no one has one
currently;
Underbanked households in which at least one member
currently has a bank account, but that also use non-bank
financial service providers to conduct routine transactions like
check cashing or bill payment; and
Fully-banked households that primarily rely on
traditional financial services.
67
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Card Issuing Banks
banks that are authorized
by payment networks to issue cards and that provide accounts to
hold deposits. Many card issuing banks also manage settlement
and provide risk management services. A banks
participation in a prepaid card program can range from actively
managing and marketing the card program to providing passive
sponsorship into payment networks.
Payment Networks
companies, such as Visa and
MasterCard, that facilitate
point-of-sale
card acceptance, provide purchase and withdrawal transaction
routing and processing between merchant acquirers and card
issuing banks, perform certain clearing and settlement functions
and provide marketing and support services to card issuing
banks. Payment networks also establish network rules and
establish processing and security standards and customer
protections to which all participating members must adhere.
Processors
technology vendors that provide
connectivity to payment networks, maintain account balances, and
authorize purchase and withdrawal transactions. Many processors
provide additional services, including card activation and
customer service, and develop
and/or
integrate value-added cardholder applications such as online
bill payment, microlending and mobile payment services.
Program Managers
specialized vendors that
design, manage, market and operate prepaid card programs.
Prepaid card program managers may provide a range of services or
delegate that provision to other specialized vendors, such as
card issuing banks, processors and distributors, and collaborate
with them as these programs are implemented. Prepaid card
program managers may also negotiate the allocation of fees and
risk management with all vendors involved in a particular
prepaid card program.
Distributors
organizations, such as
retailers, remittance vendors, tax preparers, check cashers,
payday lenders, card resellers and employers, that distribute
cards through various sales channels and may also manage
inventory fulfillment and provide
point-of-sale
integration and technology.
Reload Networks
vendors that provide products
and services, connectivity, technology and integration which
enable
point-of-sale
locations to accept cash payments and associate those payments
with a specific account. These vendors also provide transaction
routing and processing between the point of sale and the
destination of the fund transfer. A small number of reload
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networks have proprietary brands, acceptance locations and
technology, while most take advantage of the brands, technology
and
point-of-sale
relationships of other third-party vendors.
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Attracting new users by introducing new products, improving
current products to address consumers current and evolving
needs, and building demand for our products through promotions;
Expanding and strengthening our distribution by establishing
relationships with additional high-quality retail chains,
increasing online distribution of our products and accelerating
our entry into new distribution channels, including
collaborating with third-party service providers, such as
electronic tax preparation providers; and
Adding network acceptance members to and applications for the
Green Dot Network by continuing to enroll additional third-party
prepaid card program providers that want to offer their
cardholders access to our reload network and to identify
additional uses for our reload networks cash transfer
technology.
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increase our efficiency in introducing and managing potential
new products and services, which are more difficult to
accomplish with multiple unaffiliated card issuing banks;
reduce the risk that we would be negatively impacted by one of
the banks that issue our cards changing its business practices
as a result of, among other things, a change of strategic
direction, financial hardship or regulatory developments;
reduce the sponsorship and service fees and other expenses that
we incur each year to the third-party banks that issue our
cards, and correspondingly increase funds available to us to
spend on other aspects of our business, including the ability to
invest in further reducing consumer pricing; and
further increase the degree to which our operations are
integrated and provide increased control over our operations.
Never-banked households in which no one has ever had
a bank account;
Previously-banked households in which at least one
member has previously had a bank account, but no one has one
currently;
Underbanked households in which at least one member
currently has a bank account, but that also use non-bank
financial service providers to conduct routine transactions like
check cashing or bill payment; and
Fully-banked households that primarily rely on
traditional financial services.
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Walmart, Kmart, Meijer
Walgreens, CVS, Rite-Aid, Duane Reade
7-Eleven, The Pantry (Kangaroo Express)
Kroger
RadioShack
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The Green PlaNET front-end processing system communicates with
the host systems of retail distributors and network acceptance
members through a proprietary application programming interface,
or API, and runs a variety of proprietary and third-party
software applications that facilitate the purchase of a card at
a retail location as well as the loading of cash onto a card or
MoneyPak. It enables our reload network to interoperate with
funds transfer networks and engages in real-time transaction
verification so that cards do not exceed applicable limits, thus
ensuring compliance with our anti-money laundering program.
The Green PlaNET back-end processing system runs a variety of
proprietary and third-party software applications that enable
the activation, daily use and maintenance of our cardholder
accounts. It executes a variety of transaction-enabling
processes and initiates several customer verification modules,
such as internally developed anti-money laundering, Know
Your Customer and Office of Foreign Assets Control
requirements, and external data requests from outsourced
vendors, such as Experian and LexisNexis, that together ensure
compliance with all federal requirements for the opening of a
new account. It interfaces with our database to generate account
statements and initiate account notification communications,
such as emails and text messages. It also enables our cards to
interoperate with Visa, MasterCard and other payment or funds
transfer networks, interacts with the systems of other
processors and executes back-end batch processes, such as
transaction fee calculations, charge-back transactions, retailer
invoicing and account write-offs, that facilitate the daily
accounting, reconciliation and settlement of transactions and
account activity. In addition, the Green PlaNET back-end
processing system houses a variety of security applications that
provide customer and card data encryption, fraud monitoring,
information security administration and firewalls that protect
the Green PlaNET infrastructure.
The Green PlaNET customer-facing systems include a service
processing system and various communication systems. The Green
PlaNET service processing system includes several customer
relationship management software applications that operate a
variety of support services, providing real-time account history
access and pending transaction data, contact information,
personal identification number request and issuance services and
balance inquiry applications. It also enables consumers to
direct cash transfers using our MoneyPak product. In addition,
Green PlaNET provides our consumers, retail distributors and
network acceptance members with the ability to communicate with
us and access accounts using a variety of technologies. These
technologies integrate with our customer care applications and
allow us, among other things, to address customer inquiries and
automatically prompt customer support agents to sell upgrades
and make cross-sales. We have also integrated Green PlaNET with
our website, www.greentdot.com, to provide a full range of
interactive services, including online card
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sales, full activation and personalization services, electronic
funds transfers, and access to account histories and management
services.
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breadth of distribution;
brand recognition;
the ability to reload funds;
compliance and regulatory capabilities;
enterprise-class and scalable IT;
pricing.
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the number and quality of retail locations;
brand recognition;
product and service functionality;
number of cardholders and customers using the service;
reliability of the service;
retail price;
enterprise-class
and scalable IT;
ability to integrate quickly with multiple payment platforms and
distributors;
compliance and regulatory capabilities.
brand recognition with consumers and retailers;
the ability to reload funds;
ability to develop and maintain strong relationship with retail
distributors;
compliance and regulatory capabilities;
pricing; and
large customer base.
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anti-money laundering laws;
money transfer and payment instrument licensing regulations;
escheatment laws;
privacy and information safeguard laws;
bank regulations; and
consumer protection laws.
report large cash transactions and suspicious activity;
screen transactions against the U.S. governments
watch-lists, such as the watch-list maintained by the Office of
Foreign Assets Control;
prevent the processing of transactions to or from certain
countries, individuals, nationals and entities;
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identify the dollar amounts loaded or transferred at any one
time or over specified periods of time, which requires the
aggregation of information over multiple transactions;
gather and, in certain circumstances, report customer
information;
comply with consumer disclosure requirements; and
register or obtain licenses with state and federal agencies in
the United States and seek registration of our retail
distributors and network acceptance members when necessary.
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48
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer
41
President, Cards and Network
36
Chief Financial Officer
44
General Counsel and Secretary
44
Chief Operating Officer
71
Director
53
Director
59
Director
55
Director
58
Director
63
Director
*
Lead independent director.
(1)
Member of our audit committee.
(2)
Member of our compensation committee.
(3)
Member of our nominating and governance committee.
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Class I directors are Messrs. Ott and Smith (current
terms expiring in 2011);
Class II directors are Mr. Aldrich and Ms. Hanna
(current terms expiring in 2012); and
Class III directors are Messrs. Greenleaf, Moritz and
Streit (current terms expiring in 2013).
appoints our independent auditors;
approves the audit and non-audit services to be performed by our
independent auditors;
assesses the qualifications, performance and independence of our
independent auditors;
monitors the integrity of our financial statements and our
compliance with legal and regulatory requirements as they relate
to financial statements or accounting matters;
reviews the integrity, adequacy and effectiveness of our
accounting and financial reporting processes and the adequacy
and effectiveness of our systems of internal control;
discusses the results of the audit with the independent auditors
and reviews with management and the independent auditors our
interim and year-end operating results; and
prepares the audit committee report that the SEC requires in our
annual proxy statement.
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reviews, approves and makes recommendations to our board of
directors regarding the compensation of our executive officers;
administers and interprets our stock and equity incentive plans;
reviews, approves and makes recommendations to our board of
directors (as our compensation committee deems appropriate) with
respect to equity and
non-equity
incentive compensation plans; and
establishes and reviews general strategies relating to
compensation and benefits of our employees.
identifies, evaluates and recommends nominees to our board of
directors and its committees;
oversees the evaluation of the performance of our board of
directors and its committees and of individual directors;
considers and makes recommendations to our board of directors
regarding the composition of our board of directors and its
committees;
reviews our legal compliance policies; and
makes recommendations to our board of directors concerning our
corporate governance guidelines and other corporate governance
matters.
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Stock Awards
$
39,990
(1)
*
Former director.
(1)
Represents the grant date fair value of 3,720 fully-vested
shares of our common stock that were issued to
Mr. Greenleaf as compensation for his services as chair of
our audit committee on December 11, 2008 under our 2001
Stock Plan.
(2)
Mr. Ott was appointed to our board of directors after the
completion of fiscal 2009 and did not receive any compensation
for fiscal 2009.
on our audit committee is $10,000 for the chair of that
committee and $5,000 for each of its other members;
on our compensation committee is $5,000 for the chair of that
committee and $3,000 for each of its other members;
on our nominating and corporate governance committee is $5,000
for the chair of that committee and $3,000 for each of its other
members; and
as the Lead Independent Director is $5,000.
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Steven W. Streit, Chairman, President and Chief Executive
Officer, or CEO;
Mark T. Troughton, President, Cards and Network;
John L. Keatley, Chief Financial Officer;
John C. Ricci, General Counsel and Secretary; and
William D. Sowell, Chief Operating Officer.
attract and retain talented and experienced executives;
motivate and reward executives whose knowledge, skills and
performance are critical to our success;
link compensation to company performance and individual
achievement;
link specific cash-based elements of compensation to our
near-term financial performance; and
align the interests of our executive officers and those of our
stockholders by providing our executive officers with long-term
incentives to increase stockholder value.
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base salary;
variable and other cash incentive awards linked to corporate
and/or
individual objectives; and
periodic grants of long-term equity-based awards.
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On-Target
Bonus Amount
$
75,000
100,000
100,000
100,000
28,471
(1)
(1)
Mr. Sowells annual on-target bonus amount was
$70,500, prorated based on his date of hire of March 2,
2009. In connection with the hiring of Mr. Sowell as our
Chief Operating Officer in March 2009, we negotiated an
employment arrangement with him that provided for an on-target
bonus
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amount equal to 30% of his base annual salary, which we believed
was the level of variable cash incentive compensation required
to attract qualified candidates and provide the candidate
selected with appropriate incentives during his first year of
service.
directly or indirectly linked to our companys achievement
of its objectives;
aspirational i.e., their achievement should
represent a bonus-worthy accomplishment; and
linked to the executive officers job description and
direct responsibilities.
