Delaware | 71-0987913 | |
(State or other jurisdiction
of
incorporation or organization) |
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification Number) |
John A. Burgess, Esq. | Keith F. Higgins, Esq. | |
James R. Burke, Esq. | Christopher J. Austin, Esq. | |
Justin L. Ochs, Esq. | Ropes & Gray LLP | |
Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP | One International Place | |
60 State Street | Boston, Massachusetts 02110 | |
Boston, Massachusetts 02109 | (617) 951-7000 | |
(617) 526-6000 |
The
information contained in this prospectus is not complete and may
be changed. Neither we nor the selling stockholders may sell
these securities until the registration statement filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission is effective. This prospectus
is not an offer to sell these securities and it is not
soliciting offers to buy these securities in any state where the
offer or sale is not permitted.
|
Proceeds to
|
||||||||||||||||
Underwriting Discounts and
|
Proceeds to
|
Selling
|
||||||||||||||
Price to Public | Commissions | SS&C Holdings | Stockholders | |||||||||||||
Per Share
|
$ | $ | $ | $ | ||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | $ | $ | $ |
Morgan Stanley | Credit Suisse | JPMorgan |
Jefferies & Company | Wachovia Securities |
Table of Contents
9
66
94
101
II-4
II-5
II-6
Fund Administration Services
Loan Management/Accounting
Money Market Processing
1
Table of Contents
2
Table of Contents
3
Table of Contents
Our business is affected by changes in the state of the general
economy and the financial markets, and a slowdown or prolonged
downturn in the general economy or the financial services
industry could disproportionately affect demand for our products
and services.
We face significant competition with respect to our products and
services, which may result in price reductions, reduced gross
margins or loss of market share.
If we cannot attract, train and retain qualified managerial,
technical and sales personnel, we may not be able to provide
adequate technical expertise and customer service to our clients
or maintain focus on our business strategy.
Our substantial indebtedness could adversely affect our
financial health and prevent us from fulfilling our obligations
under our
11
3
/
4
% senior
subordinated notes due 2013 and our senior credit facilities.
4
Table of Contents
Carlyle capitalized SS&C Holdings with an aggregate equity
contribution of $381.0 million;
William C. Stone, SS&Cs Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer, contributed $165.0 million of
equity in the form of stock and rollover options, and certain
other management and employee option holders contributed
approximately $9.0 million of additional equity in the form
of rollover options, to SS&C Holdings;
SS&C entered into senior secured credit facilities
consisting of:
a $75.0 million revolving credit facility, of which
$10.0 million was drawn at closing; and
a $275.0 million term loan B facility, which was fully
drawn at closing and of which the equivalent of
$75.0 million was drawn in Canadian dollars by one of
SS&Cs Canadian subsidiaries;
5
Table of Contents
SS&C issued and sold $205.0 million in aggregate
principal amount of
11
3
/
4
%
senior subordinated notes due 2013;
all outstanding options to purchase shares of SS&Cs
common stock became fully vested and immediately exercisable,
and each outstanding option (other than options held by
(1) non-employee directors, (2) certain individuals
identified in a schedule to the Merger Agreement and
(3) individuals who held options that were exercisable for
fewer than 100 shares of SS&Cs common stock)
were, subject to certain conditions, assumed by SS&C
Holdings and converted into an option to acquire common stock of
SS&C Holdings; and
all in-the-money warrants to purchase shares of SS&Cs
common stock were cancelled in exchange for cash equal to the
excess of the transaction price over the exercise price of the
warrants.
Time of
Time of Initial
Transaction
Public Offering
$
$
$ million
$ million
6
Table of Contents
shares
shares
Total
shares
We have granted the underwriters a
30-day
option to purchase up
to shares of our common stock.
Use of proceeds
We intend to use a majority of our net proceeds of this offering
to redeem up to $71.75 million in principal amount of our
outstanding
11
3
/
4
% senior
subordinated notes due 2013 at a redemption price of 111.75% of
the principal amount, plus accrued and unpaid interest, and the
balance of our net proceeds for working capital and other
general corporate purposes, including potential acquisitions.
See Use of Proceeds for additional information. We
will not receive any proceeds from the sale of shares by the
selling stockholders, except for the aggregate exercise price of
options held by certain selling stockholders.
SSNC
12,155,024 shares of common stock issuable upon the
exercise of stock options outstanding as of December 31,
2007 at a weighted average exercise price of $7.70 per
share;
1,296,907 shares of common stock reserved as of
December 31, 2007 for future issuance under our 2006 equity
incentive plan; and
1,250,000 shares of common stock reserved as of the date of
this prospectus for future issuance under our 2008 stock
incentive plan.
no exercise of outstanding options after December 31, 2007;
a 7.5-for-1 stock split of our common stock that was effected on
April 23, 2008;
the effectiveness upon the closing of this offering of our
restated certificate of incorporation and our amended and
restated bylaws, which contain provisions customary for public
companies, as more fully described below under Description
of Capital Stock; and
no exercise by the underwriters of their over-allotment option.
7
Table of Contents
8
Table of Contents
Predecessor
Successor
Combined
Successor
Year
January 1
November 23
Year
Year
Year
Ended
through
through
Ended
Ended
Ended
December 31,
November 22,
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
2004
2005
2005
2005(1)
2006
2007
(In thousands, except per share and percentage data)
$
17,250
$
20,147
$
3,587
$
23,734
$
22,925
$
27,514
36,433
44,064
3,701
47,765
55,222
61,910
11,320
12,565
2,520
15,085
19,582
17,491
30,885
67,193
7,857
75,050
107,740
141,253
95,888
143,969
17,665
161,634
205,469
248,168
33,770
59,004
7,627
66,631
100,016
128,882
62,118
84,965
10,038
95,003
105,453
119,286
18,748
25,078
2,504
27,582
37,964
44,274
13,957
19,199
2,071
21,270
23,620
26,282
36,912
36,912
32,705
81,189
4,575
85,764
61,584
70,556
29,413
3,776
5,463
9,239
43,869
48,730
1,536
1,031
30
1,061
388
939
(8
)
(2,092
)
(4,920
)
(7,012
)
(47,427
)
(45,463
)
99
655
258
913
456
1,911
31,040
3,370
831
4,201
(2,714
)
6,117
12,030
2,658
2,658
(3,789
)
(458
)
$
19,010
$
712
$
831
$
1,543
$
1,075
$
6,575
$
0.90
$
0.03
$
0.02
$
0.02
$
0.12
$
0.84
$
0.03
$
0.02
$
0.02
$
0.12
21,185
23,300
53,063
53,093
53,157
22,499
24,478
54,853
54,867
55,953
70.2
%
77.3
%
65.4
%
76.0
%
79.3
%
81.9
%
$
64,989
$
8,588
$
73,577
$
83,998
$
98,667
As of December 31, 2007
Actual
As Adjusted
(In thousands)
$
19,175
$
8,016
1,190,495
205,000
238,009
612,593
Table of Contents
(1)
Our combined results for the year ended December 31, 2005
represent the addition of the Predecessor period from
January 1, 2005 through November 22, 2005 and the
Successor period from November 23, 2005 through
December 31, 2005. This combination does not comply with
generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) or with the
rules for pro forma presentation, but is presented because we
believe it provides the most meaningful comparison of our
results.
(2)
Amounts for the Predecessor periods are computed based upon the
capital structure in existence prior to the Acquisition. Amounts
for the Successor periods are computed based upon the capital
structure in existence subsequent to the Acquisition.
(3)
Recurring revenue percentage represents software-enabled
services revenues and maintenance revenues as a percentage of
total revenues. We do not believe that the recurring revenue
percentage for the Successor period of 2005 is meaningful
because such period is only five weeks in duration and not
indicative of our overall trends.
(4)
Consolidated EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial measure used in key
financial covenants contained in our senior credit facilities,
which are material facilities supporting our capital structure
and providing liquidity to our business. Consolidated EBITDA is
defined as earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and
amortization (EBITDA), further adjusted to exclude unusual items
and other adjustments permitted in calculating covenant
compliance under our senior credit facilities. We believe that
the inclusion of supplementary adjustments to EBITDA applied in
presenting Consolidated EBITDA is appropriate to provide
additional information to investors to demonstrate compliance
with the specified financial ratios and other financial
condition tests contained in our senior credit facilities.
Consolidated EBITDA is not presented for the year ended
December 31, 2004 because we did not have any senior credit
facilities that required the calculation of Consolidated EBITDA
for that year.
Management uses Consolidated EBITDA to gauge the costs of our
capital structure on a day-to-day basis when full financial
statements are unavailable. Management further believes that
providing this information allows our investors greater
transparency and a better understanding of our ability to meet
our debt service obligations and make capital expenditures.
The breach of covenants in our senior credit facilities that are
tied to ratios based on Consolidated EBITDA could result in a
default under that agreement, in which case the lenders could
elect to declare all amounts borrowed due and payable and to
terminate any commitments they have to provide further
borrowings. Any such acceleration would also result in a default
under our indenture. Any default and subsequent acceleration of
payments under our debt agreements would have a material adverse
effect on our results of operations, financial position and cash
flows. Additionally, under our debt agreements, our ability to
engage in activities such as incurring additional indebtedness,
making investments and paying dividends is also tied to ratios
based on Consolidated EBITDA.
Consolidated EBITDA does not represent net income (loss) or cash
flow from operations as those terms are defined by GAAP and does
not necessarily indicate whether cash flows will be sufficient
to fund cash needs. Further, our senior credit facilities
require that Consolidated EBITDA be calculated for the most
recent four fiscal quarters. As a result, the measure can be
disproportionately affected by a particularly strong or weak
quarter. Further, it may not be comparable to the measure for
any subsequent four-quarter period or any complete fiscal year.
Consolidated EBITDA is not a recognized measurement under GAAP,
and investors should not consider Consolidated EBITDA as a
substitute for measures of our financial performance and
liquidity as determined in accordance with GAAP, such as net
income, operating income or net cash provided by operating
activities. Because other companies may calculate Consolidated
EBITDA differently than we do, Consolidated EBITDA may not be
comparable to similarly titled measures reported by other
companies. Consolidated EBITDA has other limitations as an
analytical tool, when compared to the use of net income (loss),
which is the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure,
including:
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect the provision of income tax
expense in our various jurisdictions;
10
Table of Contents
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect the significant interest
expense we incur as a result of our debt leverage;
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect any attribution of costs to
our operations related to our investments and capital
expenditures through depreciation and amortization charges;
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect the cost of compensation we
provide to our employees in the form of stock option awards; and
Consolidated EBITDA excludes expenses that we believe are
unusual or non-recurring, but which others may believe are
normal expenses for the operation of a business.
Predecessor
Successor
Combined
Successor
Period
Period
from
from
November 23,
January 1
2005
Year
Year
Year
through
through
Ended
Ended
Ended
November 22,
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
2005
2005
2005
2006
2007
(In thousands)
$
712
$
831
$
1,543
$
1,075
$
6,575
1,061
4,890
5,951
47,039
44,524
2,658
2,658
(3,789
)
(458
)
9,575
2,301
11,876
27,128
35,047
14,006
8,022
22,028
71,453
85,668
616
616
3,017
(296
)
36,912
36,912
1,841
1,721
(737
)
(242
)
(979
)
1,485
(1,718
)
14,808
85
14,893
1,147
135
3,871
10,979
107
107
1,184
2,158
$
64,989
$
8,588
$
73,577
$
83,998
$
98,667
(a)
Purchase accounting adjustments include (1) an adjustment
to increase revenues by the amount that would have been
recognized if deferred revenue were not adjusted to fair value
at the date of the Transaction and (2) an adjustment to
increase rent expense by the amount that would have been
recognized if lease obligations were not adjusted to fair value
at the date of the Transaction.
(b)
Unusual or non-recurring charges include foreign currency gains
and losses, gains and losses on the sales of marketable
securities, equity earnings and losses on investments, proceeds
and payments associated with legal and other settlements, costs
associated with the closing of a regional office and other
one-time gains and expenses.
(c)
Acquired EBITDA and cost savings reflects the EBITDA impact of
significant businesses that were acquired during the period as
if the acquisition occurred at the beginning of the period and
cost savings to be realized from such acquisitions.
(d)
Other includes management fees and related expenses paid to
Carlyle and the non-cash portion of straight-line rent expense.
11
Table of Contents
Combined
Successor
Twelve Months
Twelve Months
Twelve Months
Twelve Months
Ended
Ended
Ended
Ended
December 31, 2007
December 31, 2005
December 31, 2006
December 31, 2007
(As adjusted)(5)
(In thousands, except ratio data)
$
73,577
$
83,998
$
98,667
$
6.43
5.48
4.30
10.87
(4)
1.88
2.34
(1)
We reconcile our Consolidated EBITDA for the trailing four
quarters to net income for the same period using the same
methods set forth above.
(2)
Consolidated total leverage ratio is defined in our senior
credit facilities at the last day of any period of four
consecutive fiscal quarters, as the ratio of (a) the
principal amount of all debt at such date, minus the amount, up
to a maximum amount of $30,000,000, of cash and cash equivalents
to (b) Consolidated EBITDA. The maximum consolidated total
leverage ratio for 2008 is 6.00. The maximum consolidated total
leverage ratio for 2007 was 6.75 and for 2006 was 7.50. There
was no maximum consolidated total leverage ratio covenant prior
to June 30, 2006.
(3)
Consolidated net interest coverage ratio is defined in our
senior credit facilities as for any period, the ratio of
(a) Consolidated EBITDA for such period to (b) total
cash interest expense for such period with respect to all
outstanding indebtedness minus total cash interest income for
such period. The minimum consolidated net interest coverage
ratio for 2008 is 1.70. The minimum consolidated net interest
coverage ratio for 2007 was 1.50 and for 2006 was 1.40. There
was no minimum consolidated net interest coverage ratio covenant
prior to June 30, 2006.
(4)
This ratio is not comparable because we did not incur debt under
our existing senior credit facilities until November 2005 in
connection with the Transaction.
(5)
As adjusted to give effect to the sale by us
of shares
of our common stock in this offering at an assumed initial
public offering price of
$ per share (the midpoint of
the range set forth on the cover of this prospectus), after
deducting estimated underwriting discounts and commissions and
estimated offering expenses payable by us, and the use of a
majority of the net proceeds thereof to redeem
$71.75 million in original principal amount of our
outstanding
11
3
/
4
% senior
subordinated notes at a redemption price of 111.75% of the
principal amount, plus accrued and unpaid interest. The as
adjusted data also give effect to our receipt of the aggregate
exercise price for
the shares
of common stock to be acquired by certain of the selling
stockholders upon exercise of options.
12
Table of Contents
cancel or reduce planned expenditures for our products and
services;
seek to lower their costs by renegotiating their contracts with
us;
move their IT solutions in-house;
switch to lower-priced solutions provided by our
competitors; or
exit the industry.
the timing of the introduction and the market acceptance of new
products, product enhancements or services by us or our
competitors;
the lengthy and often unpredictable sales cycles of large client
engagements;
the amount and timing of our operating costs and other expenses;
13
Table of Contents
the financial health of our clients;
changes in the volume of assets under our clients
management;
cancellations of maintenance
and/or
software-enabled services arrangements by our clients;
changes in local, national and international regulatory
requirements;
changes in our personnel;
implementation of our licensing contracts and software-enabled
services arrangements;
changes in economic and financial market conditions; and
changes in the mix in the types of products and services we
provide.
the level of demand for our products and services;
the level of client spending for information technology;
the level of competition from internal client solutions and from
other vendors;
the quality of our client service;
our ability to update our products and services and develop new
products and services needed by clients;
our ability to understand the organization and processes of our
clients; and
our ability to integrate and manage acquired businesses.
14
Table of Contents
combine operations, facilities and differing firm cultures;
retain the clients or employees of acquired entities;
generate market demand for new products and services;
coordinate geographically dispersed operations and successfully
adapt to the complexities of international operations;
integrate the technical teams of these companies with our
engineering organization;
incorporate acquired technologies and products into our current
and future product lines; and
integrate the products and services of these companies with our
business, where we do not have distribution, marketing or
support experience for such products and services.
15
Table of Contents
16
Table of Contents
we may find it difficult or costly to update our services and
software and to develop new products and services quickly enough
to meet our clients needs;
17
Table of Contents
we may find it difficult or costly to make some features of our
software work effectively and securely over the Internet or with
new or changed operating systems;
we may find it difficult or costly to update our software and
services to keep pace with business, evolving industry
standards, regulatory and other developments in the industries
where our clients operate; and
we may be exposed to liability for security breaches that allow
unauthorized persons to gain access to confidential information
stored on our computers or transmitted over our network.
changes in a specific countrys or regions political
or economic condition;
difficulties in obtaining U.S. export licenses;
potentially longer payment cycles;
increased costs associated with maintaining international
marketing efforts;
foreign currency fluctuations;
the introduction of non-tariff barriers and higher duty rates;
foreign regulatory compliance; and
difficulties in enforcement of third-party contractual
obligations and intellectual property rights.
18
Table of Contents
make it more difficult for us to satisfy our obligations with
respect to our notes and our senior credit facilities;
require us to dedicate a substantial portion of our cash flow
from operations to payments on our indebtedness, thereby
reducing the availability of our cash flow to fund acquisitions,
working capital, capital expenditures, research and development
efforts and other general corporate purposes;
increase our vulnerability to and limit our flexibility in
planning for, or reacting to, changes in our business and the
industry in which we operate;
expose us to the risk of increased interest rates as borrowings
under our senior credit facilities are subject to variable rates
of interest;
place us at a competitive disadvantage compared to our
competitors that have less debt; and
limit our ability to borrow additional funds.
19
Table of Contents
incur additional indebtedness;
sell assets, including capital stock of restricted subsidiaries;
agree to payment restrictions affecting SS&Cs
restricted subsidiaries;
pay dividends;
consolidate, merge, sell or otherwise dispose of all or
substantially all of SS&Cs assets;
make strategic acquisitions;
enter into transactions with SS&Cs affiliates;
incur liens; and
designate any of SS&Cs subsidiaries as unrestricted
subsidiaries.
declare all borrowings outstanding, together with accrued
interest and other fees, to be immediately due and
payable; or
prevent us from making payments on the notes,
20
Table of Contents
fluctuations in our quarterly financial results or the quarterly
financial results of companies perceived to be similar to us;
changes in estimates of our financial results or recommendations
by securities analysts;
failure of any of our products to achieve or maintain market
acceptance;
changes in market valuations of similar companies;
success of competitive products;
changes in our capital structure, such as future issuances of
securities or the incurrence of additional debt;
announcements by us or our competitors of significant products,
contracts, acquisitions or strategic alliances;
regulatory developments in the United States, foreign countries
or both;
litigation involving our company, our general industry or both;
additions or departures of key personnel;
investors general perception of us; and
changes in general economic, industry and market conditions.
21
Table of Contents
Date Available for Sale
On the date of this prospectus.
90 days after the date of this prospectus.
180 days after the date of this prospectus, subject to
extension in specified instances, due to
lock-up
agreements between the holders of these shares and the
underwriters. However, the underwriters can waive the provisions
of these
lock-up
agreements and allow these stockholders to sell their shares at
any time.
22
Table of Contents
limitations on the removal of directors;
a classified board of directors so that not all members of our
board are elected at one time;
advance notice requirements for stockholder proposals and
nominations;
the inability of stockholders to call special meetings;
the ability of our board of directors to make, alter or repeal
our bylaws;
the ability of our board of directors to designate the terms of
and issue new series of preferred stock without stockholder
approval, which could be used to institute a rights plan, or a
poison pill, that would work to dilute the stock ownership of a
potential hostile acquirer, likely preventing acquisitions that
have not been approved by our board of directors; and
a prohibition on stockholders from acting by written consent if
William C. Stone and investment funds affiliated with Carlyle
cease to collectively hold a majority of our outstanding common
stock.
23
Table of Contents
24
Table of Contents
the effect of a slowdown or prolonged downturn in the general
economy or the financial services industry;
the effect of any further or accelerated consolidations in the
financial services industry;
our ability to retain and attract clients and key personnel;
the integration of acquired businesses;
our ability to continue to derive substantial revenues from the
licensing of, or provision of software-enabled services relating
to, certain of our licensed software, and the provision of
maintenance and professional services in support of such
licensed software;
our ability to adapt to rapidly changing technology and evolving
industry standards, and our ability to introduce new products
and services;
challenges in maintaining and expanding our international
operations;
the effects of war, terrorism and other catastrophic events;
the risk of increased interest rates due to the variable rates
of interest on certain of our indebtedness; and
other risks and uncertainties, including those listed under the
caption Risk Factors.
25
Table of Contents
a majority of our net proceeds from this offering to redeem up
to $71.75 million in principal amount of our outstanding
notes, at a redemption price of 111.75% of the principal amount,
plus accrued and unpaid interest; and
the balance of our net proceeds from this offering for working
capital and other general corporate purposes, including
potential acquisitions.
26
Table of Contents
27
Table of Contents
on an actual basis after giving effect to the 7.5-for-1 stock
split of our common stock effected as of April 23, 2008; and
on an as adjusted basis to reflect:
(2)
the sale of shares of common
stock that we are offering at an assumed initial public offering
price of $ per share, after
deducting estimated underwriting discounts and commissions and
estimated offering expenses payable by us, the use of a majority
of the net proceeds thereof to redeem $71.75 million in
original principal amount of our outstanding
11
3
/
4
% senior
subordinated notes due 2013 at a redemption price of 111.75% of
the principal amount, plus accrued and unpaid interest, and a
loss on extinguishment of debt of approximately
$10.5 million, including an $8.4 million redemption
premium and a non-cash charge of approximately $2.1 million
relating to the write-off of deferred financing fees
attributable to the redeemed notes; and
(3)
the issuance of shares of
common stock upon the exercise of options held by certain
selling stockholders in connection with this offering and the
receipt of the aggregate exercise price for such options.
As of December 31, 2007
Actual
As Adjusted
(In thousands)
$
19,175
$
$
238,009
$
205,000
443,009
532
570,043
33,615
8,481
(78
)
612,593
$
1,055,602
$
28
Table of Contents
12,155,024 shares of common stock issuable upon the
exercise of stock options outstanding as of December 31,
2007 at a weighted average exercise price of $7.70 per
share;
1,296,907 shares of common stock reserved as of
December 31, 2007 for future issuance under our 2006 equity
incentive plan; and
1,250,000 shares of common stock reserved as of the date of
this prospectus for future issuance under our 2008 stock
incentive plan.
29
Table of Contents
$
$
$
Shares Purchased
Total Consideration
Average Price
Number
Percent
Amount
Percent
Per Share
%
$
%
$
$
%
$
%
30
Table of Contents
the percentage of shares of common stock held by existing
stockholders will decrease to approximately % of the
total number of shares of our common stock outstanding after
this offering; and
the number of shares held by new investors will increase
to , or approximately %,
of the total number of shares of our common stock outstanding
after this offering.
31
Table of Contents
32
Table of Contents
Predecessor
Successor
Period from
Period from
Combined
Successor
January 1,
November 23,
Year
Year
Year
Year Ended
2005 through
2005 through
Ended
Ended
Ended
December 31,
November 22,
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
2003
2004
2005
2005
2005
2006
2007
(In thousands, except per share and percentage data)
$
14,233
$
17,250
$
20,147
$
3,587
$
23,734
$
22,925
$
27,514
31,318
36,433
44,064
3,701
47,765
55,222
61,910
6,757
11,320
12,565
2,520
15,085
19,582
17,491
13,223
30,885
67,193
7,857
75,050
107,740
141,253
65,531
95,888
143,969
17,665
161,634
205,469
248,168
1,788
2,258
2,963
856
3,819
9,216
9,616
6,248
8,462
10,393
1,499
11,892
20,415
26,038
4,387
6,606
7,849
861
8,710
12,575
14,277
8,003
16,444
37,799
4,411
42,210
57,810
78,951
20,426
33,770
59,004
7,627
66,631
100,016
128,882
45,105
62,118
84,965
10,038
95,003
105,453
119,286
8,393
10,734
13,134
1,364
14,498
17,598
19,701
11,180
13,957
19,199
2,071
21,270
23,620
26,282
7,154
8,014
11,944
1,140
13,084
20,366
24,573
36,912
36,912
26,727
32,705
81,189
4,575
85,764
61,584
70,556
18,378
29,413
3,776
5,463
9,239
43,869
48,730
914
1,536
1,031
30
1,061
388
939
(2
)
(8
)
(2,092
)
(4,920
)
(7,012
)
(47,427
)
(45,463
)
47
99
655
258
913
456
1,911
19,337
31,040
3,370
831
4,201
(2,714
)
6,117
7,541
12,030
2,658
2,658
(3,789
)
(458
)
$
11,796
$
19,010
$
712
$
831
$
1,543
$
1,075
$
6,575
$
0.63
$
0.90
$
0.03
$
0.02
$
0.02
$
0.12
$
0.59
$
0.84
$
0.03
$
0.02
$
0.02
$
0.12
18,617
21,185
23,300
53,063
53,093
53,157
19,832
22,499
24,478
54,853
54,867
55,953
$
23,711
$
28,524
$
32,116
$
4,915
$
30,709
$
57,057
(15,321
)
(89,220
)
(110,495
)
(877,261
)
(18,626
)
(12,839
)
(12,081
)
74,074
69,161
868,655
(16,427
)
(37,408
)
68.0
%
70.2
%
77.3
%
65.4
%
76.0
%
79.3
%
81.9
%
$
64,989
$
8,588
$
73,577
$
83,998
$
98,667
$
52,381
$
130,835
$
15,584
$
11,718
$
19,175
42,009
116,418
7,283
(1,312
)
8,016
82,585
185,663
1,176,371
1,152,521
1,190,495
478,143
466,235
440,580
61,588
156,094
557,133
563,132
612,593
(1)
Amounts for the Predecessor periods are computed based upon the
capital structure in existence prior to the Acquisition. Amounts
for the Successor periods are computed based upon the capital
structure in existence subsequent to the Acquisition.
(2)
Recurring revenue percentage represents software-enabled
services revenues and maintenance revenues as a percentage of
total revenues. We do not believe that the recurring revenue
percentage for the Successor period of 2005 is meaningful
because such period is only five weeks in duration and not
indicative of our overall trends.
33
Table of Contents
(3)
Consolidated EBITDA is a non-GAAP financial measure used in key
financial covenants contained in our senior credit facilities,
which are material facilities supporting our capital structure
and providing liquidity to our business. Consolidated EBITDA is
defined as earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and
amortization (EBITDA), further adjusted to exclude unusual items
and other adjustments permitted in calculating covenant
compliance under our senior credit facilities. We believe that
the inclusion of supplementary adjustments to EBITDA applied in
presenting Consolidated EBITDA is appropriate to provide
additional information to investors to demonstrate compliance
with the specified financial ratios and other financial
condition tests contained in our senior credit facilities.
Consolidated EBITDA is not presented for the years ended
December 31, 2003 and 2004 because we did not have any
senior credit facilities that required the calculation of
Consolidated EBITDA for those years.
Management uses Consolidated EBITDA to gauge the costs of our
capital structure on a day-to-day basis when full financial
statements are unavailable. Management further believes that
providing this information allows our investors greater
transparency and a better understanding of our ability to meet
our debt service obligations and make capital expenditures.
The breach of covenants in our senior credit facilities that are
tied to ratios based on Consolidated EBITDA could result in a
default under that agreement, in which case the lenders could
elect to declare all amounts borrowed due and payable and to
terminate any commitments they have to provide further
borrowings. Any such acceleration would also result in a default
under our indenture. Any default and subsequent acceleration of
payments under our debt agreements would have a material adverse
effect on our results of operations, financial position and cash
flows. Additionally, under our debt agreements, our ability to
engage in activities such as incurring additional indebtedness,
making investments and paying dividends is also tied to ratios
based on Consolidated EBITDA.
Consolidated EBITDA does not represent net income (loss) or cash
flow from operations as those terms are defined by GAAP and does
not necessarily indicate whether cash flows will be sufficient
to fund cash needs. Further, our senior credit facilities
require that Consolidated EBITDA be calculated for the most
recent four fiscal quarters. As a result, the measure can be
disproportionately affected by a particularly strong or weak
quarter. Further, it may not be comparable to the measure for
any subsequent four-quarter period or any complete fiscal year.
Consolidated EBITDA is not a recognized measurement under GAAP,
and investors should not consider Consolidated EBITDA as a
substitute for measures of our financial performance and
liquidity as determined in accordance with GAAP, such as net
income, operating income or net cash provided by operating
activities. Because other companies may calculate Consolidated
EBITDA differently than we do, Consolidated EBITDA may not be
comparable to similarly titled measures reported by other
companies. Consolidated EBITDA has other limitations as an
analytical tool, when compared to the use of net income (loss),
which is the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure,
including:
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect the provision of income tax
expense in our various jurisdictions;
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect the significant interest
expense we incur as a result of our debt leverage;
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect any attribution of costs to
our operations related to our investments and capital
expenditures through depreciation and amortization charges;
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect the cost of compensation we
provide to our employees in the form of stock option awards; and
Consolidated EBITDA excludes expenses that we believe are
unusual or non-recurring, but which others may believe are
normal expenses for the operation of a business.
34
Table of Contents
The following is a reconciliation of net income to Consolidated
EBITDA as defined in our senior credit facilities.
Predecessor
Successor
Combined
Successor
Period
Period
from
from
November 23,
January 1
2005
Year
Year
Year
through
through
Ended
Ended
Ended
November 22,
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
2005
2005
2005
2006
2007
(In thousands)
$
712
$
831
$
1,543
$
1,075
$
6,575
1,061
4,890
5,951
47,039
44,524
2,658
2,658
(3,789
)
(458
)
9,575
2,301
11,876
27,128
35,047
14,006
8,022
22,028
71,453
85,668
616
616
3,017
(296
)
36,912
36,912
1,841
1,721
(737
)
(242
)
(979
)
1,485
(1,718
)
14,808
85
14,893
1,147
135
3,871
10,979
107
107
1,184
2,158
$
64,989
$
8,588
$
73,577
$
83,998
$
98,667
(a)
Purchase accounting adjustments include (1) an adjustment
to increase revenues by the amount that would have been
recognized if deferred revenue were not adjusted to fair value
at the date of the Transaction and (2) an adjustment to
increase rent expense by the amount that would have been
recognized if lease obligations were not adjusted to fair value
at the date of the Transaction.
(b)
Unusual or non-recurring charges include foreign currency gains
and losses, gains and losses on the sales of marketable
securities, equity earnings and losses on investments, proceeds
and payments associated with legal and other settlements, costs
associated with the closing of a regional office and other
one-time gains and expenses.
(c)
Acquired EBITDA and cost savings reflects the EBITDA impact of
significant businesses that were acquired during the period as
if the acquisition occurred at the beginning of the period and
cost savings to be realized from such acquisitions.
(d)
Other includes management fees and related expenses paid to
Carlyle and the non-cash portion of straight-line rent expense.
35
Table of Contents
Combined
Successor
Twelve Months
Twelve Months
Twelve Months
Twelve Months
Ended
Ended
Ended
Ended
December 31, 2007
December 31, 2005
December 31, 2006
December 31, 2007
(As Adjusted)(5)
(In thousands, except ratio data)
$
73,577
$
83,998
$
98,667
6.43
5.48
4.30
10.87
(4)
1.88
2.34
(1)
We reconcile our Consolidated EBITDA for the trailing four
quarters to net income for the same period using the same
methods set forth above.
(2)
Consolidated total leverage ratio is defined in our senior
credit facilities at the last day of any period of four
consecutive fiscal quarters, as the ratio of (a) the
principal amount of all debt at such date, minus the amount, up
to a maximum amount of $30,000,000 of cash and cash equivalents
to (b) Consolidated EBITDA. The maximum consolidated total
leverage ratio for 2008 is 6.00. The maximum consolidated total
leverage ratio for 2007 was 6.75 and for 2006 was 7.50. There
was no maximum consolidated total leverage ratio covenant prior
to June 30, 2006.