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health insurance;
vacation, personal holidays and sick days;
life insurance and supplemental life insurance;
short-term and long-term disability insurance; and
a 401(k) retirement plan with matching contributions.
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Non-Equity
Fiscal
Stock
Option
Incentive Plan
All Other
Salary(1)
Awards(2)
Awards(3)
Compensation(4)
Compensation
Total(5)
8/09-12/09*
$
190,385
$
5,162,260
$
3,788,518
$
31,250
$
1,281
(6)
$
9,173,694
2009
450,000
75,000
3,209
(6)
528,209
8/09-12/09*
148,077
1,894,259
41,667
2,084,003
2009
339,231
150,000
(7)
489,231
8/09-12/09*
126,923
1,420,694
41,667
1,589,284
2009
289,231
1,262,215
100,000
1,651,446
8/09-12/09*
116,346
947,130
41,667
1,105,143
2009
269,615
560,985
100,000
930,600
8/09-12/09*
120,576
949,938
48,231
52,147
(9)
1,170,892
2009(8)
94,904
233,055
26,051
24,176
(9)
378,186
*
Effective September 2009, we changed our fiscal year-end from
July 31 to December 31. Amounts in this row are for
the five months ended December 31, 2009.
(1)
Effective in October 2008, the following named executive
officers received an increase in annual base salary to the
amounts set forth after their names:
Mr. Troughton $350,000;
Mr. Keatley $300,000 and
Mr. Ricci $275,000. Effective in July 2009,
Mr. Sowell received an increase in annual base salary to
$285,000. Effective in January 2010, the following named
executive officers received an increase in annual base salary to
the amounts set forth after their names:
Mr. Streit $525,000;
Mr. Troughton $475,000;
Mr. Keatley $425,000; and
Mr. Ricci $350,000.
(2)
The amount in this column represents the grant date fair value
of the stock award granted to Mr. Streit, as discussed in
note 11 of our notes to consolidated financial statements.
(3)
The amounts in this column represent the grant date fair values
of stock option awards granted to our named executive officers
in the applicable period, as discussed in note 11 of our
notes to consolidated financial statements. See the Grants
of Plan-Based Awards table below for information on stock
option grants made during fiscal 2009 and the five months ended
December 31, 2009.
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(4)
The amounts in this column generally (see footnote 7) represent
total performance-based bonuses under our FY2010 and FY2009
Management Cash Incentive Compensation Plans earned for services
rendered in the applicable period. See the Grants of
Plan-Based Awards table below for information on awards
made under these plans.
(5)
The amounts in this column represent the sum of the compensation
amounts reflected in the other columns of this table.
(6)
Represents a health insurance premium paid by us in the
applicable period on behalf of Mr. Streit.
(7)
Includes a $50,000 incentive bonus awarded in January 2009 for
Mr. Troughtons success at securing a key commercial
agreement on acceptable terms. This bonus was not awarded under
our FY2009 Management Cash Incentive Compensation Plan.
(8)
Mr. Sowell joined our company in March 2009 and his
compensation set forth in this row represents the amount earned
from the commencement of his employment through July 31,
2009.
(9)
Represents perquisites and personal benefits received in the
applicable period pursuant to Mr. Sowells housing and
travel allowance.
Number of
Grant Date
Shares
Exercise
Fair Value of
Estimated Possible Payouts Under
Number of
Underlying
Price of
Stock and
Grant
Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards
Shares of
Option
Option
Option
Date
Threshold
Target
Maximum
Stock
Awards(1)
Awards(2)
Awards(3)
FY09(4)
$
37,500
$
75,000
$
75,000
FY10(4)
15,625
31,250
31,250
11/12/09
400,000
$
20.01
$
3,788,518
12/30/09(5)
257,984
5,162,260
FY09(4)
50,000
100,000
100,000
(6)
50,000
50,000
50,000
FY10(4)
20,833
41,667
41,667
11/12/09
200,000
20.01
1,894,259
FY09(4)
50,000
100,000
100,000
FY10(4)
20,833
41,667
41,667
12/11/08
225,000
10.75
1,262,215
11/12/09
150,000
20.01
1,420,694
FY09(4)
50,000
100,000
100,000
FY10(4)
20,833
41,667
41,667
12/11/08
100,000
10.75
560,985
11/12/09
100,000
20.01
947,130
FY09(4)(7)
1,325
32,708
32,708
FY10(4)
24,115
48,231
48,231
03/19/09
40,000
10.84
233,055
08/03/09
100,000
17.19
949,938
(1)
These option awards vest as to 25% of the shares of common stock
underlying the option on the first anniversary of the vesting
commencement date, with the remainder of the shares vesting
monthly in equal installments over the next three years. All
options were granted under our 2001 Stock Plan, which is
described below under Employee Benefit
Plans, and contain provisions
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that call for accelerated vesting upon a change of control as
discussed above in Compensation Discussion and
Analysis and below in Severance and
Change of Control Agreements.
(2)
Represents the fair market value of a share of our common stock,
as determined by our board of directors, on the options
grant date. Please see Managements Discussion and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations Critical Accounting Policies and
Estimates
Stock-Based
Compensation above for a discussion of how we have valued
our common stock.
(3)
The amounts in this column represent the grant date fair values
for equity awards granted to our named executive officers as
discussed in note 11 of our notes to consolidated financial
statements.
(4)
These rows represent possible cash incentive awards under our
FY2009 Management Cash Incentive Compensation Plan (FY09) or
FY2010 Management Cash Incentive Compensation Plan (FY10), as
the case may be, upon our achievement of applicable corporate
profit goals. Actual awards are only payable if the corporate
objectives (i.e., PBT targets) are achieved at a level of at
least 90%. Actual awards cannot exceed 100% of the target amount
and are adjusted downward in the event corporate objectives are
achieved at a level between 90% and 100% by subtracting the
actual percentage achievement from 100%, multiplying that
percentage by 5 and subtracting the resulting percentage from
100%, which is then multiplied against the target bonus amount.
Bonuses were paid on a semi-annual basis. See
Compensation Discussion and Analysis
above for further discussion of these awards.
(5)
In December 2009, our board of directors awarded
257,984 shares of common stock to Mr. Streit to
compensate him for past services rendered to our company. The
number of shares awarded was equal to the number of shares
underlying fully-vested stock options that he unintentionally
allowed to expire unexercised in June 2009.
(6)
Represents a cash incentive award conditioned upon
Mr. Troughtons success at securing a key commercial
agreement on acceptable terms. See
Compensation Discussion and Analysis
above for additional information regarding this award.
(7)
Mr. Sowells award under our FY2009 Management Cash
Incentive Compensation Plan was also based on individual
objectives intended to promote achievement of non-financial
operational goals within his area of responsibility, as further
discussed in Compensation Discussion and
Analysis above, including the re-launch of our Green
Dot-branded GPR card, integration of PayPal as a network
acceptance member and developing enterprise processes for
coordinating new product development and assessing
organizational risk.
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Number of Securities
Underlying Unexercised
Option
Option
Options(1)
Exercise
Expiration
Exercisable
Unexercisable
Price(2)
Date
536,602
$
1.55
6/07/14
116,666
83,334
4.64
2/15/18
400,000
20.01
11/12/19
145,833
7,292
1.41
1/19/16
262,500
187,500
4.64
2/15/18
200,000
20.01
11/12/19
4,375
1.41
9/17/14
3,125
1.41
8/24/15
22,917
1,042
1.41
1/19/16
24,374
4,167
1.41
4/27/16
165,000
125,000
4.64
2/15/18
56,250
168,750
10.75
12/11/18
150,000
20.01
11/12/19
65,012
0.83
4/28/13
192,029
5,209
1.41
1/19/16
71,154
52,084
4.64
2/15/18
25,000
75,000
10.75
12/11/18
100,000
20.01
11/12/19
40,000
10.84
3/19/19
100,000
17.19
08/03/19
(1)
All options vest as to 25% of the shares of common stock
underlying the option on the first anniversary of the vesting
commencement date, with the remainder of the shares vesting
monthly in equal installments over the next three years.
(2)
Represents the fair market value of a share of our common stock,
as determined by our board of directors, on the options
grant date. Please see Managements Discussion and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of
Operations Critical Accounting Policies and
Estimates
Stock-Based
Compensation for a discussion of how we have valued our
common stock.
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Option Awards
Stock Awards
Number
Number
Value
of Shares
Value
of Shares
Realized
Acquired
Realized
Acquired on
on
on
on
Exercise
Exercise
Vesting
Vesting
$
257,984
$
5,162,260
10,000
153,700
58,924
1,008,481
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Accelerated
Stock
Severance Amount
Options
$
225,000
$
175,000
150,000
137,500
Accelerated
Stock Options
$
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shares subject to options granted under our 2010 Equity
Incentive Plan that cease to be subject to the option for any
reason other than exercise of the option;
shares subject to awards granted under our 2010 Equity Incentive
Plan that are subsequently forfeited or repurchased by us at the
original issue price; and
shares subject to awards granted under our 2010 Equity Incentive
Plan that otherwise terminate without shares being issued.
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for any breach of their duty of loyalty to our company or our
stockholders;
for any act or omission not in good faith or that involves
intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law;
for unlawful payments of dividends or unlawful stock repurchases
or redemptions as provided in Section 174 of the Delaware
General Corporation Law; or
for any transaction from which they derived an improper personal
benefit.
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we have been or are to be a participant;
the amount involved exceeded or exceeds $120,000; and
any of our directors, executive officers or holders of more than
5% of our capital stock, or any immediate family member of or
person sharing the household with any of these individuals, had
or will have a direct or indirect material interest.
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each stockholder known by us to be the beneficial owner of more
than 5% of either class of our common stock;
each of our directors;
each of our named executive officers;
all of our directors and executive officers as a group; and
the selling stockholders.
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Shares Beneficially Owned
Shares Beneficially Owned
Prior to this Offering
After this Offering
Class A
Class B
Shares of
Class A
Class B
Common
Common
Class A
Common
Common
% of Total
Stock
Stock
Common Stock
Stock
Stock
Voting
Shares
%
Shares
%
Being Offered
Shares
%
Shares
%
Power
Directors, Named Executive Officers and 5% Stockholders:
12,099,373
31.9
5,015,688
13.0
(3)
4,106,783
10.8
2,208,552
100.0
1,201,366
3.1
1,176,790
3.1
580,879
1.5
(9)
400,630
1.1
388,931
1.0
(12)
357,687
*
(14)
17,000
*
11,666
*
25,356,793
63.8
1,577,600
4.2
(19)
1,281,716
3.4
(21)
727,668
1.9
665,114
1.8
469,029
1.2
435,277
1.1
406,692
1.1
357,556
*
343,742
*
315,323
*
277,883
*
259,834
*
221,165
*
207,449
*
179,497
*
159,950
*
158,608
*
158,608
*
146,512
*
(30)
135,568
*
132,584
*
121,886
*
119,772
*
113,178
*
112,109
*
105,360
*
100,000
*
99,536
*
94,566
*
91,894
*
90,000
*
82,946
*
77,000
*
(36)
76,383
*
74,319
*
71,568
*
70,088
*
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Shares Beneficially Owned
Shares Beneficially Owned
Prior to this Offering
After this Offering
Class A
Class B
Shares of
Class A
Class B
Common
Common
Class A
Common
Common
% of Total
Stock
Stock
Common Stock
Stock
Stock
Voting
Shares
%
Shares
%
Being Offered
Shares
%
Shares
%
Power
68,828
*
62,946
*
59,596
*
47,980
*
47,799
*
47,333
*
44,994
*
(43)
43,604
*
37,195
*
36,466
*
36,183
*
36,183
*
35,000
*
34,970
*
34,970
*
33,116
*
32,189
*
31,383
*
30,715
*
30,558
*
26,357
*
25,000
*
22,140
*
21,383
*
19,076
*
378,380
*
*
Represents beneficial ownership of
less than 1% of our outstanding shares of common stock.