(3)
Consolidated net interest coverage ratio is defined in our
senior credit facilities as for any period, the ratio of
(a) Consolidated EBITDA for such period to (b) total
cash interest expense for such period with respect to all
outstanding indebtedness minus total cash interest income for
such period. The minimum consolidated net interest coverage
ratio for 2008 is 1.70. The minimum consolidated net interest
coverage ratio for 2007 was 1.50 and for 2006 was 1.40. There
was no minimum consolidated net interest coverage ratio covenant
prior to June 30, 2006.
(4)
This ratio is not comparable because we did not incur debt under
our existing senior credit facilities until November 2005 in
connection with the Transaction.
(5)
As adjusted to give effect to the sale by us
of shares of our common stock in
this offering at an assumed initial public offering price of
$ per share (the midpoint of the
range set forth on the cover of this prospectus), after
deducting estimated underwriting discounts and commissions and
estimated offering expenses payable by us, and the use of a
majority of the net proceeds thereof to redeem
$71.75 million in original principal amount of our
outstanding
11
3
/
4
% senior
subordinated notes at a redemption price of 111.75% of the
principal amount, plus accrued and unpaid interest. The as
adjusted data also give effect to our receipt of the aggregate
exercise price for the shares of
common stock to be acquired by certain of the selling
stockholders upon exercise of options.
36
Table of Contents
FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
37
Table of Contents
38
Table of Contents
Weighted Average
Carrying Value
Amortization
(In millions)
Period
$
197.1
11.5 years
$
55.7
8.5 years
$
17.2
13.9 years
$
1.4
10 years
$
0.7
3 years
Acquisition Date
Description
March 12, 2007
Alternative investment fund management services
August 31, 2006
Web-based training software
March 3, 2006
Alternative investment fund management services
October 31, 2005
Money market processing software and services
August 24, 2005
Collateralized trading software and services
June 3, 2005
Investor relations software and services
April 19, 2005
Investment management software and services
February 28, 2005
Alternative investment fund management services
February 11, 2005
Facilities management software
39
Table of Contents
40
Table of Contents
significant underperformance relative to historical or projected
future operating results;
significant changes in the manner of our use of the acquired
assets or the strategy for our overall business; and
significant negative industry or economic trends.
41
Table of Contents
the value of our business as determined at arms length in
connection with the Transaction;
significant business milestones that may have affected the value
of our business subsequent to the Transaction;
the continued risks associated with our business;
the economic outlook in general and the condition and outlook of
our industry;
our financial condition and expected operating results;
our level of outstanding indebtedness;
the market price of stocks of publicly traded corporations
engaged in the same or similar lines of business; and
as of July 31, 2006 and March 31, 2007, analyses using
a weighted average of three generally accepted valuation
procedures: the income approach, the market approach
publicly traded guideline company method and the market
approach transaction method.
Weighted-Average Fair Value of
Fair Value
Options by Vesting Type(1):
of
Change
Shares
Exercise
Underlying
in
Under Option
Price
Stock
Time
Performance
Control
8,743,732
$
9.93
$
9.93
$
4.14
$
4.40
$
2.83
78,750
9.93
9.93
4.10
4.35
2.83
172,500
9.93
9.93
4.09
4.34
0.99
131,250
13.19
13.19
5.45
5.78
1.21
22,500
13.19
13.19
5.52
5.85
1.15
(1)
The weighted-average fair value of options by vesting type
represents the value as determined under SFAS 123R at the
grant date. These fair values do not reflect the re-valuation of
certain options related to modifications effected in April 2007
and March 2008 or the resolutions approved by our board of
directors in April 2008 relating to performance-based and
superior options, as more fully described in Notes 9 and 14
to the consolidated financial statements for the year ended
December 31, 2007.
42
Table of Contents
43
Table of Contents
the growth and improved performance of our business since
March 31, 2007, resulting in higher trailing twelve-month
and projected revenues and EBITDA; and
the changes that will result in our capital structure as a
result of this offering, including the anticipated reduction in
outstanding debt resulting from the redemption of
$71.75 million in principal amount of our
11
3
/
4
% senior
subordinated notes due 2013.
Options
Intrinsic Value
the vesting of the remaining 2006 and 2007 performance-based
options that did not otherwise vest during 2007;
the conversion of all superior options granted under the 2006
Equity Incentive Plan, which are described on page 83, into
performance-based options, with one-third of the options vesting
in each of
44
Table of Contents
2008, 2009 and 2010 based upon our EBITDA for these years
falling within designated EBITDA target ranges;
the elimination of the annual EBITDA targets originally
established for 2009 through 2011, with new target ranges to be
established by our board annually; and
a modification to the performance-based options such that any
performance-based options that do not vest in any given year as
a result of not attaining that years EBITDA target range,
shall vest based upon our EBITDA for the following year falling
within the targeted range for the following year.
Successor
Combined
Successor
Predecessor
Period from
Period from
November 23, 2005
January 1, 2005
Year Ended
Year Ended
Year Ended
through
through
Percent Change
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
November 22,
from Prior Year
2007,
2006
2005
2005
2005
2007
2006
$
27,514
$
22,925
$
23,734
$
3,587
$
20,147
20.0
%
(3.4
)%
61,910
55,222
47,765
3,701
44,064
12.1
15.6
17,491
19,582
15,085
2,520
12,565
(10.7
)
29.8
141,253
107,740
75,050
7,857
67,193
31.1
43.6
$
248,168
$
205,469
$
161,634
$
17,665
$
143,969
20.8
27.1
45
Table of Contents
Year Ended December 31,
2007
2006
2005
11.1
%
11.2
%
14.7
%
25.0
26.9
29.6
7.0
9.5
9.3
56.9
52.4
46.4
46
Table of Contents
47
Table of Contents
48
Table of Contents
49
Table of Contents
50
Table of Contents
Less than
More than
Total
1 Year
1-3 Years
3-5 Years
5 Years
All Other
$
443,009
$
2,429
$
4,857
$
230,723
$
205,000
$
218,047
40,784
80,890
72,285
24,088
45,676
7,665
14,729
12,428
10,854
3,058
1,924
604
509
21
6,712
6,712
$
716,502
$
52,802
$
101,080
$
315,945
$
239,963
$
6,712
(1)
Short-term and long-term debt obligations do not reflect our
intention to redeem up to 35% of our senior subordinated notes.
If we redeem 35% of our senior subordinated notes with the net
proceeds from this offering, our payments due in more than five
years will be reduced by $71.8 million.
(2)
Reflects interest payments on our term loan facility at an
assumed interest rate of three-month LIBOR of 4.83% plus 2.0%
for U.S. dollar loans and CDOR of 4.81% plus 2.85% for Canadian
dollar loans, interest payments on our revolving credit facility
at an assumed interest rate of one-month LIBOR of 4.83% plus
2.75% and required interest payment payments on our senior
subordinated notes of 11.75%.
51
Table of Contents
(3)
We are obligated under noncancelable operating leases for office
space and office equipment. The lease for the corporate facility
in Windsor, Connecticut expires in 2016. We sublease office
space under noncancelable leases. We received rental income
under these leases of $1.5 million, $1.4 million and
$0.4 million for the years ended December 31, 2007,
2006 and 2005, respectively. The effect of the rental income to
be received in the future has not been included in the table
above.
(4)
Purchase obligations include the minimum amounts committed under
contracts for goods and services.
(5)
As of December 31, 2007, our FIN 48 liability and
related net interest payable were $6.5 million and
$0.2 million, respectively. We are unable to reasonably
estimate the timing of FIN 48 liability and interest
payments in individual years beyond 12 months due to
uncertainties in the timing of the effective settlement of tax
positions.
52
Table of Contents
53
Table of Contents
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect the provision of income tax
expense in our various jurisdictions;
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect the significant interest
expense we incur as a result of our debt leverage;
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect any attribution of costs to
our operations related to our investments and capital
expenditures through depreciation and amortization charges;
Consolidated EBITDA does not reflect the cost of compensation we
provide to our employees in the form of stock option
awards; and
Consolidated EBITDA excludes expenses that we believe are
unusual or non-recurring, but which others may believe are
normal expenses for the operation of a business.
54
Table of Contents
Successor
Combined
Successor
Predecessor
Period from
November 23,
Period from
2005
January 1
Year Ended
Year Ended
Year Ended
through
through
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
November 22,
2007
2006
2005
2005
2005
(In thousands)
$
6,575
$
1,075
$
1,543
$
831
$
712
44,524
47,039
5,951
4,890
1,061
(458
)
(3,789
)
2,658
2,658
35,047
27,128
11,876
2,301
9,575
85,688
71,453
22,028
8,022
14,006
(296
)
3,017
616
616
36,912
36,912
1,721
1,841
(1,718
)
1,485
(979
)
(242
)
(737
)
135
1,147
14,893
85
14,808
10,979
3,871
2,158
1,184
107
107
$
98,667
$
83,998
$
73,577
$
8,588
$
64,989
(1)
Purchase accounting adjustments include (a) an adjustment
to increase revenues by the amount that would have been
recognized if deferred revenue were not adjusted to fair value
at the date of the Transaction and (b) an adjustment to
increase rent expense by the amount that would have been
recognized if lease obligations were not adjusted to fair value
at the date of the Transaction.
(2)
Unusual or non-recurring charges include foreign currency gains
and losses, gains and losses on the sales of marketable
securities, equity earnings and losses on investments, proceeds
and payments associated with legal and other settlements, costs
associated with the closing of a regional office and other
one-time gains and expenses.
(3)
Acquired EBITDA and cost savings reflects the EBITDA impact of
significant businesses that were acquired during the period as
if the acquisition occurred at the beginning of the period and
cost savings to be realized from such acquisitions.
(4)
Other includes management fees and related expenses paid to
Carlyle and the non-cash portion of straight-line rent expense.
Covenant
Actual
Requirements
Ratios
6.75
x
4.30
x
1.50
x
2.34
x
55
Table of Contents
56
Table of Contents
57
Table of Contents
Real Estate
Alternative
Corporate
Institutional
Insurance &
Municipal
Leasing/
Selected
Investment
Treasury
Financial
Assets
Pension
Commercial
Finance
Property
Managers
Groups
Institutions
Managers
Funds
Lenders
Groups
Managers
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
58
Table of Contents
59
Table of Contents
60
Table of Contents
61
Table of Contents
62
Table of Contents
provide complementary products or services in the financial
services industry;
address a highly specialized problem or a market niche in the
financial services industry;
expand our global reach into strategic geographic markets;
have solutions that lend themselves to being delivered as
software-enabled services; and
possess proven technology and an established client base that
will provide a source of ongoing revenues and to whom we may be
able to sell existing products and services.
63
Table of Contents
Acquired Products and
Chalke
$10,000,000
PTS
Mabel Systems
$850,000 and 109,224 shares
Mabel
Shepro Braun Systems
1,500,000 shares
Total Return, Antares
Quantra
$2,269,800 and 819,028 shares
SKYLINE
The Savid Group
$821,500
Debt & Derivatives
HedgeWare
1,028,524 shares
AdvisorWare
Brookside
41,400 shares
Consulting services
Digital Visions
$1,350,000
PortPro, The BANC Mall, PALMS
Real-Time, USA
$4,000,000
Real-Time, Lightning
DBC
$4,500,000
Municipal finance products
Amicorp Fund Services
$1,800,000
Fund services
Investment Advisory Network
$3,000,000
Compass, Portfolio Manager
NeoVision Hypersystems
$1,600,000
Heatmaps
OMR Systems
$19,671,000
TradeThru, Xacct
Achievement Technologies
$470,000
SamTrak
EisnerFast
$25,300,000
Fund services
Financial Models Company
$159,000,000
FMC suite of products
Financial Interactive
358,424 shares and warrants to purchase 50,000 shares
Fund
Runner
MarginMan
$5,600,000
MarginMan
Open Information Systems
$24,000,000
Money Market Manager, Information Manager
Cogent Management
$12,250,000
Fund services
Zoologic
$3,000,000
Education and training courseware
Northport
$5,000,000
Fund services
64
Table of Contents
Products
Typical Users
Vertical Markets Served
AdvisorWare
Altair
CAMRA
CAMRA D Class
Debt & Derivatives
Fund
Runner
Fund
Runner
Investorsite
Fund
Runner
Marathon
Lightning
Pacer
Pages
PALMS
PortPro
Recon
SS&C Wealth Management
Suite Front Office
Sylvan
Total Return
Portfolio managers
Asset managers
Fund administrators
Investment advisors
Accountants
Auditors
Alternative investment managers Brokers/dealers
Alternative investment managers
Corporate treasury groups
Financial institutions
Institutional asset managers
Insurance and pension funds
Trading/Treasury Operations
Antares
Heatmaps
MarginMan
Suite Front Office
TradeDesk
TradeThru
Securities traders
Financial institutions
Risk managers
Foreign exchange traders
Asset managers
Alternative investment managers
Corporate treasury groups
Financial institutions
Institutional asset managers
Insurance and pension funds
65
Table of Contents
Products
Typical Users
Vertical Markets Served
Financial Modeling
AnalyticsExpress
DBC (family of products)
Finesse HD
PTS
CEO/CFOs
Risk managers
Actuarial professionals
Bank asset/liability managers Investment bankers
State/local treasury staff
Financial advisors
Insurance and pension funds
Financial institutions
Municipal finance groups
Loan Management/Accounting
LMS Loan Suite
LMS Originator
LMS Servicer
The BANC Mall
Mortgage originators
Commercial lenders
Mortgage loan servicers
Mortgage loan portfolio managers
Real estate investment managers
Bank/credit union loan officers
Commercial lenders
Financial institutions
Insurance and pension funds
Property Management
SKYLINE (family of products)
SamTrak
Real estate investment managers
Real estate leasing agents
Real estate property managers
Facility managers
Real estate leasing/property managers
Money Market Processing
Information Manager
Money Market Manager
Financial institutions
Custodians
Security lenders
Cash managers
Financial institutions
Training
Zoologic Learning Solutions
Financial institutions
Asset managers
Hedge fund managers
Investment bankers
All verticals
Services
Typical Users
Vertical Markets Served
Software-enabled services
SS&C Direct
SS&C Fund Services
SSCNet
SVC
Portfolio managers
Asset managers
Fund administrators
Investment advisors
Alternative investment managers Securities traders
Alternative investment managers
Financial institutions
Institutional asset managers
Insurance and pension funds
Table of Contents
67
Table of Contents
68
Table of Contents
general bond structures,
revenue bonds,
housing bonds,
student loans, and
Federal Housing Administration insured revenue bonds
and securitizations.
69
Table of Contents
retirement communities
universities
hospitals
70
Table of Contents
hosting of a companys application software,
automated workflow integration,
automated quality control mechanisms, and
extensive interface and connectivity services to custodian
banks, data service providers, depositories and other external
entities.
investment managers
commodity pool operators
proprietary traders
private equity groups
separate managed accounts
71
Table of Contents
72
Table of Contents
content-rich, periodic software and services
eBriefings
targeted at clients and prospects in each of our vertical
and geographic markets,
regular product-focused webinars,
seminars and symposiums,
trade shows and conferences, and
e-marketing campaigns.
73
Table of Contents
74
Table of Contents
195 employees in research and development,
579 employees in consulting and services,
77 employees in sales and marketing,
94 employees in client support, and
114 employees in finance and administration.
75
Table of Contents
76
Table of Contents
52
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer
46
President, Chief Operating Officer and Director
56
Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
61
Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
66
Director
56
Director
37
Director
46
Director
62
Director Nominee
(1)
Member of our Compensation Committee.
(2)
Member of our Audit Committee.
(3)
Member of our Nominating Committee as of the closing of this
offering.
(4)
Mr. Daly will become a director upon the closing of this
offering and join our Audit and Nominating Committees.