**
The shares of Class A common
stock being offered by this individual will be acquired through
the exercise of options at the closing of this offering, and
thus the number of shares shown in the footnotes as being
subject to options will be reduced by the same number after the
offering.
Shares shown for this individual
represent shares subject to options that are exercisable within
60 days of March 31, 2010.
§
Identifies one of our current or
former (within the past three years) employees of Green Dot
Corporation.
(1)
Represents 7,778,099 shares
owned by Sequoia Capital Franchise Fund, 1,850,387 shares
owned by Sequoia Capital IX, 1,246,945 shares owned by
Sequoia Capital US Growth Fund IV, L.P.,
1,060,650 shares owned by Sequoia Capital Franchise
Partners and 163,292 shares owned by Sequoia Capital
Entrepreneurs Annex Fund. SCFF Management, LLC is the sole
general partner of Sequoia Capital Franchise Fund and Sequoia
Capital Franchise Partners. SCIX Management, LLC is the sole
general partner of Sequoia Capital IX and Sequoia Capital
Entrepreneurs Annex Fund. SCGF IV Management, LP (Cayman) is the
mid-tier general partner and SCGF GenPar, Ltd. (Cayman) is the
top tier general partner of Sequoia Capital US Growth
Fund IV, LP. Michael J. Moritz, one of our directors, is a
Managing Director of SCGF GenPar, Ltd. (Cayman), and he is a
Managing Member of SCFF Management, LLC, SCIX Management, LLC,
SCGF IV Management, LP and SCGF IV Management, LP (Cayman).
Mr. Moritz may be deemed to have shared voting and
investment power over the shares held by Sequoia Capital
Franchise Fund, Sequoia Capital IX, Sequoia Capital US Growth
Fund IV, L.P., Sequoia Capital Franchise Partners and
Sequoia Capital Entrepreneurs Annex Fund, as applicable.
Mr. Moritz disclaims beneficial ownership of those shares,
except to the extent of his pecuniary interest therein. The
address for Mr. Moritz and each of these entities is 3000
Sand Hill Road, Building 4, Suite 250, Menlo Park,
California 94025.
(2)
Represents 4,311,713 shares
owned by the Steven W. Streit Family Trust, of which
Mr. Streit is the trustee, 34,040 shares owned by his
children and 669,935 shares subject to options held by
Mr. Streit that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 31, 2010.
(3)
Represents shares
to be sold by the Steven W. Streit Family Trust.
(4)
W. Thomas Smith, Jr., one of our
directors, is a managing partner of Total Technology Ventures,
LLC, the general partner of TTP Fund, L.P. The other managing
partner is Gardiner W. Garrard. The address for Mr. Smith
and each of these entities is 1230 Peachtree Street, Promenade
II, Suite 1190, Atlanta, Georgia 30309.
(5)
Our right to repurchase these
shares lapses with respect to 36,810 shares per month over
60 months, beginning on June 24, 2010. See
Prospectus Summary Recent Developments
above. The principal business address of Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
is 702 Southwest 8th Street, Bentonville, Arkansas
72716-0215.
(6)
Includes 453,125 shares
subject to options held by Mr. Troughton that are
exercisable within 60 days of March 31, 2010.
Table of Contents
(7)
Represents 1,029,955 shares
held by the David William Hanna Trust dated October 30,
1989, 78,635 shares held by Tim J. Morgan, Trustee of the
Hanna 2008 Annuity Trust dated 6/5/08 and
68,200 shares held by the Virginia L. Hanna Trust dated
August 16, 2001. Ms. Hanna, one of our directors,
disclaims beneficial ownership of the shares held by the David
William Hanna Trust dated October 30, 1989 and the shares
held by Tim J. Morgan, Trustee of the Hanna 2008 Annuity Trust
dated 6/5/08, except to the extent of her pecuniary interest
therein. The address of these trusts is
c/o Hanna
Capital Management, 8105 Irvine Center Drive, Suite 1170,
Irvine, California 92618.
(8)
Represents 330,190 shares held
by the Greenleaf Family Trust, of which Timothy R. Greenleaf,
one of our directors, is the trustee, and 250,689 shares
held by Mr. Greenleaf.
(9)
Represents shares
to be sold by the Greenleaf Family Trust.
(10)
Represents shares held by YKA
Partners Ltd., of which Kenneth C. Aldrich, one of our
directors, is the agent of the general partner.
(11)
Represents 5,234 shares held
by John C. Ricci, 4,460 shares held by his minor
children and 379,237 shares subject to options held by Mr.
Ricci that are exercisable within 60 days of March 31,
2010.
(12)
Represents shares
to be sold by John C. Ricci.
(13)
Represents 25,000 shares held
by John L. Keatley, 3,000 shares held by his minor
daughters and 329,687 shares subject to options held by
Mr. Keatley that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 31, 2010. This amount does not include
10,000 shares held by the Keatley Family Trust, of which he
is neither a trustee nor a beneficiary.
(14)
Represents shares
to be sold by John L. Keatley.
(15)
Represents shares subject to
options held by Mr. Ott, one of our directors, that are
exercisable within 60 days of March 31, 2010.
(16)
Represents shares subject to
options held by Mr. Sowell that are exercisable within
60 days of March 31, 2010.
(17)
Includes 1,860,650 shares
subject to options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 31, 2010.
(18)
Represents 805,071 shares held
by Donald B. Wiener, a former director, 124,207 shares held
by the Caroline Rose Shifke Trust U/A dated 12/13/89,
124,207 shares held by the Katherine Elisabeth Shifke
Trust U/A dated 4/11/91, 124,207 shares held by the
David Jacques Shifke Trust U/A dated 12/4/91,
84,000 shares held by the Sophie Grace Wiener
Trust U/A dated 8/19/03, 62,000 shares held by the
Sandra M. Feingerts Childrens Trust U/A dated
12/5/03, 55,602 shares held by the Andrew Charles Spomer
Trust U/A dated 11/12/93, 55,602 shares held by the
Daniel Baron Spomer Trust U/A dated 4/10/96,
47,568 shares held by the Kathryn Ellen Wiener
Trust U/A dated 11/12/93, 47,568 shares owned by the
John Baron Wiener Trust U/A dated 12/11/98, and
47,568 shares held by the Thomas Max Wiener Trust U/A
dated 3/16/99. Donald B. Wiener is a trustee for each of these
trusts.
(19)
Represents shares
to be sold by Donald B. Wiener.
(20)
Represents 111,111 shares
owned by the Benson A. Riseman Grantor Retained Annuity Trust,
26,265 shares owned by the Benson A. Riseman Irrevocable
Life Insurance Trust, 1,059,478 shares owned by the Benson
A. Riseman Living Trust, 2,222 shares held by Chelsea
Kathleen Riseman, 2,222 shares held by Benjamin Adam
Riseman and 80,418 shares that are subject to options held
by Benson A. Riseman that are exercisable within
60 days of March 31, 2010. Benson A. Riseman is the
trustee of the Benson A. Riseman Grantor Retained Annuity Trust
and the Benson A. Riseman Living Trust. Kurt Weiss is the
trustee of the Benson A. Riseman Irrevocable Life Insurance
Trust.
(21)
Represents shares
to be sold by the Benson A. Riseman Grantor Retained Annuity
Trust, shares to be sold by
the Benson A. Riseman Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust
and shares to be sold by the
Benson A. Riseman Living Trust.
(22)
Jennifer C. Enright is the trustee
of the Jennifer C. Enright Revocable Trust,
UTD Dec. 3, 2009.
(23)
Raulee Marcus is the trustee of the
Raulee Marcus Living Trust, dated 4/9/10.
(24)
Includes 257,249 shares
subject to options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 31, 2010.
(25)
The managing partner of Kodiak
Ventures, LP is David W. Berkus.
(26)
Includes 116,900 shares
subject to options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 31, 2010.
(27)
Gary Lazar and Carole Lazar are the
trustees of the Lazar Family Trust 4/15/92.
(28)
Bradely Shames is the partner of
BMS Investments.
(29)
Represents 6,752 shares held
by Ronald P. Egge or Eric M. Egge as Joint Tenants,
6,752 shares held by Ronald P. Egge or Sonja L.
Egge as Joint Tenants, 106,000 shares held by the
Ronald P. Egge Living Trust, 6,752 shares held by
Ronald Egge or Elise M. Lindaman as Joint Tenants,
6,752 shares held by Mary Krach or Aaron Krach as Joint
Tenants, 6,752 shares held by Mary Krach or Daniel Krach as
Joint Tenants and 6,752 shares held by Mary Krach or Raquel
Krach as Joint Tenants. Ronald P. Egge is the trustee of the
Ronald P. Egge Living Trust.
(30)
Represents shares
to be sold by Ronald P. Egge or Eric M. Egge as Joint
Tenants, shares to be sold by
Ronald P. Egge or Sonja L. Egge as Joint
Tenants, shares to be sold by
the Ronald P. Egge Living
Trust, shares to be sold by
Ronald Egge or Elise M. Lindaman as Joint
Tenants, shares to be sold by
Mary Krach or Aaron Krach as Joint
Tenants, shares to be sold by
Mary Krach or Daniel Krach as Joint Tenants
and shares to be sold by Mary
Krach or Raquel Krach as Joint Tenants.
121
Table of Contents
(31)
Steven J. Pfrenzinger is the
trustee of the Steven J. Pfrenzinger and Margaret A. Pfrenzinger
Family Trust dated 3/25/83.
(32)
The Managing Member of Avalon
Investments, LLC is John P. Kensey.
(33)
L. Ried Schott is the trustee of
the L. Ried Schott Living Trust dtd 8/13/97.
(34)
Edmund M. Olivier de Vezin is
trustee of the Edmund & Ellen Olivier Revocable Family
Trust.
(35)
Represents 38,000 shares held
by James L. Aeling, 9,856 shares held by the Survivors
Trust of the Aeling Family Trust, 3,944 shares held by the
Marital Exempt Trust of the Aeling Family Trust,
11,200 shares held by the Aeling Family
Exemption Trust, and 14,000 shares held by the Aeling
Family Non-Exempt Trust. Dorothy A. Aeling is trustee of the
Survivors Trust of the Aeling Family Trust, the Marital Exempt
Trust of the Aeling Family Trust, the Aeling Family
Exemption Trust and the Aeling Family Non-Exempt Trust.
(36)
Represents shares
to be sold by James L. Aeling
and shares to be sold by the
Survivors Trust of the Aeling Family Trust.
(37)
Sol Zechter is trustee of the
Zechter Family Trust.