77
Table of Contents
78
Table of Contents
appointing, approving the compensation of, and assessing the
independence of our independent registered public accounting
firm;
overseeing the work of our independent registered public
accounting firm, including through the receipt and consideration
of reports from our independent registered public accounting
firm;
reviewing and discussing with management and our independent
registered public accounting firm our annual and quarterly
financial statements and related disclosures;
coordinating our board of directors oversight of internal
control over financial reporting, disclosure controls and
procedures and our code of business conduct and ethics;
establishing procedures for the receipt and retention of
accounting related complaints and concerns;
approving any related person transactions; and
preparing the audit committee report required by the rules of
the Securities and Exchange Commission.
reviewing and approving, or making recommendations to our board
of directors with respect to, the compensation of our chief
executive officer and our other executive officers;
overseeing and administering our cash and equity incentive plans;
reviewing and making recommendations to our board with respect
to director compensation; and
preparing the compensation committee report required by
Securities and Exchange Commission rules.
identifying individuals qualified to become members of our board
of directors;
recommending to our board of directors the persons to be
nominated for election as directors and to each of the
boards committees; and
79
Table of Contents
reviewing and making recommendations to our board of directors
with respect to management succession planning.
attract, retain and motivate the best possible executive talent;
reward successful performance by the executive officers and the
company; and
align the interests of executive officers with those of our
stockholders by providing long-term equity compensation.
80
Table of Contents
base salary;
discretionary annual cash bonuses;
stock option awards;
perquisites; and
severance and change-of-control benefits.
81
Table of Contents
40% of the options are time-based options that vest
as to 25% of the number of shares underlying the option on
November 23, 2006 and as to 1/36 of the number of shares
underlying the option each month thereafter until fully vested
on November 23, 2009. The time-based options become fully
vested and exercisable immediately prior to the effective date
of a liquidity event, as defined in the stock option agreement
(the consummation of this offering will not constitute a
liquidity event under such definition);
82
Table of Contents
40% of the options are performance-based options
that vest based on the determination by our board of directors
or compensation committee as to whether our earnings before
interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, as adjusted
(EBITDA), for each fiscal year 2006 through 2010 falls within
the targeted EBITDA range for such year. If our EBITDA for a
particular year is at the low end of the targeted EBITDA range,
50% of the performance-based option for that year vests, and if
our EBITDA is at or above the high end of the targeted EBITDA
range, 100% of the performance-based option for that year vests.
If our EBITDA is below the targeted EBITDA range, the
performance-based option does not vest, and if our EBITDA is
within the targeted EBITDA range, between 50% and 100% of the
performance-based option vests, based on linear interpolation.
As a result of our boards acceleration of the vesting of
our performance-based options, as described below, 40% of the
number of shares underlying the performance-based options will
have vested as of the closing of this offering. A certain
percentage of performance-based options will also vest
immediately prior to the effective date of a liquidity event if
proceeds from the liquidity event equal or exceed specified
returns on investments in SS&C Holdings made by investment
funds affiliated with Carlyle; and
20% of the options are superior options, which
originally vested upon specified liquidity events but which
convert into performance-based options upon the closing of this
offering, as described below.
83
Table of Contents
conversion of our outstanding superior options into
performance-based options that vest based on our EBITDA
performance in 2008, 2009 and 2010 (and 2011 for options awarded
in 2007);
vesting in full of the 2006 and 2007 performance-based options;
elimination of pre-determined EBITDA ranges from the option
agreements and provision for the annual proposal of EBITDA
ranges by management, subject to approval by our board of
directors;
rolling over of performance-based options that do
not vest (in whole or in part) in any given year into
performance-based options for the following year, except as
otherwise provided by our board of directors; and
amendment of the definition of liquidity event.
84
Table of Contents
Name and
Option
All Other
Year
Salary($)
Bonus($)
Awards($)(1)
Compensation($)
Total($)
2007
$
591,667
$
1,175,000
$
1,713,901
$
3,552
(2)
$
3,484,120
2006
500,000
895,000
597,582
3,552
1,996,134
2007
395,833
600,000
1,285,437
3,360
(3)
2,284,630
2006
350,000
440,000
448,188
3,240
1,241,508
2007
222,917
225,000
642,734
3,887
(4)
1,094,538
2006
200,000
165,000
224,094
3,774
592,414
2007
203,750
150,000
342,811
4,213
(5)
700,774
2006
190,000
100,000
119,515
3,722
412,819
(1)
The amounts in this column for 2006 and 2007 reflect the dollar
amount earned for financial reporting purposes for the
applicable year, in accordance with SFAS 123R, for options
to purchase shares of SS&C Holdings common stock granted
under the 2006 equity incentive plan. The amounts disregard the
estimate of forfeitures related to service-based vesting and are
based on assumptions included in Note 9 of the notes to our
consolidated financial statements included elsewhere in this
prospectus.
(2)
Consists of our contribution of $3,000 to Mr. Stones
account under the SS&C 401(k) savings plan and our payment
of $552 of group term life premiums for the benefit of
Mr. Stone.
(3)
Consists of our contribution of $3,000 to
Mr. Boulangers account under the SS&C 401(k)
savings plan and our payment of $360 of group term life premiums
for the benefit of Mr. Boulanger.
85
Table of Contents
(4)
Consists of our contribution of $3,000 to
Mr. Pedontis account under the SS&C 401(k)
savings plan and our payment of $887 of group term life premiums
for the benefit of Mr. Pedonti.
(5)
Consists of our contribution of $3,000 to
Mr. Whitmans account under the SS&C 401(k)
savings plan and our payment of $1,213 of group term life
premiums for the benefit of Mr. Whitman.
The employment of Mr. Stone as the chief executive officer
of SS&C Holdings and SS&C;
An initial term through November 23, 2008, with automatic
one-year renewals until terminated either by Mr. Stone or
us;
An annual base salary of at least $500,000;
An opportunity to receive an annual bonus in an amount to be
established by our board of directors based on achieving
individual and company performance goals mutually determined by
our board and Mr. Stone. If Mr. Stone is employed at
the end of any calendar year, his annual bonus will not be less
than $450,000 for that year;
A grant of options to purchase shares of our common stock
representing 2% of our outstanding common stock on
November 23, 2005;
Certain severance payments and benefits. If we terminate
Mr. Stones employment without cause, if
Mr. Stone resigns for good reason (including, under certain
circumstances, following a change of control) prior to the end
of the term of the employment agreement, or if Mr. Stone
receives a notice of non-renewal of the employment term by us,
Mr. Stone will be entitled to receive (1) an amount
equal to 200% of his base salary and 200% of his target annual
bonus, (2) vesting acceleration with respect to 50% of his
then unvested options and shares of restricted stock, and
(3) three years of coverage under SS&Cs medical,
dental and vision benefit plans. In the event of
Mr. Stones death or a termination of
Mr. Stones employment due to any disability that
renders Mr. Stone unable to perform his duties under the
agreement for six consecutive months, Mr. Stone or his
representative or heirs, as applicable, will be entitled to
receive (1) vesting acceleration with respect to 50% of his
then unvested options and shares of restricted stock, and
(2) a pro-rated amount of his target annual bonus. In the
event payments to Mr. Stone under his employment agreement
(or the management agreement entered into in connection with the
Transaction) cause Mr. Stone to incur a 20% excise tax
under Section 4999 of the Internal Revenue Code,
Mr. Stone will be entitled to an additional payment
sufficient to cover such excise tax and any taxes associated
with such payments; and
Certain restrictive covenants, including a non-competition
covenant pursuant to which Mr. Stone will be prohibited
from competing with SS&C and its affiliates during his
employment and for a period equal to the later of (1) four
years following the effective time of the merger, in the case of
a termination by us for cause or a resignation by Mr. Stone
without good reason, and (2) two years following
Mr. Stones termination of employment for any reason.
86
Table of Contents
the then-outstanding shares of our common stock or the common
stock of SS&C, or
the combined voting power of our then-outstanding voting
securities or the then-outstanding voting securities of
SS&C entitled to vote generally in the election of
directors (in each case, other than any acquisition by us,
Carlyle Partners IV, L.P. (an investment fund affiliated with
Carlyle), Mr. Stone, any employee or group of employees of
ours, or affiliates of any of the foregoing, or by any employee
benefit plan (or related trust) sponsored or maintained by us or
any of our affiliates); or
individuals whose election, or nomination for election by our
stockholders, was approved by at least a majority of the
directors comprising the board of directors on the effective
date of Mr. Stones employment agreement and any
individuals subsequently elected to our board of directors
pursuant to the stockholders agreement or
individuals nominated or designated for election by Carlyle
Partners IV, L.P.
87
Table of Contents
to prescribe, amend and rescind rules and regulations relating
to our 2006 equity incentive plan,
to determine the type or types of awards to be granted under our
2006 equity incentive plan,
to select the persons to whom awards may be granted under our
2006 equity incentive plan,
to grant awards and to determine the terms and conditions of
such awards,
to construe and interpret our 2006 equity incentive plan and
to amend, suspend or terminate our 2006 equity incentive plan.
88
Table of Contents
each option will vest, depending on the classification of the
option as a time option, performance option or superior option,
as follows:
°
Time options will vest as to 25% of the number of shares
underlying the option on a date certain (November 23, 2006
for the first tranche of options awarded under the plan in
August 2006, but generally the first anniversary of either the
date of grant or the start date for a new employee) and will
continue to vest as to 1/36 of the number of shares underlying
the option on the day of the month of the date of grant each
month thereafter until such options are fully vested. Time
options will become fully vested and exercisable immediately
prior to the effective date of a liquidity event as defined in
the stock option agreement.
°
A certain percentage of the performance options will vest based
on the administrators determination as to whether our
EBIDTA for each fiscal year 2006 through 2010 (2007 through 2011
for options awarded in 2007) falls within the targeted
EBITDA range for such year. If our EBITDA is at or above the
high end of the targeted EBITDA range, 100% of the
performance-based option for that year vests. If our EBITDA is
below the targeted EBITDA range, the performance-based option
does not vest, and if our EBITDA is within the targeted EBITDA
range, between 50% and 100% of the performance-based option
vests, based on linear interpolation. As a result of our
boards acceleration of the vesting of the remainder of the
2006 and 2007 performance-based options, 40% of the number of
shares underlying the performance-based options will have vested
as of the closing of this offering. A certain percentage of
performance options will also vest immediately prior to the
effective date of a liquidity event if proceeds from the
liquidity event equal or exceed a certain target.
°
The superior options, which originally vested upon specified
liquidity events, will convert into performance-based options
upon the closing of this offering and will vest based on the
administrators determination as to whether our EBITDA for
each fiscal year 2008 through 2010 (2008 through 2011 for
options awarded in 2007) falls within the targeted EBITDA range
for such year. A certain percentage of performance-based options
will also vest immediately prior to the effective date of a
liquidity event if proceeds from the liquidity event equal or
exceed a certain target.
any portion of an option that is unvested at the time of a
participants termination of service with us will be
forfeited to us; and
any portion of an option that is vested but unexercised at the
time of a participants termination of service with us may
not be exercised after the first to occur of the following:
°
the expiration date of the option, which will be no later than
ten years from the date of grant,
°
90 days following the date of the termination of service
for any reason other than cause, death or disability,
°
the date of the termination of service for cause and
°
twelve months following the termination of service by reason of
the participants death or disability.
89
Table of Contents
to adopt, amend and repeal rules and regulations relating to our
2008 stock incentive plan;
to determine the type or types of awards to be granted under our
2008 stock incentive plan;
to select the persons to whom awards may be granted under our
2008 stock incentive plan;
to grant awards and to determine the terms and conditions of
such awards;
to delegate to one or more of our officers the power to grant
awards under our 2008 stock incentive plan to our employees or
officers (other than executive officers);
to construe and interpret our 2008 stock incentive plan; and
to amend, suspend or terminate our 2008 stock incentive plan,
subject in certain instances to stockholder approval.
90
Table of Contents
each option will vest as to 25% of the number of shares
underlying the option on the first anniversary of the date of
grant and will continue to vest as to an additional 1/36 of the
remaining number of shares underlying the option on the day of
the month of the date of grant each month thereafter until the
fourth anniversary of the date of grant;
options will become fully vested and exercisable immediately
prior to the effective date of a change in control as defined in
the stock option agreement;
any portion of an option that is unvested at the time of a
participants termination of service with us will be
forfeited to us; and
any portion of an option that is vested but unexercised at the
time of a participants termination of service with us may
not be exercised after the first to occur of the following:
°
the expiration date of the option, which will be no later than
ten years from the date of grant,
°
90 days following the date of the termination of service
for any reason other than cause, death or disability,
°
the date of the termination of service for cause, and
°
twelve months following the termination of service by reason of
the participants death or disability.
provide that awards shall be assumed, or substantially
equivalent awards shall be distributed, by the acquiring or
succeeding corporation;
upon written notice to a participant, provide that the
participants unexercised awards will terminate immediately
prior to the consummation of such corporate event unless
exercised by the participant within a specified period following
the date of notice;
provide that outstanding awards shall become exercisable,
realizable or deliverable, or restrictions applicable to an
award shall lapse, in whole or in part prior to or upon such
corporate event;
in the event of a corporate event under the terms of which
holders of our common stock will receive a cash payment for each
share surrendered in connection with the corporate event, make
or provide for a cash payment to participants in exchange for
the termination of all such awards;
provide that, in connection with our liquidation or dissolution,
awards shall convert into the right to receive liquidation
proceedings (net of any applicable exercise price or tax
withholdings); and
any combination of the foregoing.
91
Table of Contents
Equity
Incentive
Plan Awards:
Number of
Number of
Number of
Securities
Securities
Securities
Underlying
Underlying
Underlying
Unexercised
Unexercised
Unexercised
Unearned
Option
Option
Options (#)
Options(#)
Options
Exercise
Expiration
Exercisable
Unexercisable
(#)(3)
Price ($)
Date
562,500
(1)
$
0.98
2/17/2010
562,500
(1)
0.88
5/31/2011
1,125,000
(1)
2.13
4/8/2013
277,320
(2)
255,126
(2)
9.93
8/9/2016
191,692
(3)
340,754
(3)
9.93
8/9/2016
266,223
(4)
9.93
8/9/2016
187,500
(1)
4.76
10/18/2014
281,250
(1)
2.00
2/6/2013
207,990
(2)
191,346
(2)
9.93
8/9/2016
143,767
(3)
255,569
(3)
9.93
8/9/2016
199,668
(4)
9.93
8/9/2016
112,499
(1)
2.21
8/1/2012
103,995
(2)
95,673
(2)
9.93
8/9/2016
71,887
(3)
127,781
(3)
9.93
8/9/2016
99,834
(4)
9.93
8/9/2016
55,957
(1)
2.00
2/6/2013
55,462
(2)
51,026
(2)
9.93
8/9/2016
38,340
(3)
68,148
(3)
9.93
8/9/2016
53,244
(4)
9.93
8/9/2016
(1)
These options were granted under our prior 1998 stock incentive
plan and are fully vested.
92
Table of Contents
(2)
This option is a time-based option awarded under our 2006 equity
incentive plan that vests as to 25% of the number of shares
underlying the option on November 23, 2006 and as to 1/36
of the number of shares underlying the option on the day of the
month of the date of the grant each month thereafter until fully
vested on November 23, 2009. The time-based options become
fully vested and exercisable immediately prior to the effective
date of a liquidity event, as defined in the stock option
agreement.
(3)
This option is a performance-based option awarded under our 2006
equity incentive plan that vests based on the determination by
our board of directors or compensation committee as to whether
our EBITDA for each fiscal year 2006 through 2010 falls within
the targeted EBITDA range for such year. If our EBITDA for a
particular year is at the low end of the targeted EBITDA range,
50% of the performance-based option for that year vests, and if
our EBITDA is at or above the high end of the targeted EBITDA
range, 100% of the performance-based option for that year vests.
If our EBITDA is below the targeted EBITDA range, the
performance-based option does not vest, and if our EBITDA is
within the targeted EBITDA range, between 50% and 100% of the
performance-based option vests, based on linear interpolation.