(38)
Y. Ben-Barak is trustee of the
Ben-Barak 1990 Family Trust.
(39)
James Henry Holly is trustee of the
Holly Family 1989 Trust.
(40)
Larry Marc Daines is trustee of the
Larry M. & Virginia A. Daines Trust dated Dec. 15,
2000.
(41)
Includes 48,437 shares subject
to options that are exercisable within 60 days of
March 31, 2010.
(42)
Represents 39,727 shares held by
Irwin D. Miller and 5,267 shares held by the Miller Living
Survivors Trust. Elaine Miller is trustee of the Miller
Living Survivors Trust.
(43)
Represents
shares to be sold by the Miller Living Survivors Trust.
(44)
Kenneth A. Pickar is trustee of the
Kenneth A., Sandra L. Pickar Family Trust.
(45)
Warren J. Hanselman is trustee of
The Hanselman Trust, dtd May 10, 2008.
(46)
Represents shares held by 50
selling stockholders not listed above who, as a group, owned
less than 1% of the outstanding Class B common stock prior
to this offering. Of these selling
stockholders,
are current or former (within the past three years) employees of
Green Dot Corporation.
122
Table of Contents
each stockholder known by us to be the beneficial owner of more
than 5% of our common stock;
each of our directors;
each of our named executive officers;
all of our directors and executive officers as a group; and
the selling stockholders.
Shares Beneficially Owned
after Offering if the
Number of Shares
Underwriters Option is
to be Sold if the
Exercised in Full
Underwriters
Class A
Class B
% of Total
Option is
Common Stock
Common Stock
Voting
Exercised in Full
Shares
%
Shares
%
Power
123
Table of Contents
Shares Beneficially Owned
after Offering if the
Number of Shares
Underwriters Option is
to be Sold if the
Exercised in Full
Underwriters
Class A
Class B
% of Total
Option is
Common Stock
Common Stock
Voting
Exercised in Full
Shares
%
Shares
%
Power
Table of Contents
Shares Beneficially Owned
after Offering if the
Number of Shares
Underwriters Option is
to be Sold if the
Exercised in Full
Underwriters
Class A
Class B
% of Total
Option is
Common Stock
Common Stock
Voting
Exercised in Full
Shares
%
Shares
%
Power
Table of Contents
If we were to seek to amend our certificate of incorporation to
increase the authorized number of shares of a class of stock, or
to increase or decrease the par value of a class of stock, then
that class would be required to vote separately to approve the
proposed amendment; and
If we were to seek to amend our certificate of incorporation in
a manner that altered or changed the powers, preferences or
special rights of a class of stock in a manner that affected its
holders adversely, then that class would be required to vote
separately to approve the proposed amendment.
126
Table of Contents
127
Table of Contents
Total Number of
Shares Subject
Exercise Price
to Warrants
Per Share
Expiration Date
4,283,456
(1)
$
23.70
March 3, 2017(2)
283,786
1.41
February 11, 2012
*
This warrant is redeemable for cash if we fail to perform under
our commercial agreement with the holder (PayPal). In addition,
we have the right to repurchase any shares previously issued
upon the exercise of the warrant if the holder fails to perform
under the same agreement.
(1)
Of these shares, 3,426,765 shares will vest and become
exercisable only upon the achievement of certain performance
goals prior to the earlier of March 3, 2014 or the
termination of our commercial agreement with the holder
(PayPal), and the remaining shares will vest and become
exercisable only if certain other performance goals also take
place prior to the same deadline.
(2)
The warrant may expire earlier than this date. The warrant
provides that it expires on the earlier of March 3, 2014 or
the termination of our commercial agreement with the holder
(PayPal) if none of the shares subject to the warrant have
vested prior to the earlier event. Should any of the shares
subject to the warrant vest, the warrant expires on the earliest
of the date on which our commercial agreement with the holder is
terminated, the date of a change in control of our company or
March 3, 2017.
(3)
If this warrant to purchase shares of our
Series C-1
preferred stock remains outstanding following the completion of
this offering, it will become exercisable for a like number of
shares of our Class B common stock.
128
Table of Contents
129
Table of Contents
Board of Directors Vacancies.
Our restated
certificate of incorporation and restated bylaws authorize only
our board of directors to fill vacant directorships. In
addition, the number of directors constituting our board of
directors is permitted to be set only by a resolution adopted by
a majority vote of our entire board of directors. These
provisions would prevent a stockholder from increasing the size
of our board of directors and then gaining control of our board
of directors by filling the resulting vacancies with its own
nominees.
Classified Board.
Our restated certificate of
incorporation and restated bylaws provide that our board is
classified into three classes of directors. This could delay a
successful tender offeror from obtaining majority control of our
board of directors, and the prospect of that delay might deter a
potential offeror. In addition, stockholders are not permitted
to cumulate their votes for the election of directors.
Stockholder Action; Special Meeting of
Stockholders.
Our restated certificate of
incorporation provides that our stockholders may not take action
by written consent, but may only take action at annual or
special meetings of our stockholders. Our restated bylaws
further provide that special meetings of our stockholders may be
called only by a majority of our board of directors, the
chairman of our board of directors, our chief executive officer
or our president.
Advance Notice Requirements for Stockholder Proposals and
Director Nominations
. Our restated bylaws provide advance
notice procedures for stockholders seeking to bring business
before our annual meeting of stockholders, or to nominate
candidates for election as directors at our annual meeting of
stockholders. Our restated bylaws also specify certain
requirements regarding the form and content of a
stockholders notice. These provisions might preclude our
stockholders from bringing matters before our annual meeting of
stockholders or from making nominations for directors at our
annual meeting of stockholders.
Limits on Voting Power.
Our restated
certificate of incorporation provides that a holder, or group of
affiliated holders, of more than 24.9% of our common stock may
not vote shares representing more than 14.9% of the voting power
represented by the outstanding shares of our Class A and
Class B common stock. These provisions might make it more
difficult for, or discourage an attempt by, such a stockholder
to obtain control of us by means of a merger, tender offer,
proxy contest or other means.
Issuance of Undesignated Preferred Stock.
Our
board of directors has the authority, without further action by
the stockholders, to issue up to 5,000,000 shares of
undesignated preferred stock with rights and preferences,
including voting rights, designated from time to time by our
board of directors. The existence of authorized but unissued
shares of preferred stock would enable our board of directors to
render more difficult, or to discourage an attempt to obtain
control of us by means of, a merger, tender offer, proxy contest
or similar transaction.
130
Table of Contents
No shares will be eligible for sale in the public market
immediately upon completion of this offering;
shares
will be eligible for sale in the public market upon the
expiration of the
lock-up
and/or
market standoff agreements described below, subject in some
cases to the volume and other restrictions of Rule 144 and
Rule 701 also described below; and
the remainder of the shares will be eligible for sale in the
public market from time to time thereafter upon the lapse of our
right of repurchase with respect to any unvested shares.
131
Table of Contents
1% of the number of shares of our Class A and Class B
common stock then outstanding, which will equal
approximately shares
immediately after this offering; or
the average weekly trading volume of our Class A common
stock during the four calendar weeks preceding the filing of a
notice on Form 144 with respect to that sale.
132
Table of Contents
133
Table of Contents
Number of
Shares
Paid by Selling Stockholders
No Exercise
Full Exercise
$
$
$
$
134
Table of Contents
135
Table of Contents
the information set forth in this prospectus and otherwise
available to the representatives;
our prospects and the history of and prospects for the industry
in which we compete;
an assessment of our management;
our prospects for future earnings;
the general condition of the securities markets at the time of
this offering;
136
Table of Contents
the recent market prices of, and demand for, publicly traded
common stock of generally comparable companies; and
other factors deemed relevant by the underwriters and us.
to legal entities that are authorized or regulated to operate in
the financial markets or, if not so authorized or regulated,
whose corporate purpose is solely to invest in securities;
137
Table of Contents
to any legal entity that has two or more of (1) an average
of at least 250 employees during the last financial year;
(2) a total balance sheet of more than 43,000,000 and
(3) an annual net turnover of more than 50,000,000,
as shown in its last annual or consolidated accounts;
to fewer than 100 natural or legal persons (other than qualified
investors as defined in the EU Prospectus Directive) subject to
obtaining the prior consent of the book-running managers for any
such offer; or
in any other circumstances that do not require the publication
by the issuer of a prospectus pursuant to Article 3 of the
EU Prospectus Directive.