As a result of our boards acceleration of the vesting of
the remainder of the 2006 and 2007 performance-based options,
40% of the number of shares underlying this performance-based
option will have vested as of the closing of this offering. In
addition, a certain percentage of this option will vest
immediately prior to the effective date of a liquidity event if
proceeds from the liquidity event equal or exceed specified
returns on investments in us made by investment funds affiliated
with Carlyle.
(4)
This option was a superior option at the time of grant and
originally vested upon specified liquidity events. Upon the
closing of this offering, this option converts into a
performance-based option that vests based on the determination
by our board of directors or compensation committee as to
whether our EBITDA for each fiscal year 2008 through 2010 falls
within the targeted EBITDA range for such year. A certain
percentage of this option will also vest immediately prior to
the effective date of a liquidity event if proceeds from the
liquidity event equal or exceed specified returns on investments
in us made by investment funds affiliated with Carlyle.
93
Table of Contents
Without Cause, For
Good Reason
(Including Certain
Payments to
Changes of
For Cause or
William C. Stone
Control) or
Without
Upon Termination
Upon Notice of
Good Reason
Liquidity
Non-Renewal
(1)
Event(2)
Disability
Death
$
1,200,000
(3)
$
$
$
$
900,000
(4)
450,000
(5)
450,000
(5)
(7)
(7)
(7)
37,351
(8)
2,612,318
(9)
$
$
$
$
$
(1)
In the event that Mr. Stones employment is terminated
for cause or without good reason, he will be entitled to unpaid
base salary through the date of the termination, payment of any
annual bonus earned with respect to a completed fiscal year of
SS&C that is unpaid as of the date of termination and any
benefits due to him under any employee benefit plan, policy,
program, arrangement or agreement.
(2)
Liquidity event is defined in our 2006 equity incentive plan.
Time-based options will become fully vested and exercisable
immediately prior to the effective date of a liquidity event.
Performance-based options, including superior options that
convert into performance-based options upon the closing of this
offering, will vest in whole or in part immediately prior to the
effective date of a liquidity event if proceeds from the
liquidity event equal or exceed a certain target.
(3)
Consists of 200% of 2007 base salary payable promptly upon
termination.
(4)
Consists of 200% of 2007 target annual bonus payable promptly
upon termination. The compensation committee did not set a
formal 2007 target annual bonus for Mr. Stone. The figure
used for the 2007 target annual bonus is $450,000, the minimum
annual bonus specified for Mr. Stone in his employment
agreement.
(5)
Consists of a cash payment equal to the amount of
Mr. Stones target annual bonus for 2007, payable
within 30 business days of termination. The compensation
committee did not set a formal 2007 target annual bonus for
Mr. Stone. The figure used for the 2007 target annual bonus
is $450,000, the minimum annual bonus specified for
Mr. Stone in his employment agreement.
(6)
Based upon an exercise price of $9.93 per share and
$ (which represents the
mid-point
of
the range set forth on the cover of this prospectus).
(7)
Vesting acceleration with respect to unvested options to
purchase an aggregate of 431,052 shares of our common
stock, which is equal to 50% of all unvested options held by
Mr. Stone on December 31, 2007.
(8)
Represents three years of coverage under SS&Cs
medical, dental and vision benefit plans.
(9)
In the event that the severance and other benefits provided for
in Mr. Stones employment agreement or otherwise
payable to him in connection with a change in control constitute
parachute payments within the meaning of
Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 and will
be subject to the excise tax imposed by Section 4999 of the
Code, then Mr. Stone shall receive (a) a payment from
us sufficient to pay such excise tax, and (b) an additional
payment from us sufficient to pay the excise tax and federal and
state income taxes arising from the payments made by us to
Mr. Stone pursuant to this sentence.
Table of Contents
Number of Shares
Underlying
Value of Unvested
Unvested Options (#)
Options ($)(1)
646,583
$
323,288
172,418
(1)
The value of unvested options was calculated by multiplying the
number of shares underlying unvested options by
$ (which represents the
mid-point
of
the range set forth on the cover of this prospectus) and then
deducting the aggregate exercise price for these options.
Fees Earned
or Paid in
Cash
Option Awards
Total
($)(1)
($)(2)
($)
$
32,500
$
32,500
(1)
For his service as a director, Mr. Etherington is paid an
annual retainer fee of $25,000 and $2,500 for each board meeting
attended in person. Mr. Etherington was paid an aggregate
of $32,500 for his service as a director in 2007.
(2)
Upon his election to the board of directors in 2006, Mr.
Etherington was granted an option to purchase 18,750 shares
of our common stock at an exercise price per share of $9.93.
Such option was 100% vested on the date of grant.
95
Table of Contents
96
Table of Contents
97
Table of Contents
98
Table of Contents
the related persons interest in the related person
transaction;
the approximate dollar value of the amount involved in the
related person transaction;
the approximate dollar value of the amount of the related
persons interest in the transaction without regard to the
amount of any profit or loss;
whether the transaction was undertaken in the ordinary course of
our business;
whether the terms of the transaction are no less favorable to us
than terms that could have been reached with an unrelated third
party;
the purpose of, and the potential benefits to us of, the
transaction; and
any other information regarding the related person transaction
or the related person in the context of the proposed transaction
that would be material to investors in light of the
circumstances of the particular transaction.
interests arising solely from the related persons position
as an executive officer of another entity (whether or not the
person is also a director of such entity), that is a participant
in the transaction, where (a) the related person and all
other related persons own in the aggregate less than a 10%
equity interest in such entity and (b) the related person
and his or her immediate family members are not involved in the
negotiation of the terms of the transaction and do not receive
any special benefits as a result of the transaction, and
(c) the amount involved in the transaction equals less than
the greater of $200,000 or 5% of the annual gross revenues of
the company receiving payment under the transaction; and
a transaction that is specifically contemplated by provisions of
our charter or bylaws.
99
Table of Contents
each person we know to be the beneficial owner of more than 5%
of the outstanding shares of common stock;
each of our named executive officers;
each of our directors and director nominees;
all of our executive officers and directors as a group; and
each of our other selling stockholders.
Shares Beneficially Owned Prior to the Offering
Shares Beneficially Owned After the Offering
Number
Percent
Shares Offered
Number
Percent
38,355,712
72.2
%
17,448,539
31.2
%
837,149
1.6
%
18,750
*
100
Table of Contents
*
Represents less than one percent of the outstanding shares of
common stock.
(1)
TC Group IV, L.P. is the sole general partner of Carlyle
Partners IV, L.P. and CP IV Coinvestment, L.P., the record
holders of 36,866,782 and 1,488,930 shares of our common
stock, respectively. TC Group IV Managing GP, L.L.C. is the sole
general partner of TC Group IV, L.P. TC Group, L.L.C. is the
sole managing member of TC Group IV Managing GP, L.L.C. TCG
Holdings, L.L.C. is the sole managing member of TC Group, L.L.C.
Accordingly, TC Group IV, L.P., TC Group IV Managing GP, L.L.C.,
TC Group, L.L.C. and TCG Holdings, L.L.C. each may be deemed
owners of shares of our common stock owned of record by each of
Carlyle Partners IV, L.P. and CP IV Coinvestment, L.P. William
E. Conway, Jr., Daniel A. DAniello and David M.
Rubenstein are managing members of TCG Holdings, L.L.C. and, in
such capacity, may be deemed to share beneficial ownership of
shares of our common stock beneficially owned by TCG Holdings,
L.L.C. Such individuals expressly disclaim any such beneficial
ownership. Each of Carlyle Partners IV, L.P. and CP IV
Coinvestment, L.P. may be considered an affiliate or associated
person of a broker-dealer that is not participating in this
offering. Each represents that it acquired its shares in the
ordinary course of business and at the time of purchase had no
agreements or understandings, directly or indirectly, with any
person to distribute the securities. The principal address and
principal offices of TCG Holdings, L.L.C. and certain affiliates
is
c/o The
Carlyle Group, 1001 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Suite 220
South, Washington, D.C.
20004-2505.
(2)
Includes 2,741,197 shares subject to outstanding stock
options exercisable on or within the
60-day
period following December 31, 2007.
(3)
Consists of 837,149 shares subject to outstanding stock
options exercisable on or within the
60-day
period following December 31, 2007.
(4)
Consists of 18,750 shares subject to outstanding stock
options exercisable on or within the
60-day
period following December 31, 2007.
(5)
Does not include 38,355,712 shares of common stock held by
investment funds associated with or designated by The Carlyle
Group. Messrs. Holt, Watts and Newnam are executives of The
Carlyle Group. They disclaim beneficial ownership of the shares
held by investment funds associated with or designated by The
Carlyle Group.
(6)
Consists of 296,714 shares subject to outstanding stock
options exercisable on or within the
60-day
period following December 31, 2007.
(7)
Consists of 154,199 shares subject to outstanding stock
options exercisable on or within the
60-day
period following December 31, 2007.
(8)
Includes 4,048,009 shares subject to outstanding stock
options exercisable on or within the
60-day
period following December 31, 2007.
Table of Contents
102
Table of Contents
liens;
sale-leaseback transactions;
debt;
dividends and other restricted payments;
redemptions and stock repurchases;
consolidations, mergers and acquisitions;
asset dispositions;
investments, loans and advances;
changes in line of business;
103
Table of Contents
changes in fiscal year;
restrictive agreements with subsidiaries;
transactions with affiliates;
amendments or prepayments of subordinated indebtedness; and
speculative hedging agreements.
delivery of financial and other information to the
administrative agent;
notice to the administrative agent upon the occurrence of
certain events of default, litigation and other material events;
conduct of business and maintenance of existence;
payment of material taxes and other governmental charges;
maintenance of properties, licenses and insurance;
access to books and records by the lenders;
compliance with applicable laws and regulations; and
further assurances and maintenance of collateral.
104
Table of Contents
Price
105.8750
%
102.9375
%
100.0
%
incur additional indebtedness;
sell assets, including capital stock of restricted subsidiaries;
agree to payment restrictions affecting SS&Cs
restricted subsidiaries;
pay dividends;
make certain investments;
consolidate, merge, sell or otherwise dispose of all or
substantially all of SS&Cs assets;
enter into transactions with SS&Cs affiliates;
incur liens; and
designate any of SS&Cs subsidiaries as unrestricted
subsidiaries.
105
Table of Contents
106
Table of Contents
107
Table of Contents
108
Table of Contents
Shares Eligible
Shares sold in the offering and shares saleable under
Rule 144 that are not subject to a lock-up
90 Days after Date of Prospectus
Shares saleable under Rules 144 and 701 that are not subject to
a lock-up
180 Days after Date of Prospectus
Lock-up released; shares saleable under Rules 144 and 701
offer, pledge, sell, contract to sell, sell any option or
contract to purchase, purchase any option or contract to sell,
grant any option, right or warrant to purchase, lend or
otherwise transfer or dispose of, directly or indirectly, any
shares of our common stock or any securities convertible into or
exercisable or exchangeable for common stock; or
enter into any swap or other arrangement that transfers to
another, in whole or in part, any of the economic consequences
of ownership of our common stock,
109
Table of Contents
1% of the number of shares of our common stock then outstanding,
which will equal
approximately shares
immediately after this offering; or
the average weekly trading volume in our common stock on the
NASDAQ Global Market during the four calendar weeks preceding
the filing of a notice on Form 144 with respect to such
sale.
110
Table of Contents
an individual who is a citizen or resident of the United States;
a corporation or any other organization taxable as a corporation
for U.S. federal income tax purposes, created or organized
in the United States or under the laws of the United States or
of any state thereof or the District of Columbia;
an estate, the income of which is included in gross income for
U.S. federal income tax purposes regardless of its
source; or
a trust if (1) a U.S. court is able to exercise
primary supervision over the trusts administration and one
or more U.S. persons have the authority to control all of
the trusts substantial decisions or (2) the trust has
a valid election in effect under applicable U.S. Treasury
Regulations to be treated as a U.S. person.
insurance companies;
tax-exempt organizations;
financial institutions;
brokers or dealers in securities;
regulated investment companies;
pension plans;
111
Table of Contents
controlled foreign corporations;
passive foreign investment companies;
owners that hold our common stock as part of a straddle, hedge,
conversion transaction, synthetic security or other integrated
investment; and
certain U.S. expatriates.
112
Table of Contents
the gain is effectively connected with a U.S. trade or
business and, if an applicable income tax treaty so provides, is
attributable to a permanent establishment or a fixed base
maintained by such
non-U.S. holder,
in which case the
non-U.S. holder
generally will be taxed at the graduated U.S. federal
income tax rates applicable to U.S. persons (as defined in
the Code) and, if the
non-U.S. holder
is a foreign corporation, the branch profits tax described above
in Distributions on Our Common Stock also may apply;
the
non-U.S. holder
is a nonresident alien individual who is present in the United
States for 183 days or more in the taxable year of the
disposition and certain other conditions are met, in which case
the
non-U.S. holder
will be subject to a 30% tax (or such lower rate as may be
specified by an applicable income tax treaty between the United
States and such holders country of residence) on the net
gain derived from the disposition, which may be offset by
U.S. source capital losses of the
non-U.S. holder,
if any; or
we are or have been, at any time during the five-year period
preceding such disposition (or the
non-U.S. holders
holding period, if shorter) a U.S. real property
holding corporation unless our common stock is regularly
traded on an established securities market and the
non-U.S. holder
holds no more than 5% of our outstanding common stock, directly
or indirectly during the shorter of the
5-year
period ending on the date of the disposition or the period that
the
non-U.S. holder
held our common stock. If we are determined to be a
U.S. real property holding corporation and the foregoing
exception does not apply, then a purchaser may withhold 10% of
the proceeds payable to a
non-U.S. holder
from a sale of our common stock and the
non-U.S. holder
generally will be taxed on its net gain derived from the
disposition at the graduated U.S. federal income tax rates
applicable to U.S. persons (as defined in the Code).
Generally, a corporation is a U.S. real property holding
corporation only if the fair market value of its U.S. real
property interests equals or exceeds 50% of the sum of the fair
market value of its worldwide real property interests plus its
other assets used or held for use in a trade or business.
Although there can be no assurance, we do not believe that we
are, or have been, a U.S. real property holding
corporation, or that we are likely to become one in the future.
No assurance can be provided that our common stock will be
regularly traded on an established securities market for
purposes of the rules described above.
113
Table of Contents
114
Table of Contents
Number of
Shares
Total
Per Share
No Exercise
Full Exercise
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
115
Table of Contents
offer, pledge, sell, contract to sell, sell any option or
contract to purchase, purchase any option or contract to sell,
grant any option, right or warrant to purchase, lend or
otherwise transfer or dispose of, directly or indirectly, any
shares of our common stock or any securities convertible into or
exercisable or exchangeable for common stock; or
enter into any swap or other arrangement that transfers to
another, in whole or in part, any of the economic consequences
of ownership of our common stock,
the sale of shares to the underwriters;
transactions by any person other than us relating to shares of
common stock or other securities acquired in open market
transactions after the completion of the offering of the shares;
transfers of shares of common stock or any security convertible
into our common stock as a bona fide gift;
transfers to family members or to trusts for the benefit of the
stockholder or family members of the stockholder, in each case,
for estate planning purposes;
distributions of shares of common stock or any security
convertible into or exercisable for common stock to partners,
members or equityholders of the stockholder;
a stockholders entry into a written trading plan designed
to comply with Rule 10b5-1 under the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, provided that no sales are made pursuant to such
trading plan during the restricted period; or
the exercise of an option to purchase shares of common stock
granted under a stock incentive plan or stock purchase plan
described in this prospectus or the acceptance of restricted
stock awards from us and the disposition of shares of restricted
stock to us pursuant to the terms of such plan.
during the last 17 days of the
180-day
restricted period we issue an earnings release or a material
news event relating to us occurs; or
prior to the expiration of the
180-day
restricted period, we announce that we will release earnings
results during the
16-day
period beginning on the last day of the
180-day
restricted period,
116
Table of Contents
117
Table of Contents
the purchaser is entitled under applicable provincial securities
laws to purchase the shares without the benefit of a prospectus
qualified under those securities laws,
where required by law, that the purchaser is purchasing as
principal and not as agent,
118
Table of Contents
the purchaser has reviewed the text above under Resale
Restrictions, and
the purchaser acknowledges and consents to the provision of
specified information concerning its purchase of the shares to
the regulatory authority that by law is entitled to collect the
information.