138
Table of Contents
139
Table of Contents
F-2
Table of Contents
F-3
Table of Contents
Year Ended July 31,
Five Months Ended
Three Months Ended March 31,
2007
2008
2009
December 31, 2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
(In thousands, except per share data)
$
45,717
$
91,233
$
119,356
$
50,895
$
31,185
$
42,158
25,419
45,310
62,396
30,509
15,744
22,782
12,488
31,583
53,064
31,353
13,811
27,879
83,624
168,126
234,816
112,757
60,740
92,819
38,838
69,577
75,786
31,333
20,016
26,039
20,610
28,303
40,096
26,610
9,410
16,260
9,809
21,944
32,320
17,480
7,700
14,680
13,212
19,124
22,944
14,020
5,206
11,755
82,469
138,948
171,146
89,443
42,332
68,734
1,155
29,178
63,670
23,314
18,408
24,085
771
665
396
115
47
72
(625
)
(247
)
(1
)
(2
)
(23
)
1,301
29,596
64,065
23,427
18,455
24,134
(3,346
)
12,261
26,902
9,764
7,749
11,319
4,647
17,335
37,163
13,663
10,706
12,815
(5,157
)
(13,650
)
(29,000
)
(9,170
)
(7,227
)
(8,444
)
$
(510
)
$
3,685
$
8,163
$
4,493
$
3,479
$
4,371
$
(0.05
)
$
0.34
$
0.68
$
0.37
$
0.29
$
0.34
$
(0.05
)
$
0.26
$
0.52
$
0.29
$
0.22
$
0.27
11,100
10,757
12,036
12,222
12,041
12,913
11,100
14,154
15,712
15,425
15,501
15,982
$
1.01
$
0.37
$
0.34
$
0.91
$
0.34
$
0.31
36,978
37,164
37,855
40,654
40,367
40,924
F-4
Table of Contents
Consolidated Statements of
Changes in Redeemable Convertible
Preferred Stock and in Stockholders Equity (Deficit)
Stockholders Equity (Deficit)
Redeemable
Related
(Accumulated
Total
Convertible
Convertible
Class A
Class B
Additional
Party
Deficit)
Stockholders
Preferred Stock
Preferred Stock
Common Stock
Common Stock
Paid-in
Notes
Retained
Equity
Shares
Amount
Shares
Amount
Shares
Amount
Shares
Amount
Capital
Receivable
Earnings
(Deficit)
(In thousands)
$
24,088
$
18,540
$
11,508
$
12
$
1,318
$
(4,020
)
$
(9,695
)
$
6,155
1,361
1
1,065
1,066
(711
)
(711
)
191
(191
)
156
156
2,926
18,701
(251
)
(195
)
(2,675
)
(3
)
(2,191
)
(16,419
)
(18,808
)
3,635
(3,635
)
(3,635
)
4,647
4,647
2,926
22,336
23,837
18,345
10,194
10
539
(4,922
)
(25,102
)
(11,130
)
1,559
2
1,621
1,623
(120
)
(120
)
193
(193
)
1,240
1,240
4,480
(4,480
)
(4,480
)
17,335
17,335
2,926
26,816
23,837
18,345
11,753
12
3,593
(5,235
)
(12,247
)
4,468
308
415
415
(364
)
(364
)
215
(215
)
2,468
2,468
1,956
(1,956
)
(1,956
)
(2,926
)
(28,772
)
1,105
12,977
(21
)
(1,778
)
(9,197
)
2,002
(1,958
)
(1,958
)
37,163
37,163
24,942
31,322
12,040
12
2,955
(5,814
)
13,763
42,238
562
1
2,811
2,812
55
(55
)
5,869
5,869
258
6,782
6,782
13,663
13,663
24,942
31,322
12,860
13
12,603
27,426
71,364
80
300
300
2
1,842
1,842
12,815
12,815
$
24,942
$
31,322
$
12,942
$
13
$
14,745
$
$
40,241
$
86,321
F-5
Table of Contents
Year Ended July 31,
Five Months Ended
Three Months Ended March 31,
2007
2008
2009
December 31, 2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
(In thousands)
$
4,647
$
17,335
$
37,163
$
13,663
$
10,706
$
12,815
3,524
4,407
4,593
2,254
1,158
1,563
7,909
16,135
22,548
11,218
5,135
9,091
156
1,240
2,468
6,782
556
1,842
(133
)
50
61
60
70
8
405
77
13
(2,635
)
40
(1,731
)
3,530
(524
)
(1,866
)
(2,544
)
(2,033
)
(18,125
)
(6,999
)
(1,672
)
11,777
(11,001
)
(24,717
)
(29,853
)
(20,241
)
(4,220
)
(9,371
)
(551
)
(2,263
)
(903
)
(919
)
1,116
1,062
(862
)
(2,750
)
2,297
(5,548
)
2,265
2,064
2,607
4,665
3,170
8,135
1,519
1,126
3,983
4,529
18,125
6,999
1,672
(11,777
)
3,888
10,785
(5,309
)
5,153
2,400
4,895
(2,000
)
4,394
(978
)
7,603
(2,112
)
(1,755
)
(4,527
)
3,713
1,366
(3,780
)
(1,491
)
10,108
2,461
35,006
35,297
26,121
17,102
33,461
(260
)
(43
)
(13,039
)
(14
)
(5
)
9,976
(4,298
)
(5,120
)
(6,361
)
(5,049
)
(1,731
)
(2,907
)
(4,558
)
(5,163
)
(19,400
)
(5,063
)
(1,736
)
7,069
(2,584
)
(2,446
)
(148,560
)
(76,961
)
(12,404
)
(77
)
151,056
74,465
12,404
77
355
1,154
110
946
16
300
524
1,866
(1,958
)
20,000
13,000
(20,109
)
(39,770
)
5,869
158
(3,264
)
(28,618
)
8,681
16
300
(1,939
)
26,579
(12,721
)
29,739
15,382
40,830
14,645
12,706
39,285
26,564
16,692
56,303
$
12,706
$
39,285
$
26,564
$
56,303
$
32,074
$
97,133
$
427
$
100
$
1
$
$
$
20
$
3,805
$
8,104
$
27,403
$
10,032
$
9,241
$
1,210
F-6
Table of Contents
1.
Organization
2.
Summary of
Significant Accounting Policies
F-7
Table of Contents
2.
Summary of
Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)
Five Months Ended
December 31, 2008
$
46,460
24,391
18,212
89,063
35,001
15,409
11,765
9,463
71,638
17,425
255
(1
)
17,679
7,424
10,255
(11,153
)
$
(898
)
F-8
Table of Contents
2.
Summary of
Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)
Five Months Ended
December 31, 2008
$
(0.07
)
$
(0.07
)
12,028
12,028
Five Months Ended
December 31, 2008
$
5,999
(2,452
)
(26,140
)
$
(22,593
)
Table of Contents
2.
Summary of
Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)
F-10
Table of Contents
2.
Summary of
Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)
F-11
Table of Contents
2.
Summary of
Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)
3 4 years
3 years
2 years
Shorter of the useful life or the lease term
F-12
Table of Contents
2.
Summary of
Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)
F-13
Table of Contents
2.
Summary of
Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)
F-14
Table of Contents
2.
Summary of
Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)
F-15
Table of Contents
2.
Summary of
Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)
3.
Accounts
Receivable
July 31,
December 31,
March 31,
2008
2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
$
9,231
$
10,165
$
12,072
$
15,898
(5,277
)
(6,448
)
(7,460
)
(9,731
)
3,954
3,717
4,612
6,167
558
1,143
647
986
(248
)
(114
)
(110
)
(80
)
310
1,029
537
906
8,989
14,870
22,123
22,922
2,417
827
1,708
598
564
$
14,080
$
21,324
$
30,287
$
30,559
F-16
Table of Contents
3.
Accounts
Receivable (Continued)
July 31,
December 31,
March 31,
2007
2008
2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
$
2,104
$
2,718
$
5,277
$
6,448
$
7,460
6,519
13,652
20,187
10,255
8,556
1,390
2,483
2,361
963
535
(7,295
)
(13,576
)
(21,377
)
(10,206
)
(6,820
)
$
2,718
$
5,277
$
6,448
$
7,460
$
9,731
4.
Property and
Equipment
July 31,
December 31,
March 31,
2008
2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
$
6,296
$
7,812
$
10,180
$
11,032
2,062
2,879
3,802
4,179
9,470
13,078
15,114
16,472
882
1,097
1,277
1,283
18,710
24,866
30,373
32,966
(11,614
)
(16,187
)
(18,400
)
(19,938
)
$
7,096
$
8,679
$
11,973
$
13,028
5.
Related Party
Transactions
F-17
Table of Contents
5.
Related Party
Transactions (Continued)
F-18
Table of Contents
6.
Income
Taxes
Five Months Ended
Year Ended July 31,
December 31,
2007
2008
2009
2009
$
(629
)
$
9,611
$
22,645
$
4,389
(82
)
2,610
5,988
1,845
(711
)
12,221
28,633
6,234
(2,121
)
74
(1,662
)
3,114
(514
)
(34
)
(69
)
416
(2,635
)
40
(1,731
)
3,530
$
(3,346
)
$
12,261
$
26,902
$
9,764
Five Months Ended
Year Ended July 31,
December 31,
2007
2008
2009
2009
35.0
%
35.0
%
35.0
%
35.0
%
6.1
5.7
6.1
6.7
(288.9
)
(9.4
)
0.7
0.9
(257.2
)%
41.4
%
42.0
%
41.7
%
F-19
Table of Contents
6.
Income Taxes
(Continued)
July 31,
December 31,
2008
2009
2009
$
3,102
$
2,827
$
3,280
696
1,898
479
600
1,002
1,454
648
956
874
5,046
6,683
6,087
(975
)
(2,019
)
(2,423
)
(1,572
)
(364
)
(2,697
)
(77
)
(147
)
(487
)
(2,624
)
(2,530
)
(5,607
)
$
2,422
$
4,153
$
480
July 31,
December 31,
2008
2009
2009
$
4,446
$
5,681
$
4,634
(2,024
)
(1,528
)
(4,154
)
$
2,422
$
4,153
$
480
F-20
Table of Contents
6.
Income Taxes
(Continued)
7.
Borrowing
Agreements
8.
Fair Values of
Financial Instruments
9.
Concentrations of
Credit Risk
10.
Redeemable
Convertible Preferred Stock and Stockholders Equity
(Deficit)
F-21
Table of Contents
10.
Redeemable
Convertible Preferred Stock and Stockholders Equity
(Deficit) (Continued)
Proceeds Net of
Number of Shares
Liquidation
Issuance
Authorized
Outstanding
Amount
Costs
6,520
6,481
$
1,953
$
1,899
3,197
3,177
2,186
2,008
10,114
9,939
8,230
8,136
4,541
4,240
5,976
5,976
24,372
23,837
$
18,345
$
18,019
F-22
Table of Contents
10.
Redeemable
Convertible Preferred Stock and Stockholders Equity
(Deficit) (Continued)
Proceeds Net of
Number of Shares
Liquidation
Issuance
Authorized
Outstanding
Amount
Costs
6,520
6,404
$
1,930
$
1,877
3,197
3,177
2,186
2,008
10,114
9,939
8,230
8,136
4,541
4,240
5,976
5,976
1,182
1,182
13,000
12,979
25,554
24,942
$
31,322
$
30,976
Proceeds Net of
Number of Shares
Liquidation
Issuance
Authorized
Outstanding
Amount
Costs
6,520
6,404
$
1,930
$
1,877
3,197
3,177
2,186
2,008
10,114
9,939
8,230
8,136
4,541
4,240
5,976
5,976
1,182
1,182
13,000
12,979
25,554
24,942
$
31,322
$
30,976
Proceeds Net of
Number of Shares
Liquidation
Issuance
Authorized
Outstanding
Amount
Costs
6,520
6,404
$
1,930
$
1,877
3,197
3,177
2,186
2,008
10,114
9,939
8,230
8,136
4,541
4,240
5,976
5,976
1,182
1,182
13,000
12,979
25,554
24,942
$
31,322
$
30,976
F-23
Table of Contents
10.
Redeemable
Convertible Preferred Stock and Stockholders Equity
(Deficit) (Continued)
F-24
Table of Contents
10.
Redeemable
Convertible Preferred Stock and Stockholders Equity
(Deficit) (Continued)
If we were to seek to amend our Certificate of Incorporation to
increase the authorized number of shares of a class of stock, or
to increase or decrease the par value of a class of stock, then
that class would be required to vote separately to approve the
proposed amendment; and
If we were to seek to amend our Certificate of Incorporation in
a manner that altered or changed the powers, preferences or
special rights of a class of stock in a manner that affected its
holders adversely, then that class would be required to vote
separately to approve the proposed amendment.
F-25
Table of Contents
10.
Redeemable
Convertible Preferred Stock and Stockholders Equity
(Deficit) (Continued)
F-26
Table of Contents
10.
Redeemable
Convertible Preferred Stock and Stockholders Equity
(Deficit) (Continued)
F-27
Table of Contents
11.
Stock-Based
Compensation
Five Months
Three Months
Ended
Ended
Year Ended July 31,
December 31,
March 31,
2007
2008
2009
2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
4.52
%
2.98
%
2.26
%
2.56
%
1.85
%
2.50
%
6.08
6.08
6.08
6.08
6.08
5.80
54.3
%
54.3
%
53.2
%
46.9
%
56.0
%
52.3
%
F-28
Table of Contents
11.
Stock-Based
Compensation (Continued)
Per Share
Grant Date
Estimated
Number of
Per Share Fair
Weighted
Shares Subject
Per Share
Value of Our
Average Fair
to Options
Exercise Price
Common
Value of
Granted
of Options
Stock
Options
50,000
$
10.84
$
10.84
$
5.83
85,800
15.65
15.65
8.80
127,500
17.19
17.19
9.50
1,261,750
20.01
20.01
9.47
130,500
25.00
25.00
12.79
F-29
Table of Contents
11.