119
Table of Contents
120
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
F-2
Table of Contents
F-3
Table of Contents
(In thousands, except per share data)
Successor
Predecessor
Period from
Period from
November 23,
January 1, 2005
Year Ended
Year Ended
2005 through
through
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
November 22,
2007
2006
2005
2005
$
27,514
$
22,925
$
3,587
$
20,147
61,910
55,222
3,701
44,064
17,491
19,582
2,520
12,565
141,253
107,740
7,857
67,193
248,168
205,469
17,665
143,969
9,616
9,216
856
2,963
26,038
20,415
1,499
10,393
14,277
12,575
861
7,849
78,951
57,810
4,411
37,799
128,882
100,016
7,627
59,004
119,286
105,453
10,038
84,965
19,701
17,598
1,364
13,134
26,282
23,620
2,071
19,199
24,573
20,366
1,140
11,944
36,912
70,556
61,584
4,575
81,189
48,730
43,869
5,463
3,776
939
388
30
1,031
(45,463
)
(47,427
)
(4,920
)
(2,092
)
1,911
456
258
655
6,117
(2,714
)
831
3,370
(458
)
(3,789
)
2,658
$
6,575
$
1,075
$
831
$
712
$
0.12
$
0.02
$
0.02
$
0.03
53,157
53,093
53,063
23,300
$
0.12
$
0.02
$
0.02
$
0.03
55,953
54,867
54,853
24,478
F-4
Table of Contents
Successor
Predecessor
Period from
November 23,
Period from
2005
January 1,
Year Ended
Year Ended
through
2005
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
through
(in thousands)
2007
2006
2005
November 22, 2005
$
6,575
$
1,075
$
831
$
712
35,047
27,128
2,301
9,575
10,979
3,871
(768
)
(15
)
3,177
2,317
2,754
159
82
187
(456
)
(641
)
105
4
(15
)
15
(6,115
)
(10,112
)
(1,107
)
(337
)
336
424
41
945
(6,635
)
2,509
(395
)
(5,442
)
(1,723
)
(2,044
)
(798
)
(1,287
)
7,844
654
(8,286
)
101
(114
)
(801
)
240
10,745
(3,088
)
4,178
34,891
2,790
(247
)
(3
)
(619
)
3,116
1,176
(130
)
(909
)
57,057
30,709
4,915
32,116
(7,717
)
(4,223
)
(276
)
(2,488
)
8
1
15
3
(5,130
)
(13,979
)
(207,919
)
(425
)
(877,000
)
(2,000
)
(88,250
)
190,159
(12,839
)
(18,626
)
(877,261
)
(110,495
)
5,200
17,400
83,000
(42,688
)
(34,518
)
(2,345
)
(8,016
)
663
930
1
96
2,549
89
(10
)
(68
)
(5,584
)
490,000
381,000
(3,718
)
(37,408
)
(16,427
)
868,655
69,161
647
478
26
(446
)
7,457
(3,866
)
(3,665
)
(9,664
)
11,718
15,584
19,249
28,913
$
19,175
$
11,718
$
15,584
$
19,249
$
43,451
$
45,549
$
3,491
$
1,384
$
(1,627
)
$
(635
)
$
407
$
7,441
See Note 10 for a discussion of acquisitions
F-5
Table of Contents
For the Periods January 1, 2005 through
November 22, 2005 (Predecessor) and November 23,
2005
through December 31, 2005 and the Years Ended
December 31, 2006 and 2007 (Successor)
Common Stock
Accumulated
Number
Additional
Other
Total
Total
of Issued
Paid-in
Retained
Comprehensive
Treasury
Stockholders
Comprehensive
Shares
Amount
Capital
Earnings
Income
Stock
Equity
Income
(In thousands, except per share amounts)
31,276
$
313
$
185,032
$
23,029
$
1,140
$
(53,420
)
$
156,094
712
712
$
712
adjustment
7,215
7,215
7,215
investments, net of tax
(654
)
(654
)
(654
)
$
7,273
390
4
2,545
2,549
406
4
10,220
10,224
691
691
(5,584
)
(5,584
)
$0.08 per share
(1,868
)
(1,868
)
exercise of stock options
3,177
3,177
32,072
$
321
$
201,665
$
21,873
$
7,701
$
(59,004
)
$
172,556
53,063
$
531
$
554,434
$
$
$
$
554,965
831
831
$
831
adjustment
1,232
1,232
1,232
interest rate swaps, net of tax
105
105
105
$
2,168
53,063
$
531
$
554,434
$
831
$
1,337
$
$
557,133
1,075
1,075
$
1,075
adjustment
(273
)
(273
)
(273
)
interest rate swaps, net of tax
635
635
635
$
1,437
3,871
3,871
67
1
662
663
33
96
96
(68
)
(68
)
53,163
$
532
$
559,063
$
1,906
$
1,699
$
(68
)
$
563,132
6,575
6,575
$
6,575
adjustment
34,490
34,490
34,490
interest rate swaps, net of tax
(2,574
)
(2,574
)
(2,574
)
$
38,491
expense
10,979
10,979
2
1
1
(10
)
(10
)
53,165
$
532
$
570,043
$
8,481
$
33,615
$
(78
)
$
612,593
F-6
Table of Contents
1.
Organization
Revolving credit facility
$
10,000
$
768,416
275,000
75,153
205,000
173,965
6,000
33,431
381,000
$
1,050,965
173,965
$
1,050,965
F-7
Table of Contents
$
235,088
55,700
197,100
17,200
2,070
806,587
(79,817
)
(75,000
)
(107,963
)
1,050,965
(173,965
)
$
877,000
F-8
Table of Contents
2.
Summary
of Significant Accounting Policies
F-9
Table of Contents
F-10
Table of Contents
F-11
Table of Contents
Predecessor
Period from
January 1
through
November 23,
2005
$
712
31,700
(3,473
)
$
28,939
F-12
Table of Contents
3-5 years
7-10 years
Shorter of lease term or estimated useful life
F-13
Table of Contents
$
820,470
3,303
15
(89
)
36,991
$
860,690
December 31,
2007
2006
$
210,128
$
202,353
59,593
56,454
17,411
17,268
2,272
2,070
289,404
278,145
(55,430
)
(24,260
)
$
233,974
$
253,885
$
30,115
29,365
28,224
26,797
25,073
$
139,574
F-14
Table of Contents
F-15
Table of Contents
F-16
Table of Contents
Successor
Predecessor
Period from
Period from
Year
Year
November 23
January 1
Ended
Ended
through
through
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
November 22,
2007
2006
2005
2005
53,157
53,093
53,063
23,300
2,796
1,774
1,790
1,178
55,953
54,867
54,853
24,478
3.
Accounts
Receivable
Successor
December 31,
December 31,
2007
2006
$
29,546
$
24,679
11,248
8,686
(1,248
)
(1,670
)
$
39,546
$
31,695
Successor
Predecessor
Period from
Period from
November 23
January 1
Year Ended
Year Ended
through
through
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
November 22,
2007
2006
2005
2005
$
1,670
$
2,092
$
2,057
$
766
336
424
41
945
(823
)
(853
)
(6
)
(280
)
65
7
626
$
1,248
$
1,670
$
2,092
$
2,057
F-17
Table of Contents
4.
Stockholders
Equity
5.
Income
Taxes
Successor
Predecessor
Period from
Period from
November 23
January 1
Year Ended
Year Ended
through
through
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
November 22,
2007
2006
2005
2005
$
(11,417
)
$
(10,670
)
$
(159
)
$
1,650
17,534
7,956
990
1,720
$
6,117
$
(2,714
)
$
831
$
3,370
Successor
Predecessor
Period from
Period from
November 23
January 1
Year Ended
Year Ended
through
through
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
November 22,
2007
2006
2005
2005
$
460
$
1,168
$
334
$
(61
)
4,406
3,556
467
2,002
99
75
90
371
(6,262
)
(6,116
)
(575
)
234
441
(2,776
)
(258
)
(92
)
398
304
(58
)
204
$
(458
)
$
(3,789
)
$
$
2,658
F-18
Table of Contents
Successor
Predecessor
Period from
Period from
November 23
January 1
Year Ended
Year Ended
through
through
December 31,
December 31,
December 31,
November 22,
2007
2006
2005
2005
$
2,141
$
(949
)
$
290
$
1,180
321
248
21
373
(175
)
(1,883
)
(1,905
)
(303
)
(390
)
(1,536
)
(1,228
)
1,516
646
(147
)
45
(8
)
154
$
(458
)
$
(3,789
)
$
$
2,658
F-19
Table of Contents
Successor
2007
2006
Deferred
Deferred
Deferred
Deferred
Tax
Tax
Tax
Tax
Assets
Liabilities
Assets
Liabilities
$
6,606
$
$
8,688
$
4,418
1,161
1,658
2,053
985
726
887
890
548
2,860
299
287
293
844
3,808
6,267
5,440
5,931
5,616
2,612
60,192
65,201
15,694
75,056
16,665
80,855
(5,116
)
(5,712
)
$
10,578
$
75,056
$
10,953
$
80,855
F-20
Table of Contents
$
5,266
452
739
$
6,457
6.
Debt and
Derivative Instruments
Successor
2007
2006
$
$
3,000
238,009
263,929
205,000
205,000
443,009
471,929
(2,429
)
(5,694
)
$
440,580
$
466,235
F-21
Table of Contents
(A)
Senior
Credit Facilities
F-22
Table of Contents
(B)
11
3
/
4
% Senior
Subordinated Notes due 2013
F-23
Table of Contents
Successor
$
2,429
2,429
2,429
2,429
228,293
205,000
$
443,009
7.
Leases
Year Ending December 31,
$
7,665
7,363
7,366
6,443
5,985
10,854
$
45,676
F-24
Table of Contents
Year Ending December 31,
$
1,320
1,181
1,195
1,195
1,195
1,393
$
7,479
8.
Defined
Contribution Plans
9.
Stock
Option and Purchase Plans
F-25
Table of Contents
F-26
Table of Contents
Time-based Awards
Performance-based Awards
2007
2006
2007
2006
4.0
4.0
4.5
4.5
45.85
%
45.85
%
45.85
%
45.85
%
4.57
%
4.86
%
4.57
%
4.86
%
0
%
0
%
0
%
0
%
Successor
2007
2006
$
257
$
100
343
124
2,452
785
3,052
1,009
1,803
647
1,146
425
4,978
1,790
7,927
2,862
$
10,979
$
3,871
F-27
Table of Contents
Shares Under
Weighted Average
Option
Exercise Price
3,633,501
$
2.26
8,822,482
9.93
(321,637
)
9.93
(33,510
)
2.85
12,100,836
7.65
326,250
11.47
(270,375
)
9.85
(1,687
)
0.98
12,155,024
7.70
Outstanding Vested Options Currently Exercisable
Outstanding Options Expected to Vest
Weighted-
Weighted-
Aggregate
Average
Aggregate
Average
Shares
Weighted-
Intrinsic
Remaining
Shares
Weighted-
Intrinsic
Remaining
Under
Average
Value
Contractual
Under
Average
Value
Contractual
Option
Exercise Price
(In thousands)
Term (years)
Option
Exercise Price
(In thousands)
Term (years)
6,531,255
$
5.71
$
48,821
6.3
1,711,893
$
10.05
$
5,371
8.7
F-28
Table of Contents
Shares Under
Weighted Average
Option
Exercise Price
2,379,462
$
7.56
137,200
26.99
(25,213
)
16.92
(1,522,515
)
8.59
(968,934
)
8.48
(1)
Includes 1,132,676 options with a weighted-average exercise
price of $9.29 that were cashed out in connection with the
Transaction, with the same economic effect as an exercise and
sale for the Transaction consideration.
10.
Acquisitions
F-29
Table of Contents
Northport
Zoologic
Cogent
$
708
$
505
$
1,019
425
60
1,500
500
4,500
3,303
2,535
9,328
(350
)
(1,163
)
(756
)
(300
)
(1,755
)
(31
)
(150
)
(142
)
$
5,130
$
2,712
$
11,894
F-30
Table of Contents
F-31
Table of Contents
OIS
MarginMan
FI
FMC
EisnerFast
Achievement
$
2,474
$
105
$
815
$
16,223
$
1,089
$
3
5,275
1,447
1,306
9,683
210
4,000
2,266
2,078
37,103
8,587
230
76
138
814
12,328
2,303
9,829
113,560
17,106
350
(199
)
(13,835
)
(307
)
(516
)
(3,388
)
(11,633
)
(1,449
)
(91
)
$
24,000
$
5,681
$
10,579
$
151,915
$
25,333
$
472
F-32
Table of Contents
Period from
Period from
November 23
January 1
through
through
December 31,
November 22,
2007
2006
2005
2005
$
248,854
$
211,354
$
18,506
$
181,332
6,596
1,777
902
3,613
$
0.12
$
0.03
$
0.02
$
0.15
$
0.12
$
0.03
$
0.02
$
0.15
11.
Related
Party Transactions
12.
Commitments
and Contingencies
F-33
Table of Contents
13.
Product
and Geographic Sales Information
F-34
Table of Contents
Successor
Predecessor
Period from
Period from
November 23,
January 1,
2005 through
2005 through
December 31,
November 22,
2007
2006
2005
2005
$
147,104
$
122,341
$
10,261
$
91,542
40,892
35,924
2,572
18,406
4,672
2,850
370
3,163
49,612
40,150
4,151
27,737
5,888
4,204
311
3,121
$
248,168
$
205,469
$
17,665
$
143,969
2007
2006
$
20,702
$
20,814
4,580
5,057
134
85
523
425
124
125
$
26,063
$
26,506
Successor
Predecessor
Period from
Period from
November 23,
January 1,
2005 through
2005 through
December 31,
November 22,
2007
2006
2005
2005
$
192,617
$
152,094
$
12,883
$
105,081
29,341
27,686
2,458
21,143
8,919
9,446
625
8,521
5,120
5,296
790
3,499
5,514
5,983
569
5,192
4,498
4,083
340
533
2,159
881
$
248,168
$
205,469
$
17,665
$
143,969
14.
Subsequent
Events
F-35
Table of Contents
the vesting of the remaining 2006 and 2007 performance-based
options that did not otherwise vest during 2007;
the conversion of all superior options granted under the 2006
Equity Incentive Plan into performance-based options, with
one-third of the options vesting in each of 2008, 2009 and 2010
based upon the Companys EBITDA for these years falling
within designated EBITDA target ranges;
the elimination of the annual EBITDA targets originally
established for 2009 through 2011, with new target ranges to be
established by the Companys board annually; and
a modification to the performance-based options such that any
performance-based options that do not vest in any given year as
a result of not attaining that years EBITDA target range,
shall vest based upon the Companys EBITDA for the
following year falling within the targeted range for the
following year.
15.
Selected
Quarterly Financial Data (Unaudited)
First
Second
Third
Fourth
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
(In thousands)
$
55,914
$
60,328
$
63,483
$
68,443
26,472
28,020
31,114
33,680
11,047
9,598
13,902
14,183
(173
)
(1,059
)
2,221
5,586
First
Second
Third
Fourth
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
Quarter
(In thousands)
$
48,365
$
50,655
$
52,449
$
54,000
25,069
26,150
26,641
27,593
11,427
11,340
10,579
10,523
(226
)
1,787
359
(845
)
F-36
Table of Contents
SS&C TECHNOLOGIES HOLDINGS, INC.
PARENT COMPANY BALANCE SHEETS
F-37
Table of Contents
Period from
November 23,
Year Ended
Year Ended
2005 through
December 31, 2007
December 31, 2006
December 31, 2005
(In thousands)
$
$
$
6,575
1,075
831
$
6,575
$
1,075
$
831
F-38
Table of Contents
Period from
November 23,
Year Ended
Year Ended
2005 through
(In thousands)
December 31, 2007
December 31, 2006
December 31, 2005
$
6,575
$
1,075
$
831
(6,575
)
(1,075
)
(831
)
(381,000
)
(381,000
)
381,000
381,000
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
$
F-39
Table of Contents
PARENT COMPANY STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN STOCKHOLDERS
EQUITY
For the Period November 23, 2005 through December 31,
2005 and the
Years Ended December 31, 2006 and 2007
Common Stock
Accumulated
Number
Additional
Other
Total
Total
of Issued
Paid-in
Retained
Comprehensive
Treasury
Stockholders
Comprehensive
Shares
Amount
Capital
Earnings
Income
Stock
Equity
Income
53,063
$
531
$
554,434
$
$
$
$
554,965
831
831
$
831
1,232
1,232
1,232
105
105
105
$
2,168
53,063
$
531
$
554,434
$
831
$
1,337
$
$
557,133
1,075
1,075
$
1,075
(273
)
(273
)
(273
)
635
635
635
$
1,437
3,871
3,871
67
1
662
663
33
96
96
(68
)
(68
)
53,163
$
532
$
559,063
$
1,906
$
1,699
$
(68
)
$
563,132
6,575
6,575
$
6,575
34,490
34,490
34,490
(2,574
)
(2,574
)
(2,574
)
$
38,491
10,979
10,979
2
1
1
(10
)
(10
)
53,165
$
532
$
570,043
$
8,481
$
33,615
$
(78
)
$
612,593
F-40
Table of Contents
1.
Background
and Basis of Presentation
2.
Debt
3.
Commitments
and Contingencies
F-41
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Item 13.
Other
Expenses of Issuance and Distribution.
$
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
$
*
*
To be filed by amendment.
Item 14.
Indemnification
of Directors and Officers.
II-1
Table of Contents
Item 15.
Recent
Sales of Unregistered Securities.
(a)
Issuances
of Capital Stock.
II-2
Table of Contents
(b)
Stock
Option Grants.
Item 16.
Exhibits
and Financial Statement Schedules.
1
.1
Form of Underwriting Agreement
2
.1
Acquisition Agreement, dated February 25, 2005, by and between
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and Financial Models Company Inc.
is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to SS&C
Technologies, Inc.s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on
March 2, 2005 (File No. 000-28430)
2
.2
Purchase Agreement, dated February 28, 2005, by and among
SS&C Technologies, Inc., EisnerFast LLC and EHS, LLC is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to SS&C
Technologies, Inc.s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on
March 3, 2005 (File No. 000-28430)
2
.3
Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of July 28, 2005, by and
among the Registrant, Sunshine Merger Corporation and SS&C
Technologies, Inc. is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 2.1 to SS&C Technologies, Inc.s Current
Report on Form 8-K, filed on July 28, 2005 (File No. 000-28430)
2
.4
Amendment No. 1 to Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of
August 25, 2005, by among the Registrant, Sunshine Merger
Corporation and SS&C Technologies, Inc. is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to SS&C Technologies,
Inc.s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on August 30, 2005
(File No. 000-28430)
3
.1
Certificate of Incorporation of the Registrant, as amended
3
.2
Bylaws of the Registrant, as amended
3
.3
Form of Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Registrant
(to be effective upon the closing of this offering)
3
.4
Form of Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Registrant (to be
effective upon the closing of this offering)
4
.1
Indenture, dated as of November 23, 2005, among Sunshine
Acquisition II, Inc., SS&C Technologies, Inc., the
Guarantors named on the signature pages thereto, and Wells Fargo
Bank, National Association, as Trustee, relating to the
11
3
/
4
% Senior
Subordinated Notes due 2013, including the form of
11
3
/
4
% Senior
Subordinated Note due 2013, is incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 4.1 to SS&C Technologies, Incs
Registration Statement on Form S-4, as amended (File No.
333-135139) (the Form S-4)
II-3
Table of Contents
4
.2
First Supplemental Indenture, dated as of April 27, 2006, among
Cogent Management Inc., SS&C Technologies, Inc. and Wells
Fargo Bank, National Association, as Trustee, relating to the
11
3
/
4
% Senior
Subordinated Notes due 2013, is incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 4.2 to the Form S-4
4
.3
Guarantee of
11
3
/
4
% Senior
Subordinated Notes due 2013 by Financial Models Company Ltd.,
Financial Models Holdings Inc., SS&C Fund Administration
Services LLC, OMR Systems Corporation and Open Information
Systems, Inc. is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 4.3
to the Form S-4
4
.4
Guarantee of
11
3
/
4
% Senior
Subordinated Notes due 2013 by Cogent Management Inc. is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 4.4 to the Form S-4
4
.5
Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005,
among Sunshine Acquisition II, Inc., SS&C Technologies,
Inc. and the Guarantors named therein, as Issuers, and Wachovia
Capital Markets, LLC, J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. and Banc
of America Securities LLC, as Initial Purchasers, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 4.5 to the Form S-4
4
.6
Purchase Agreement, dated as of November 17, 2005, between
Sunshine Acquisition II, Inc. and the Initial Purchasers named
in Schedule I thereto is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 4.6 to the Form S-4
4
.7
Joinder Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, executed by
SS&C Technologies, Inc., Financial Models Company Ltd.,
Financial Models Holdings Inc., SS&C Fund Administration
Services LLC, OMR Systems Corporation and Open Information
Systems, Inc. is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 4.7
to the Form S-4
4
.8
Joinder Agreement, dated as of April 27, 2006, executed by
Cogent Management Inc. is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 4.8 to the Form S-4
4
.9*
Specimen certificate evidencing shares of common stock
5
.1**
Opinion of Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP
10
.1
Credit Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, among Sunshine
Acquisition II, Inc., SS&C Technologies, Inc., SS&C
Technologies Canada Corp., the several lenders from time to time
parties thereto, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as Administrative
Agent, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., Toronto Branch, as Canadian
Administrative Agent, Wachovia Bank, National Association, as
Syndication Agent, and Bank of America, N.A., as Documentation
Agent, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to
the Form S-4
10
.2
Guarantee and Collateral Agreement, dated as of November 23,
2005, made by the Registrant, Sunshine Acquisition II, Inc.,
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and certain of its subsidiaries in
favor of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as Administrative Agent, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Form S-4
10
.3
CDN Guarantee and Collateral Agreement, dated as of November 23,
2005, made by SS&C Technologies Canada Corp. and 3105198
Nova Scotia Company in favor of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.,
Toronto Branch, as Canadian Administrative Agent, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the Form S-4
10
.4
Assumption Agreement, dated as of April 27, 2006, made by Cogent
Management Inc., in favor of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as
Administrative Agent, is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10.4 to the Form S-4
10
.5
Stockholders Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, by and
among the Registrant, Carlyle Partners IV, L.P., CP IV
Coinvestment, L.P., William C. Stone and Other Executive
Stockholders (as defined therein) is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 10.5 to the Form S-4
10
.6
Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, by
and among the Registrant, Carlyle Partners IV, L.P., CP IV
Coinvestment, L.P., William C. Stone and Other Executive
Investors (as defined therein) is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 10.6 to the Form S-4
10
.7
Form of Service Provider Stockholders Agreement by and among the
Registrant, Carlyle Partners IV, L.P., CP IV Coinvestment, L.P.
and the Service Provider Stockholders (as defined therein) is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.7 to the Form S-4
10
.8
Management Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, between the
Registrant, William C. Stone and TC Group, L.L.C. is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.8 to the Form S-4
Table of Contents
10
.9
SS&C Technologies, Inc. Management Rights Agreement, dated
as of November 23, 2005, by and among Carlyle Partners IV, L.P.,
CP IV Coinvestment, L.P., the Registrant and SS&C
Technologies, Inc. is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10.9 to the Form S-4
10
.10
1998 Stock Incentive Plan, including form of stock option
agreement, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.10
to the Form S-4
10
.11
1999 Non-Officer Employee Stock Incentive Plan, including form
of stock option agreement, is incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 10.11 to the Form S-4
10
.12
Form of Option Assumption Notice for 1998 Stock Incentive Plan
and 1999 Non-Officer Employee Stock Incentive Plan is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.12 to the Form S-4
10
.13
2006 Equity Incentive Plan is incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 10.1 to SS&C Technologies, Inc.s
Current Report on
Form 8-K,
filed on August 15, 2006 (File
No. 333-135139)
(the August 15, 2006
8-K)
10
.14
Forms of 2006 Equity Incentive Plan Amended and Restated Stock
Option Grant Notice and Amended and Restated Stock Option
Agreement
10
.15
Form of Dividend Equivalent Agreement is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the August 15, 2006
8-K
10
.16
Form of Stock Award Agreement is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the August 15, 2006 8-K
10
.17
Employment Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, by and
between William C. Stone and the Registrant is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 10.13 to the Form S-4
10
.18
Description of Executive Officer Compensation Arrangements is
incorporated herein by reference to Item 5.02 of SS&C
Technologies, Inc.s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on
March 18, 2008 (File No. 333-135139)
10
.19
Lease Agreement, dated September 23, 1997, by and between
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and Monarch Life Insurance Company,
as amended by First Amendment to Lease dated as of November 18,
1997, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.15 to
SS&C Technologies, Inc.s Annual Report on Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 1997 (File No. 000-28430)
10
.20
Second Amendment to Lease, dated as of April 1999, between
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and New Boston Lamberton Limited
Partnership is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.12
to SS&C Technologies, Inc.s Annual Report on Form
10-K for the year ended December 31, 2004 (File No. 000-28430)
(the 2004 10-K)
10
.21
Third Amendment to Lease, effective as of July 1, 1999, between
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and New Boston Lamberton
Limited Partnership is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10.13 to the 2004 10-K
10
.22
Fourth Amendment to Lease, effective as of June 7, 2005, between
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and New Boston Lamberton Limited
Partnership, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.5
to SS&C Technologies, Inc.s Quarterly Report on Form
10-Q for the quarterly period ended June 30, 2005 (File No.
000-28430) (the Q2 2005 10-Q)
10
.23
First Amendment, dated as of March 6, 2007, to the Credit
Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, among SS&C
Technologies, Inc., SS&C Technologies Canada Corp., as CDN
Borrower, the several banks and other financial institutions or
entities from time to time parties to the Credit Agreement as
lenders, Wachovia Bank, National Association, as Syndication
Agent, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as administrative agent and
JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., Toronto Branch, as Canadian
Administrative Agent, is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10.1 to SS&C Technologies, Inc.s Current
Report on Form 8-K, filed on March 9, 2007 (File No. 333-135139)
10
.24
Lease Agreement, dated January 6, 1998, by and between Financial
Models Company Inc. and Polaris Realty (Canada) Limited, as
amended by First Amendment of Lease, dated as of June 24,
1998, and as amended by Second Lease Amending Agreement, dated
as of November 13, 1998, is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10.6 to the Q2 2005 10-Q
10
.25*
Fifth Amendment to Lease, dated as of November 1, 2006, by and
between SS&C Technologies, Inc. and New Boston Lamberton
Limited Partnership
Table of Contents
10
.26
2008 Stock Incentive Plan
10
.27
Form of 2008 Stock Incentive Plan Stock Option Grant Notice and
Stock Option Agreement
10
.28
Amendment No. 1, dated April 22, 2008, to the
Stockholders Agreement dated as of November 23, 2005, by
and among the Registrant, Carlyle Partners IV, L.P., CP IV
Coinvestment, L.P. and William C. Stone
10
.29
Amendment No. 1, dated April 22, 2008, to the Service
Provider Stockholders Agreement dated as of November 23,
2005, by and among the Registrant, Carlyle Partners IV, L.P. and
CP IV Coinvestment, L.P.
10
.30
Amendment No. 1, dated April 22, 2008, to the
Management Agreement dated as of November 23, 2005, by and
among the Registrant, William C. Stone and TC Group, L.L.C.
21
Subsidiaries of the Registrant
23
.1**
Consent of Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP (included
in Exhibit 5.1)
23
.2
Consents of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
24
*
Powers of Attorney (included in the signature pages to this
registration statement)
99
.1*
Consent of Kenneth Daly
*
Previously filed
**
To be filed by amendment.
The Registrant hereby agrees to furnish supplementally a copy of
any omitted schedules to this agreement to the Securities and
Exchange Commission upon its request.
Item 17.
Undertakings.
Table of Contents
By:
Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer
(Principal Executive Officer)
April 24, 2008
Senior Vice President and Chief
Financial Officer
(Principal Financial and Accounting Officer)
April 24, 2008
Director
April 24, 2008
Director
April 24, 2008
Director
April 24, 2008
Director
April 24, 2008
Director
April 24, 2008
* By:
/s/ Patrick J. Pedonti
II-7
Table of Contents
1
.1
Form of Underwriting Agreement
2
.1
Acquisition Agreement, dated February 25, 2005, by and between
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and Financial Models Company Inc.
is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to SS&C
Technologies, Inc.s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on
March 2, 2005 (File No. 000-28430)
2
.2
Purchase Agreement, dated February 28, 2005, by and among
SS&C Technologies, Inc., EisnerFast LLC and EHS, LLC is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to SS&C
Technologies, Inc.s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on
March 3, 2005 (File No. 000-28430)
2
.3
Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of July 28, 2005, by and
among the Registrant, Sunshine Merger Corporation and SS&C
Technologies, Inc. is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 2.1 to SS&C Technologies, Inc.s Current
Report on Form 8-K, filed on July 28, 2005 (File No. 000-28430)
2
.4
Amendment No. 1 to Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of
August 25, 2005, by among the Registrant, Sunshine Merger
Corporation and SS&C Technologies, Inc. is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to SS&C Technologies,
Inc.s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on August 30, 2005
(File No. 000-28430)
3
.1
Certificate of Incorporation of the Registrant, as amended
3
.2
Bylaws of the Registrant, as amended
3
.3
Form of Restated Certificate of Incorporation of the Registrant
(to be effective upon the closing of this offering)
3
.4
Form of Amended and Restated Bylaws of the Registrant (to be
effective upon the closing of this offering)
4
.1
Indenture, dated as of November 23, 2005, among Sunshine
Acquisition II, Inc., SS&C Technologies, Inc., the
Guarantors named on the signature pages thereto, and Wells Fargo
Bank, National Association, as Trustee, relating to the
11
3
/
4
% Senior
Subordinated Notes due 2013, including the form of
11
3
/
4
% Senior
Subordinated Note due 2013, is incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 4.1 to SS&C Technologies, Incs
Registration Statement on Form S-4, as amended (File No.