Stock-Based
Compensation (Continued)
Number
Weighted-Average
Aggregate
of Shares
Exercise Price
Intrinsic Value
5,164
$
1.00
410
4.36
(444
)
1.7
(264
)
1.04
4,866
1.22
1,914
4.64
(163
)
2.81
(1,822
)
0.63
4,795
2.76
812
11.32
(664
)
4.24
(35
)
3.21
4,908
3.88
1,389
19.75
(48
)
10.15
(562
)
1.68
5,687
$
7.98
$
68,408
131
25.00
(54
)
5.43
(80
)
3.65
5,684
$
8.46
$
94,027
5,552
$
7.79
$
67,845
5,565
$
8.28
$
93,049
3,016
$
2.96
$
51,445
3,160
$
3.37
$
68,354
F-30
Table of Contents
11.
Stock-Based
Compensation (Continued)
Options Outstanding
Options Currently Exercisable
Weighted-Average
Weighted-
Weighted-Average
Weighted-
Remaining
Average
Number
Remaining
Average
Number
Contractual
Exercise
Currently
Contractual
Exercise
Outstanding
Life (in Years)
Price
Exercisable
Life (in Years)
Price
462,163
2.9
$ 0.56
462,163
2.9
$
0.56
1,436,762
5.4
1.69
1,383,780
5.4
1.65
2,315,146
8.3
6.12
1,170,484
8.2
5.44
211,500
9.5
15.56
1,261,750
9.9
20.01
5,687,321
3,016,427
Options Outstanding
Options Currently Exercisable
Weighted-Average
Weighted-
Weighted-Average
Weighted-
Remaining
Average
Number
Remaining
Average
Number
Contractual
Exercise
Currently
Contractual
Exercise
Outstanding
Life (in Years)
Price
Exercisable
Life (in Years)
Price
462,163
2.6
$
0.56
462,163
2.6
$
0.56
1,403,735
5.2
1.69
1,381,666
5.2
1.66
2,217,181
8.0
6.18
1,263,242
7.9
5.54
211,500
9.2
15.56
18,843
9.1
12.74
1,389,500
9.6
20.48
34,000
9.9
25.00
5,684,079
3,159,914
F-31
Table of Contents
12.
Earnings per
Common Share
Three Months Ended
Year Ended July 31,
Five Months Ended
March 31,
2007
2008
2009
December 31, 2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
$
4,647
$
17,335
$
37,163
$
13,663
$
10,706
$
12,815
(3,635
)
(4,480
)
(1,956
)
(1,522
)
(9,634
)
(9,170
)
(17,410
)
(9,170
)
(7,227
)
(8,444
)
(510
)
3,685
8,163
4,493
3,479
4,371
11,100
10,757
12,036
12,222
12,041
12,913
$
(0.05
)
$
0.34
$
0.68
$
0.37
$
0.29
$
0.34
$
(510
)
$
3,685
$
8,163
$
4,493
3,479
4,371
11,100
10,757
12,036
12,222
12,041
12,913
2,747
2,978
2,941
2,734
2,801
650
698
262
726
268
11,100
14,154
15,712
15,425
15,501
15,982
$
(0.05
)
$
0.26
$
0.52
$
0.29
$
0.22
$
0.27
F-32
Table of Contents
12.
Earnings per
Common Share (Continued)
Year Ended July 31,
Five Months Ended
Three Months Ended March 31,
2007
2008
2009
December 31, 2009
2009
2010
(Unaudited)
3,307
392
97
223
288
171
25,707
26,763
25,674
24,942
25,018
24,942
29,014
27,155
25,771
25,165
25,306
25,113
F-33
Table of Contents
12.
Earnings per
Common Share (Continued)
Year Ended
Five Months Ended
Three Months Ended
July 31, 2009
December 31, 2009
March 31, 2010
(Unaudited)
$
8,163
$
4,493
$
4,371
1,956
9,634
17,410
9,170
8,444
$
37,163
$
13,663
$
12,815
12,036
12,222
12,913
24,942
24,942
24,942
36,978
37,164
37,855
$
1.01
$
0.37
$
0.34
$
8,163
$
4,493
$
4,371
1,956
9,634
17,410
9,170
8,444
$
37,163
$
13,663
$
12,815
12,036
12,222
12,913
2,978
2,941
2,801
698
262
268
24,942
24,942
24,942
40,654
40,367
40,924
$
0.91
$
0.34
$
0.31
13.
401(k)
Plan
F-34
Table of Contents
13.
401(k) Plan
(Continued)
14.
Commitments and
Contingencies
$
1,780
1,580
1,111
36
$
4,507
F-35
Table of Contents
14.
Commitments and
Contingencies (Continued)
$
20,353
17,499
2,760
$
40,612
F-36
Table of Contents
14.
Commitments and
Contingencies (Continued)
15.
Significant
Customer Concentrations
F-37
Table of Contents
16.
Business
Combination
17.
Subsequent
Events
F-38
Table of Contents
17.
Subsequent Events
(Continued)
F-39
Table of Contents
J.P.
Morgan
Morgan Stanley
Piper Jaffray
UBS Investment Bank
Table of Contents
ITEM 13.
Other Expenses
of Issuance and Distribution.
$
10,695
15,500
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
$
*
*
To be provided by amendment.
ITEM 14.
Indemnification
of Directors and Officers.
for any breach of the directors duty of loyalty to the
Registrant or its stockholders;
for acts or omissions not in good faith or that involve
intentional misconduct or a knowing violation of law;
under Section 174 of the Delaware General Corporation Law
(regarding unlawful dividends and stock purchases); or
for any transaction from which the director derived an improper
personal benefit.
the Registrant is required to indemnify its directors and
officers to the fullest extent permitted by the Delaware General
Corporation Law, subject to very limited exceptions;
the Registrant may indemnify its other employees and agents as
set forth in the Delaware General Corporation Law;
the Registrant is required to advance expenses, as incurred, to
its directors and officers in connection with a legal proceeding
to the fullest extent permitted by the Delaware General
Corporation Law, subject to very limited exceptions; and
the rights conferred in the bylaws are not exclusive.
II-1
Table of Contents
1
.01
3
.02
3
.04
4
.01
10
.01
ITEM 15.
Recent Sales
of Unregistered Securities.
II-2
Table of Contents
ITEM 16.
Exhibits and
Financial Statement Schedules.
Exhibit
1
.01*
Form of Underwriting Agreement.
3
.01**
Ninth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the
Registrant.
3
.02**
Form of Tenth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation
of the Registrant, to be effective upon the consummation of this
offering.
3
.03**
Second Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Registrant, as amended.
3
.04
Form of Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Registrant, to be
effective upon the consummation of this offering.
3
.05**
Certificate of Amendment to Ninth Amended and Restated
Certificate of Incorporation of Registrant.
4
.01
Ninth Amended and Restated Registration Rights Agreement by and
among the Registrant, the preferred stockholders and certain
warrant holders of the Registrant.
5
.01
Form of opinion of Fenwick & West LLP regarding the
legality of the securities being registered.
10
.01
Form of Indemnity Agreement.
10
.02**
Second Amended and Restated 2001 Stock Plan and forms of notice
of stock option grant, stock option agreement and stock option
exercise letter.
II-3
Table of Contents
Exhibit
10
.03
2010 Equity Incentive Plan and forms of notice of stock
option grant, stock option award agreement, notice of restricted
stock award, restricted stock agreement, notice of stock bonus
award, stock bonus award agreement, notice of stock appreciation
right award, stock appreciation right award agreement, notice of
restricted stock unit award, restricted stock unit award
agreement, notice of performance shares award and performance
shares agreement.
10
.04**
Lease Agreement between Registrant and Foothill Technology
Center, dated July 8, 2005, as amended on August 21,
2008 and July 30, 2009.
10
.05*
Amended and Restated Prepaid Card Program Agreement, dated as of
May 27, 2010, by and among the Registrant, Wal-Mart Stores,
Inc., Wal-Mart Stores Texas, L.P., Wal-Mart Louisiana, LLC,
Wal-Mart Stores East, Inc., Wal-Mart Stores, L.P. and GE Money
Bank.
10
.06*
Card Program Services Agreement, dated as of October 27,
2006, by and between the Registrant and GE Money Bank, as
amended.
10
.07**
Program Agreement, dated as of November 1, 2009, by and
between the Registrant and Columbus Bank and Trust Company.
10
.08**
Agreement for Services, dated as of September 1, 2009, by
and between the Registrant and Total System Services, Inc.
10
.09**
Master Services Agreement, dated as of May 28, 2009, by and
between the Registrant and Genpact International, Inc.
10
.10**
Sixth Amended and Restated Loan and Line of Credit Agreement
between Columbus Bank and Trust Company and Registrant,
dated March 24, 2010.
10
.11**
Offer letter to William D. Sowell from the Registrant, dated
January 28, 2009.
10
.12**
Form of Executive Severance Agreement.
10
.13**
FY2009 Management Cash Incentive Compensation Plan.
10
.14**
Description of FY2010 Management Cash Incentive Compensation
Plan.
10
.15**
Warrant to purchase shares of common stock of the Registrant.
10
.16**
Preferred Stock Warrant to purchase shares of
Series C-1
preferred stock of the Registrant.
10
.17*
Class A Common Stock Issuance Agreement, dated as of
May 27, 2010, between the Registrant and Wal-Mart Stores,
Inc.
10
.18
Voting Agreement, dated as of May 27, 2010, between the
Registrant and Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
10
.19
2010 Employee Stock Purchase Plan.
23
.01*
Consent of Fenwick & West LLP (included in
Exhibit 5.01).
23
.02
Consent of Ernst & Young LLP, independent registered
public accounting firm.
24
.01**
Power of Attorney.
*
To be filed by amendment.
**
Previously filed.
Registrant has omitted portions of the referenced exhibit and
filed such exhibit separately with the Securities and Exchange
Commission pursuant to a request for confidential treatment
under Rule 406 promulgated under the Securities Act.
(b)
Financial
Statement Schedules.
II-4
Table of Contents
ITEM 17.
Undertakings.
II-5
Table of Contents
By:
Principal Executive Officer:
Chairman, President and
Chief Executive Officer
June 29, 2010
Principal Financial Officer:
Chief Financial Officer
June 29, 2010
Principal Accounting Officer:
Chief Accounting Officer
June 29, 2010
Additional Directors:
*
Director
June 29, 2010
*
Director
June 29, 2010
*
Director
June 29, 2010
*
Director
June 29, 2010
*
Director
June 29, 2010
*
Director
June 29, 2010
* By:
Attorney-in-Fact
II-6
Table of Contents
Exhibit
1
.01*
Form of Underwriting Agreement.
3
.01**
Ninth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the
Registrant.
3
.02**
Form of Tenth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation
of the Registrant, to be effective upon the consummation of this
offering.
3
.03**
Second Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Registrant, as amended.
3
.04
Form of Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Registrant, to be
effective upon the consummation of this offering.
3
.05**
Certificate of Amendment to Ninth Amended and Restated
Certificate of Incorporation of Registrant.
4
.01
Ninth Amended and Restated Registration Rights Agreement by and
among the Registrant, the preferred stockholders and certain
warrant holders of the Registrant.
5
.01
Form of opinion of Fenwick & West LLP regarding the
legality of the securities being registered.
10
.01
Form of Indemnity Agreement.
10
.02**
Second Amended and Restated 2001 Stock Plan and forms of notice
of stock option grant, stock option agreement and stock option
exercise letter.
10
.03
2010 Equity Incentive Plan and forms of notice of stock
option grant, stock option award agreement, notice of restricted
stock award, restricted stock agreement, notice of stock bonus
award, stock bonus award agreement, notice of stock appreciation
right award, stock appreciation right award agreement, notice of
restricted stock unit award, restricted stock unit award
agreement, notice of performance shares award and performance
shares agreement.
10
.04**
Lease Agreement between Registrant and Foothill Technology
Center, dated July 8, 2005, as amended on August 21,
2008 and July 30, 2009.
10
.05*
Amended and Restated Prepaid Card Program Agreement, dated as of
May 27, 2010, by and among the Registrant, Wal-Mart Stores,
Inc., Wal-Mart Stores Texas, L.P., Wal-Mart Louisiana, LLC,
Wal-Mart Stores East, Inc., Wal-Mart Stores, L.P. and GE Money
Bank.
10
.06*
Card Program Services Agreement, dated as of October 27,
2006, by and between the Registrant and GE Money Bank, as
amended.
10
.07**
Program Agreement, dated as of November 1, 2009, by and
between the Registrant and Columbus Bank and Trust Company.
10
.08**
Agreement for Services, dated as of September 1, 2009, by
and between the Registrant and Total System Services, Inc.
10
.09**
Master Services Agreement, dated as of May 28, 2009, by and
between the Registrant and Genpact International, Inc.
10
.10**
Sixth Amended and Restated Loan and Line of Credit Agreement
between Columbus Bank and Trust Company and Registrant,
dated March 24, 2010.
10
.11**
Offer letter to William D. Sowell from the Registrant, dated
January 28, 2009.
10
.12**
Form of Executive Severance Agreement.
10
.13**
FY2009 Management Cash Incentive Compensation Plan.
10
.14**
Description of FY2010 Management Cash Incentive Compensation
Plan.
10
.15**
Warrant to purchase shares of common stock of the Registrant.
10
.16**
Preferred Stock Warrant to purchase shares of
Series C-1
preferred stock of the Registrant.
10
.17*
Class A Common Stock Issuance Agreement, dated as of
May 27, 2010, between the Registrant and Wal-Mart Stores,
Inc.
10
.18
Voting Agreement, dated as of May 27, 2010, between the
Registrant and Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
10
.19
2010 Employee Stock Purchase Plan.
Table of Contents
Exhibit
23
.01*
Consent of Fenwick & West LLP (included in
Exhibit 5.01).
23
.02
Consent of Ernst & Young LLP, independent registered
public accounting firm.
24
.01**
Power of Attorney.
*
To be filed by amendment.
**
Previously filed.
Registrant has omitted portions of the referenced exhibit and
filed such exhibit separately with the Securities and Exchange
Commission pursuant to a request for confidential treatment
under Rule 406 promulgated under the Securities Act.
Page (s) | ||||||||
ARTICLE I: |
STOCKHOLDERS
|
1 | ||||||
Section 1.1: |
Annual Meetings
|
1 | ||||||
Section 1.2: |
Special Meetings
|
1 | ||||||
Section 1.3: |
Notice of Meetings
|
1 | ||||||
Section 1.4: |
Adjournments
|
1 | ||||||
Section 1.5: |
Quorum
|
2 | ||||||
Section 1.6: |
Organization
|
2 | ||||||
Section 1.7: |
Voting; Proxies
|
2 | ||||||
Section 1.8: |
Fixing Date for Determination of Stockholders of Record
|
2 | ||||||
Section 1.9: |
List of Stockholders Entitled to Vote
|
3 | ||||||
Section 1.10: |
Inspectors of Elections
|
3 | ||||||
Section 1.11: |
Notice of Stockholder Business; Nominations
|
4 | ||||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE II: |
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
|
8 | ||||||
Section 2.1: |
Number; Qualifications
|
8 | ||||||
Section 2.2: |
Election; Vacancies
|
8 | ||||||
Section 2.3: |
Regular Meetings
|
8 | ||||||
Section 2.4: |
Special Meetings
|
8 | ||||||
Section 2.5: |
Remote Meetings Permitted
|
8 | ||||||
Section 2.6: |
Quorum; Vote Required for Action
|
9 | ||||||
Section 2.7: |
Organization
|
9 | ||||||
Section 2.8: |
Written Action by Directors
|
9 | ||||||
Section 2.9: |
Powers
|
9 | ||||||
Section 2.10: |
Compensation of Directors
|
9 | ||||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE III: |
COMMITTEES
|
9 | ||||||
Section 3.1: |
Committees
|
9 | ||||||
Section 3.2: |
Committee Rules
|
10 | ||||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE IV: |
OFFICERS
|
10 | ||||||
Section 4.1: |
Generally
|
10 | ||||||
Section 4.2: |
Chief Executive Officer
|
10 | ||||||
Section 4.3: |
Chairperson of the Board
|
11 | ||||||
Section 4.4: |
President
|
11 | ||||||
Section 4.5: |
Vice President
|
11 | ||||||
Section 4.6: |
Chief Financial Officer
|
11 | ||||||
Section 4.7: |
Treasurer
|
11 |
-i-
Page (s) | ||||||||
Section 4.8: |
Secretary
|
12 | ||||||
Section 4.9: |
Delegation of Authority
|
12 | ||||||
Section 4.10: |
Removal
|
12 | ||||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE V: |
STOCK
|
12 | ||||||
Section 5.1: |
Uncertificated Shares
|
12 | ||||||
Section 5.2: |
Multiple Classes of Stock
|
12 | ||||||
Section 5.3: |
Signatures
|
12 | ||||||
Section 5.4: |
Consideration and Payment for Shares
|
13 | ||||||
Section 5.5: |
Destroyed or Wrongfully Taken Certificates
|
13 | ||||||
Section 5.6: |
Transfer of Stock
|
13 | ||||||
Section 5.7: |
Registered Stockholders
|
14 | ||||||
Section 5.8: |
Effect of the Corporations Restriction on Transfer
|
14 | ||||||
Section 5.9: |
Regulations
|
15 | ||||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE VI: |
INDEMNIFICATION
|
15 | ||||||
Section 6.1: |
Indemnification of Officers and Directors
|
15 | ||||||
Section 6.2: |
Advance of Expenses
|
16 | ||||||
Section 6.3: |
Non-Exclusivity of Rights
|
16 | ||||||
Section 6.4: |
Indemnification Contracts
|
16 | ||||||
Section 6.5: |
Right of Indemnitee to Bring Suit
|
16 | ||||||
Section 6.6: |
Nature of Rights
|
17 | ||||||
Section 6.7: |
Insurance
|
17 | ||||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE VII: |
NOTICES
|
17 | ||||||
Section 7.1: |
Notice.
|
17 | ||||||
Section 7.2: |
Waiver of Notice
|
18 | ||||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE VIII: |
INTERESTED DIRECTORS
|
18 | ||||||
Section 8.1: |
Interested Directors
|
18 | ||||||
Section 8.2: |
Quorum
|
19 | ||||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE IX: |
MISCELLANEOUS
|
19 | ||||||
Section 9.1: |
Fiscal Year
|
19 | ||||||
Section 9.2: |
Seal
|
19 | ||||||
Section 9.3: |
Form of Records
|
19 | ||||||
Section 9.4: |
Reliance upon Books and Records
|
19 | ||||||
Section 9.5: |
Certificate of Incorporation Governs
|
19 | ||||||
Section 9.6: |
Severability
|
19 | ||||||
Section 9.7: |
Time Periods
|
20 | ||||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE X: |
AMENDMENT
|
20 |
-ii-
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
If to a Holder, to:
|
The name and address set forth on Schedule 1 hereto. | |
|
||
If to the Company:
|
Green Dot Corporation | |
|
605 E. Huntington Drive, Suite 205 | |
|
Monrovia, California 91016 | |
|
Attention: Chief Executive Officer and General Counsel | |
|
Facsimile: (626) 775-3704 | |
|
||
with a copy to:
|
Fenwick & West LLP | |
|
801 California Street | |
|
Mountain View, CA 94041 |
12
|
Attention: Gordon Davidson | |
|
Andrew Luh | |
|
Facsimile: (650) 938-5200 |
13
THE COMPANY
GREEN DOT CORPORATION |
||||
By: | /s/ Steve Streit | |||
Steve Streit, President | ||||
HOLDER | ||||||
|
||||||
TCV VII, L.P.
a Cayman Islands exempted limited partnership, acting by its general partner |
||||||
|
||||||
Technology Crossover Management VII, L.P.
a Cayman Islands exempted limited partnership, acting by its general partner |
||||||
|
||||||
Technology Crossover Management VII, Ltd.
a Cayman Islands exempted company |
||||||
|
||||||
|
By: |
/s/ F. Fenton
|
||||
|
Title: Authorized Signatory | |||||
|
||||||
TCV VII (A), L.P.
a Cayman Islands exempted limited partnership, acting by its general partner |
||||||
|
||||||
Technology Crossover Management VII, L.P.
a Cayman Islands exempted limited partnership, acting by its general partner |
||||||
|
||||||
Technology Crossover Management VII, Ltd.
a Cayman Islands exempted company |
||||||
|
||||||
|
By: | /s/ F. Fenton | ||||
|
||||||
|
Name: F. Fenton | |||||
|
Title: Authorized Signatory | |||||
|
||||||
TCV Member Fund, L.P.
a Cayman Islands exempted limited partnership, acting by its general partner |
||||||
|
||||||
Technology Crossover Management VII, Ltd.
a Cayman Islands exempted company |
||||||
|
||||||
|
By: | /s/ F. Fenton | ||||
|
||||||
|
Name: F. Fenton | |||||
|
Title: Authorized Signatory |
HOLDER | ||||||||
|
||||||||
SEQUOIA CAPITAL FRANCHISE FUND
SEQUOIA CAPITAL FRANCHISE PARTNERS |
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | SCFF Management, LLC | ||||||
|
A Delaware Limited Liability Company | |||||||
|
General Partner of Each | |||||||
|
||||||||
/s/ Michael Moritz | ||||||||
Michael Moritz, Managing Member | ||||||||
|
||||||||
SEQUOIA CAPITAL IX
SEQUOIA CAPITAL ENTREPRENEURS ANNEX FUND |
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | SCIX.1 Management, LLC | ||||||
|
A Delaware Limited Liability Company | |||||||
|
General Partner of Each | |||||||
|
||||||||
/s/ Michael Moritz | ||||||||
Michael Moritz, Managing Member | ||||||||
|
||||||||
SEQUOIA CAPITAL U.S. GROWTH FUND IV, L.P. | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | SCGF IV Management, L.P. | ||||||
|
A Cayman Islands exempted limited partnership | |||||||
Its General Partner | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | SCGF GenPar, Ltd | ||||||
|
A Cayman Islands limited liability company | |||||||
|
Its General Partner | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | /s/ Michael Moritz | ||||||
|
||||||||
|
Managing Director |
HOLDER | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||
TTP FUND, LP | ||||||||||
|
||||||||||
By: | Total Technology Partners, LLC | |||||||||
Its: | General Partner | |||||||||
|
||||||||||
|
By: |
/s/ Gardiner W. Garrard, III
|
||||||||
|
Managing Partner |
HOLDER | ||||||
|
||||||
TENAYA CAPITAL V, L.P . | ||||||
|
||||||
by: Tenaya Capital V GP, L.P., its General Partner | ||||||
|
||||||
By: Tenaya Capital V GP, LLC, its General Partner | ||||||
|
||||||
|
By: |
/s/ James A. Hinson
|
||||
|
Name: | James A. Hinson | ||||
|
Title: | COO | ||||
|
||||||
TENAYA CAPITAL V-P, L.P . | ||||||
|
||||||
By: Tenaya Capital V GP, L.P., its General Partner | ||||||
|
||||||
By: Tenaya Capital V GP, LLC, its General Partner | ||||||
|
||||||
|
By: |
/s/ James A. Hinson
|
||||
|
Name: | James A. Hinson | ||||
|
Title: | COO |
HOLDER | ||||||||
|
||||||||
DAVID WILLIAM HANNA TRUST DATED
OCTOBER 30, 1989 |
||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: |
/s/ David W. Hanna
|
HOLDER | ||||||||
|
||||||||
YKA PARTNERS LTD. | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: |
/s/ Kenneth Aldrich
|
||||||
|
General Partner |
HOLDER
|
||||
/s/ Donald B. Wiener | ||||
Donald B. Wiener | ||||
HOLDER
|
||||
/s/ Jacques L. Wiener as agent | ||||
Mark L. Shike & Patrcia W. Shifke, as Joint Tenants | ||||
|
HOLDER | |||||
|
||||||
|
/s/ Eric C. Weiss
|
|||||
|
||||||
WILLIAM B. WIENER, JR. FOUNDATION | ||||||
|
||||||
|
/s/ Donald B. Wiener | |||||
|
||||||
|
Donald B. Wiener, Vice President |
HOLDER
|
||||
/s/ Jacques L. Wiener as agent | ||||
Betty Wiener Spomer | ||||
HOLDER
|
||||
/s/ Jacques L. Wiener as agent | ||||
Jacques L. Wiener, III | ||||
HOLDER
|
||||
/s/ Jacques L. Wiener as agent | ||||
Sandra Baron Wiener | ||||
HOLDER
|
||||
/s/ Jacques L. Wiener as agent | ||||
Jacques L. Wiener, Jr. | ||||
HOLDER | ||||||
|
||||||
WAL-MART STORES, INC. | ||||||
|
||||||
|
By:
Name: |
/s/ Jane Thompson
|
||||
|
Title: | Senior Vice President |
(1) | a copy of the Ninth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Company, as filed with the Delaware Secretary of State on March 31, 2010, a copy of the Certificate of Amendment to Ninth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation, as filed with the Delaware Secretary of State on May 27, 2010, a copy of the Certificate of Amendment to Ninth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation, as filed with the Delaware Secretary of State on July , 2010, and a copy of the Tenth Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Company, which the Company intends to file with the Secretary of State of Delaware promptly following the closing date of the offering contemplated by the Registration Statement (the Closing Date ); |
(2) | a copy of the Second Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Company, as amended, as certified to us as of the date hereof by an officer of the Company as being complete and in full force and effect as of the date hereof, and a copy of the Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Company, which will become effective as of the Closing Date; | ||
(3) | the Registration Statement, together with the Exhibits filed as a part thereof; | ||
(4) | the preliminary prospectus, dated , 2010, prepared in connection with the Registration Statement (the Preliminary Prospectus ); | ||
(5) | the underwriting agreement to be entered into by and among the Company, the Selling Stockholders and J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. and Morgan Stanley & Co., Incorporated, as representatives of the several underwriters (the Underwriting Agreement ); | ||
(6) | the minutes of meetings and actions by written consent of the incorporator, the Companys stockholders and the Companys Board of Directors contained in the minute books of the Company that have been made available to us by the Company at the Companys offices; | ||
(7) | the securities records for the Company that have been made available to us by the Company at the Companys offices (consisting of a list of stockholders holding shares of capital stock issued by the Company and a list of option and warrant holders respecting the Companys capital and of any rights to purchase capital stock that was prepared by the Company and dated , 2010 verifying the number of such issued and outstanding securities); | ||
(8) | a management certificate addressed to us and dated of even date herewith executed by the Company containing certain factual representations (the Management Certificate ); and | ||
(9) | the custody agreements, manner of payment elections, contingent exercise notices and powers of attorney signed by the Selling Stockholders in connection with the sale of the Stock described in the Registration Statement. |
1. | the up to shares of Issued Stock to be sold by the Selling Stockholders pursuant to the Registration Statement are validly issued, fully paid and nonassessable; and | ||
2. | the up to shares of Option Stock to be sold by the Selling Stockholders, when issued and delivered in accordance with the provisions of the stock option agreements between the Company and such Selling Stockholders pursuant to which the underlying stock options were granted, will be validly issued, fully paid and nonassessable. |
Very truly yours,
|
||||
FENWICK & WEST LLP | ||||
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GREEN DOT CORPORATION
|
||||
By: | ||||
Its: | ||||
INDEMNITEE:
|
||||
Address: | ||||
-12-
| Net revenue and/or net revenue growth; | ||
| Earnings per share and/or earnings per share growth; | ||
| Earnings before income taxes and amortization and/or earnings before income taxes and amortization growth; |
| Operating income and/or operating income growth; | ||
| Net income and/or net income growth; | ||
| Total stockholder return and/or total stockholder return growth; | ||
| Return on equity; | ||
| Operating cash flow return on income; | ||
| Adjusted operating cash flow return on income; | ||
| Economic value added; | ||
| Control of expenses; | ||
| Cost of goods sold; | ||
| Profit margin; | ||
| Stock price; | ||
| Debt or debt-to-equity; | ||
| Liquidity; | ||
| Intellectual property (e.g., patents)/product development; | ||
| Mergers and acquisitions or divestitures; | ||
| Individual business objectives; | ||
| Company specific operational metrics; and | ||
| Any other factor (such as individual business objectives or unit-specific operational metrics) the Committee so designates. |
|
Name: | |||||
|
Address: |
Grant Number
:
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Date of Grant
:
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Vesting Commencement Date
:
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Exercise Price per Share
:
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Total Number of Shares
:
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Type of Option
:
|
___ Non-Qualified Stock Option (___ shares) | |||
|
||||
|
___ Incentive Stock Option (___ shares) | |||
|
||||
Expiration Date
:
|
||||
|
Post-Termination Exercise Period
:
|
Voluntary or involuntary Termination (other than for Disability or Death) = 3 Months | |
|
Disability = 12 Months | |
|
Death = 12 Months |
Vesting Schedule
:
|
Subject to the limitations set forth in this Notice, the Plan and the Option Agreement, the Option will vest and may be exercised, in whole or in part, in accordance with the following schedule: [INSERT VESTING SCHEDULE] |
PARTICIPANT: | GREEN DOT CORPORATION | |||||||
|
||||||||
Signature:
|
By: | |||||||
|
|
|
||||||
|
||||||||
Print Name:
|
Its: | |||||||
|
|
|
||||||
|
||||||||
Date:
|
Date: | |||||||
|
|
|
|
Name: | |||||
|
Address: |
GREEN DOT CORPORATION | RECIPIENT: | |||||||
|
||||||||
By:
|
Signature | |||||||
|
|
|||||||
|
||||||||
Its:
|
Please Print Name | |||||||
|
1
2
3
4
GREEN DOT CORPORATION | ||||||
|
||||||
|
By: | |||||
|
|
|||||
|
Its: | |||||
|
|
|||||
RECIPIENT: | ||||||
|
||||||
|
Signature | |||||
|
|
|||||
|
Please Print Name | |||||
|
|
5
Green Dot Corporation | ||||||
|
||||||
|
By: | |||||
|
|
|||||
|
Its: | |||||
|
|
Signature
|
||||
|
|
|||
Please Print Name
|
||||
|
|
|
PARTICIPANT | |||
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
|||
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
|
Name: | |||||
|
|
|||||
|
Address: | |||||
|
|
|
Number of Shares: | |||
|
||||
|
||||
|
Date of Grant: | |||
|
||||
|
||||
|
Vesting Commencement Date: | |||
|
||||
|
||||
|
Expiration Date: | The date on which all the Shares granted hereunder become vested, with earlier expiration upon the Termination Date | ||
|
||||
|
Vesting Schedule: | Subject to the limitations set forth in this Notice, the Plan and the Stock Bonus Agreement, the Shares will vest in accordance with the following schedule: [INSERT VESTING SCHEDULE] |
PARTICIPANT | GREEN DOT CORPORATION | |||||||
|
||||||||
Signature:
|
By: | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Print Name:
|
Its: | |||||||
|
|
Name: | |||||
|
|
|||||
|
Address: | |||||
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Grant Number:
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|
||||
Date of Grant:
|
||||
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|
||||
Vesting Commencement Date:
|
||||
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|
|||
|
||||
Fair Market Value on Date of Grant:
|
||||
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|
||||
Total Number of Shares:
|
||||
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|
|||
|
||||
Expiration Date:
|
||||
|
|
Post-Termination Exercise Period
:
|
Voluntary or involuntary Termination (other than for | |
|
Disability or Death) = 3 Months | |
|
Disability = 12 Months | |
|
Death = 12 Months |
Vesting Schedule
:
|
Subject to the limitations set forth in this Notice, the Plan and the Stock Appreciation Right Agreement, the SAR will vest and may be exercised, in whole or in part, in accordance with the following schedule: [INSERT VESTING SCHEDULE] |
PARTICIPANT: | GREEN DOT CORPORATION | |||||||
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Signature:
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By: | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Print Name:
|
Its: | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Date:
|
Date: | |||||||
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Name: | |||||
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|
|||||
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Address: | |||||
|
|
|
Number of RSUs: | |||
|
||||
|
||||
|
Date of Grant: | |||
|
||||
|
||||
|
Vesting Commencement Date: | |||
|
||||
|
||||
|
Expiration Date: | The date on which settlement of all RSUs granted hereunder occurs, with earlier expiration upon the Termination Date | ||
|
||||
|
Vesting Schedule: | Subject to the limitations set forth in this Notice, the Plan and the RSU Agreement, the RSUs will vest in accordance with the following schedule: | ||
|
[INSERT VESTING SCHEDULE] |
PARTICIPANT | GREEN DOT CORPORATION | |||||||
|
||||||||
Signature:
|
By: | |||||||
|
|
|
||||||
|
||||||||
Print Name:
|
Its: | |||||||
|
|
Name: | |||||
|
|
|||||
|
Address: | |||||
|
|
|
Number of Shares: | |||
|
||||
|
||||
|
Date of Grant: | |||
|
||||
|
||||
|
Vesting Commencement Date: | |||
|
||||
|
||||
|
Expiration Date: | The date on which all the Shares granted hereunder become vested, with earlier expiration upon the Termination Date | ||
|
||||
|
Vesting Schedule: | Subject to the limitations set forth in this Notice, the Plan and the Performance Shares Agreement, the Shares will vest in accordance with the following schedule: [INSERT VESTING SCHEDULE] |
PARTICIPANT | GREEN DOT CORPORATION | |||||||
|
||||||||
Print Name:
|
Its: | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Signature:
|
By: | |||||||
|
|
|
2
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2
3
4
5
6
GREEN DOT CORPORATION | ||||||
|
||||||
|
By: |
/s/ Steven W. Streit
|
||||
|
Title: CEO | |||||
|
||||||
WAL-MART STORES, INC. | ||||||
|
||||||
|
By: |
/s/ Jane Thomson
|
||||
|
Title: Senior Vice President |
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