333-135139) (the Form S-4)
4
.2
First Supplemental Indenture, dated as of April 27, 2006, among
Cogent Management Inc., SS&C Technologies, Inc. and Wells
Fargo Bank, National Association, as Trustee, relating to the
11
3
/
4
% Senior
Subordinated Notes due 2013, is incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 4.2 to the Form S-4
4
.3
Guarantee of
11
3
/
4
% Senior
Subordinated Notes due 2013 by Financial Models Company Ltd.,
Financial Models Holdings Inc., SS&C Fund Administration
Services LLC, OMR Systems Corporation and Open Information
Systems, Inc. is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 4.3
to the Form S-4
4
.4
Guarantee of
11
3
/
4
% Senior
Subordinated Notes due 2013 by Cogent Management Inc. is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 4.4 to the Form S-4
4
.5
Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005,
among Sunshine Acquisition II, Inc., SS&C Technologies,
Inc. and the Guarantors named therein, as Issuers, and Wachovia
Capital Markets, LLC, J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. and Banc
of America Securities LLC, as Initial Purchasers, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 4.5 to the Form S-4
4
.6
Purchase Agreement, dated as of November 17, 2005, between
Sunshine Acquisition II, Inc. and the Initial Purchasers named
in Schedule I thereto is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 4.6 to the Form S-4
4
.7
Joinder Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, executed by
SS&C Technologies, Inc., Financial Models Company Ltd.,
Financial Models Holdings Inc., SS&C Fund Administration
Services LLC, OMR Systems Corporation and Open Information
Systems, Inc. is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 4.7
to the Form S-4
4
.8
Joinder Agreement, dated as of April 27, 2006, executed by
Cogent Management Inc. is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 4.8 to the Form S-4
4
.9*
Specimen certificate evidencing shares of common stock
5
.1**
Opinion of Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP
Table of Contents
10
.1
Credit Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, among Sunshine
Acquisition II, Inc., SS&C Technologies, Inc., SS&C
Technologies Canada Corp., the several lenders from time to time
parties thereto, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as Administrative
Agent, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., Toronto Branch, as Canadian
Administrative Agent, Wachovia Bank, National Association, as
Syndication Agent, and Bank of America, N.A., as Documentation
Agent, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to
the Form S-4
10
.2
Guarantee and Collateral Agreement, dated as of November 23,
2005, made by the Registrant, Sunshine Acquisition II, Inc.,
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and certain of its subsidiaries in
favor of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as Administrative Agent, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Form S-4
10
.3
CDN Guarantee and Collateral Agreement, dated as of November 23,
2005, made by SS&C Technologies Canada Corp. and 3105198
Nova Scotia Company in favor of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.,
Toronto Branch, as Canadian Administrative Agent, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the Form S-4
10
.4
Assumption Agreement, dated as of April 27, 2006, made by Cogent
Management Inc., in favor of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as
Administrative Agent, is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10.4 to the Form S-4
10
.5
Stockholders Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, by and
among the Registrant, Carlyle Partners IV, L.P., CP IV
Coinvestment, L.P., William C. Stone and Other Executive
Stockholders (as defined therein) is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 10.5 to the Form S-4
10
.6
Registration Rights Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, by
and among the Registrant, Carlyle Partners IV, L.P., CP IV
Coinvestment, L.P., William C. Stone and Other Executive
Investors (as defined therein) is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 10.6 to the Form S-4
10
.7
Form of Service Provider Stockholders Agreement by and among the
Registrant, Carlyle Partners IV, L.P., CP IV Coinvestment,
L.P. and the Service Provider Stockholders (as defined therein)
is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.7 to the Form
S-4
10
.8
Management Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, between the
Registrant, William C. Stone and TC Group, L.L.C. is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.8 to the Form S-4
10
.9
SS&C Technologies, Inc. Management Rights Agreement, dated
as of November 23, 2005, by and among Carlyle Partners IV, L.P.,
CP IV Coinvestment, L.P., the Registrant and SS&C
Technologies, Inc. is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10.9 to the Form S-4
10
.10
1998 Stock Incentive Plan, including form of stock option
agreement, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.10
to the Form S-4
10
.11
1999 Non-Officer Employee Stock Incentive Plan, including form
of stock option agreement, is incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 10.11 to the Form S-4
10
.12
Form of Option Assumption Notice for 1998 Stock Incentive Plan
and 1999 Non-Officer Employee Stock Incentive Plan is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.12 to the Form S-4
10
.13
2006 Equity Incentive Plan is incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 10.1 to SS&C Technologies, Inc.s
Current Report on
Form 8-K,
filed on August 15, 2006 (File
No. 333-135139)
(the August 15, 2006
8-K)
10
.14
Forms of 2006 Equity Incentive Plan Amended and Restated Stock
Option Grant Notice and Amended and Restated Stock Option
Agreement
10
.15
Form of Dividend Equivalent Agreement is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 10.3 to the August 15, 2006
8-K
10
.16
Form of Stock Award Agreement is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 10.4 to the August 15, 2006 8-K
10
.17
Employment Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, by and
between William C. Stone and the Registrant is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 10.13 to the Form S-4
10
.18
Description of Executive Officer Compensation Arrangements is
incorporated herein by reference to Item 5.02 of SS&C
Technologies, Inc.s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on
March 18, 2008 (File No. 333-135139)
Table of Contents
10
.19
Lease Agreement, dated September 23, 1997, by and between
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and Monarch Life Insurance Company,
as amended by First Amendment to Lease dated as of
November 18, 1997, is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10.15 to SS&C Technologies, Inc.s Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997 (File
No. 000-28430)
10
.20
Second Amendment to Lease, dated as of April 1999, between
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and New Boston Lamberton
Limited Partnership is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10.12 to SS&C Technologies, Inc.s Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2004 (File
No. 000-28430) (the 2004 10-K)
10
.21
Third Amendment to Lease, effective as of July 1, 1999, between
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and New Boston Lamberton Limited
Partnership is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.13
to the 2004 10-K
10
.22
Fourth Amendment to Lease, effective as of June 7, 2005, between
SS&C Technologies, Inc. and New Boston Lamberton Limited
Partnership, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.5
to SS&C Technologies, Inc.s Quarterly Report on Form
10-Q for the quarterly period ended June 30, 2005 (File No.
000-28430) (the Q2 2005 10-Q)
10
.23
First Amendment, dated as of March 6, 2007, to the Credit
Agreement, dated as of November 23, 2005, among SS&C
Technologies, Inc., SS&C Technologies Canada Corp., as CDN
Borrower, the several banks and other financial institutions or
entities from time to time parties to the Credit Agreement as
lenders, Wachovia Bank, National Association, as Syndication
Agent, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as administrative agent and
JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., Toronto Branch, as Canadian
Administrative Agent, is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10.1 to SS&C Technologies, Inc.s Current
Report on Form 8-K, filed on March 9, 2007 (File No. 333-135139)
10
.24
Lease Agreement, dated January 6, 1998, by and between Financial
Models Company Inc. and Polaris Realty (Canada) Limited, as
amended by First Amendment of Lease, dated as of June 24, 1998,
and as amended by Second Lease Amending Agreement, dated as of
November 13, 1998, is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 10.6 to the Q2 2005 10-Q
10
.25*
Fifth Amendment to Lease, dated as of November 1, 2006, by and
between SS&C Technologies, Inc. and New Boston Lamberton
Limited Partnership
10
.26
2008 Stock Incentive Plan
10
.27
Form of 2008 Stock Incentive Plan Stock Option Grant Notice and
Stock Option Agreement
10
.28
Amendment No. 1, dated April 22, 2008, to the
Stockholders Agreement dated as of November 23, 2005, by
and among the Registrant, Carlyle Partners IV, L.P., CP IV
Coinvestment, L.P. and William C. Stone
10
.29
Amendment No. 1, dated April 22, 2008, to the Service
Provider Stockholders Agreement dated as of November 23,
2005, by and among the Registrant, Carlyle Partners IV, L.P. and
CP IV Coinvestment, L.P.
10
.30
Amendment No. 1, dated April 22, 2008, to the
Management Agreement dated as of November 23, 2005, by and
among the Registrant, William C. Stone and TC Group, L.L.C.
21
Subsidiaries of the Registrant
23
.1**
Consent of Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP (included
in Exhibit 5.1)
23
.2
Consents of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
24
*
Powers of Attorney (included in the signature pages to this
registration statement)
99
.1*
Consent of Kenneth Daly
*
Previously filed
**
To be filed by amendment.
The Registrant hereby agrees to furnish supplementally a copy of
any omitted schedules to this agreement to the Securities and
Exchange Commission upon its request.
- 1 -
- 2 -
- 3 -
- 4 -
- 5 -
- 6 -
- 7 -
- 8 -
- 9 -
- 10 -
- 11 -
- 12 -
- 13 -
- 14 -
- 15 -
- 16 -
- 17 -
- 18 -
- 19 -
- 20 -
- 21 -
- 22 -
- 23 -
Very truly yours,
SS&C Technologies Holdings, Inc. |
||||
By: | ||||
Name: | ||||
Title: | ||||
By:
|
|||
|
|
By:
|
||||||||
|
|
|||||||
|
Title: | |||||||
|
||||||||
By: Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC | By: J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. | |||||||
|
||||||||
By:
|
By: | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
Name: | Name: | ||||||
|
Title: | Title: |
Number of | ||
Firm Shares | ||
Selling Stockholder | To Be Sold | |
[
]
|
[ ] | |
Total:
|
[ ] |
I-1
Number of | Number of | |||||||
Firm Shares | Additional Shares | |||||||
Underwriter | To Be Purchased | To Be Purchased | ||||||
Morgan Stanley & Co. Incorporated
|
[ ] | [ ] | ||||||
Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC
|
[ ] | [ ] | ||||||
|
||||||||
J.P. Morgan Securities Inc.
|
[ ] | [ ] | ||||||
|
||||||||
Jefferies & Company, Inc.
|
[ ] | [ ] | ||||||
|
||||||||
Wachovia Capital Markets, LLC
|
[ ] | [ ] | ||||||
|
||||||||
Total:
|
[ ] | [ ] | ||||||
|
II-1
III-1
A-1
A-2
|
Very truly yours, | |||
|
||||
|
|
A-3
|
|
|||
|
||||
|
|
|||
|
||||
|
|
A-4
B-1
(a) | the Registration Statement, as of its effective date, and the Prospectus, as of the date thereof (except for the financial statements, including the notes and schedules thereto, and other financial and accounting data included therein or omitted therefrom, as to which such counsel need not express a view), appear on their face to be appropriately responsive in all material respects to the requirements of the Securities Act and the applicable rules and regulations of the Commission thereunder; |
B-2
(b) | no facts have come to the attention of such counsel that have caused such counsel to believe that (i) the Registration Statement, as of its effective date, contained an untrue statement of a material fact or omitted to state a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein not misleading (except as set forth in the parenthetical in clause (a) above), (ii) the Time of Sale Prospectus, as of the Time of Sale (as defined in such opinion), contained an untrue statement of a material fact or omitted to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements therein, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading (except as set forth in the parenthetical in clause (a) above) or (iii) the Prospectus, as of its date or as of the Closing Date, contained or contains an untrue statement of a material fact or omitted or omits to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements therein, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading (except as set forth in the parenthetical in clause (a) above); | |
(c) | such counsel is not aware of any contract or other document of a character required by the Securities Act and the applicable rules and regulations of the Commission thereunder to be filed as an exhibit to the Registration Statement that is not so filed; and | |
(d) | such counsel is not aware of any action, proceeding or litigation pending, contemplated or threatened against the Company before any court or governmental or administrative agency or body that is required by the Securities Act or the rules and regulations thereunder to be described in the Registration Statement or the Prospectus that is not so described. |
B-3
C-1
2
3
/s/ Eleanor Romanelli | ||||
Eleanor Romanelli | ||||
Incorporator |
4
/s/ Claudius E. Watts IV | ||||
Name: | Claudius E. Watts IV | |||
Title: | President |
/s/ Claudius E. Watts IV | ||||
Name: | Claudius E. Watts IV | |||
Title: | President |
/s/ William C. Stone | ||||
Name: | William C. Stone | |||
Title: | Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer |
/s/ William C. Stone | ||||
Name: | William C. Stone | |||
Title: | Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer | |||
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
- 2 -
- 3 -
- 4 -
- 5 -
- 6 -
- 7 -
- 8 -
- 9 -
SS&C TECHNOLOGIES HOLDINGS, INC. | ||||||
|
||||||
|
By: | |||||
|
||||||
|
William C. Stone | |||||
|
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer |
- 10 -
Page | ||||||||
ARTICLE I | ||||||||
|
||||||||
STOCKHOLDERS | ||||||||
|
1.1 | Place of Meetings | 1 | |||||
|
1.2 | Annual Meeting | 1 | |||||
|
1.3 | Special Meetings | 1 | |||||
|
1.4 | Notice of Meetings | 1 | |||||
|
1.5 | Voting List | 1 | |||||
|
1.6 | Quorum | 2 | |||||
|
1.7 | Adjournments | 2 | |||||
|
1.8 | Voting and Proxies | 2 | |||||
|
1.9 | Action at Meeting | 2 | |||||
|
1.10 | Nomination of Directors | 3 | |||||
|
1.11 | Notice of Business at Annual Meetings | 5 | |||||
|
1.12 | Conduct of Meetings | 7 | |||||
|
1.13 | Stockholder Action by Written Consent | 8 | |||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE II | ||||||||
|
||||||||
DIRECTORS | ||||||||
|
2.1 | General Powers | 9 | |||||
|
2.2 | Number, Election and Qualification | 9 | |||||
|
2.3 | Chairman of the Board; Vice Chairman of the Board | 9 | |||||
|
2.4 | Classes of Directors | 9 | |||||
|
2.5 | Terms of Office | 9 | |||||
|
2.6 | Quorum | 10 | |||||
|
2.7 | Action at Meeting | 10 | |||||
|
2.8 | Removal | 10 | |||||
|
2.9 | Vacancies | 10 | |||||
|
2.10 | Resignation | 10 | |||||
|
2.11 | Regular Meetings | 10 | |||||
|
2.12 | Special Meetings | 10 | |||||
|
2.13 | Notice of Special Meetings | 11 | |||||
|
2.14 | Meetings by Conference Communications Equipment | 11 | |||||
|
2.15 | Action by Consent | 11 | |||||
|
2.16 | Committees | 11 | |||||
|
2.17 | Compensation of Directors | 12 | |||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE III | ||||||||
|
||||||||
OFFICERS | ||||||||
|
3.1 | Titles | 12 | |||||
|
3.2 | Election | 12 |
i
Page | ||||||||
|
3.3 | Qualification | 12 | |||||
|
3.4 | Tenure | 12 | |||||
|
3.5 | Resignation and Removal | 12 | |||||
|
3.6 | Vacancies | 12 | |||||
|
3.7 | President; Chief Executive Officer | 13 | |||||
|
3.8 | Vice Presidents | 13 | |||||
|
3.9 | Secretary and Assistant Secretaries | 13 | |||||
|
3.10 | Treasurer and Assistant Treasurers | 13 | |||||
|
3.11 | Salaries | 14 | |||||
|
3.12 | Delegation of Authority | 14 | |||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE IV | ||||||||
|
||||||||
CAPITAL STOCK | ||||||||
|
4.1 | Issuance of Stock | 14 | |||||
|
4.2 | Stock Certificates; Uncertificated Shares | 14 | |||||
|
4.3 | Transfers | 15 | |||||
|
4.4 | Lost, Stolen or Destroyed Certificates | 15 | |||||
|
4.5 | Record Date | 15 | |||||
|
4.6 | Regulations | 16 | |||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE V | ||||||||
|
||||||||
GENERAL PROVISIONS | ||||||||
|
5.1 | Fiscal Year | 16 | |||||
|
5.2 | Corporate Seal | 16 | |||||
|
5.3 | Waiver of Notice | 16 | |||||
|
5.4 | Voting of Securities | 16 | |||||
|
5.5 | Evidence of Authority | 17 | |||||
|
5.6 | Certificate of Incorporation | 17 | |||||
|
5.7 | Severability | 17 | |||||
|
5.8 | Pronouns | 17 | |||||
|
||||||||
ARTICLE VI | ||||||||
|
||||||||
AMENDMENTS | 17 |
ii
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
Name of Optionee:
|
||||
|
|
|||
|
||||
Total Number of Shares subject to the Option:
|
||||
|
|
|||
|
||||
Exercise Price per Share:
|
$
|
|||
|
||||
Total Exercise Price:
|
$
|
|||
|
||||
Grant Date:
|
||||
|
|
|||
|
||||
Type of Option:
|
Non-Qualified Stock Option | |||
|
||||
Final Expiration Date:
|
[10 years from Grant Date] |
Vesting Schedule:
|
This Option will vest and become exercisable in accordance with the vesting schedule set forth in Article II of the Stock Option Agreement depending on the classification of the Option as follows: |
|
Time Options: | Shares Subject to the Option | ||||
|
||||||
|
Performance Options: | Shares Subject to the Option | ||||
|
||||||
|
Superior Options: | Shares Subject to the Option |
- 2 -
- 3 -
1 | William A. Etherington received an option that was fully-vested as of the grant date. |
- 1 -
- 2 -
- 3 -
- 4 -
- 5 -
- 6 -
- 7 -
- 8 -
- 9 -
- 10 -
Fiscal Year | EBITDA Range | |||
2008
|
To be determined by the Board | |||
|
||||
2009
|
To be determined by the Board | |||
|
||||
2010
|
To be determined by the Board |
- 11 -
Name of Optionee:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Total Number of Shares subject to the Option:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Exercise Price per Share:
|
$ | |
|
||
|
||
Total Exercise Price:
|
$ | |
|
||
|
||
Grant Date:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Type of Option:
|
Non-Qualified Stock Option | |
|
||
Final Expiration Date:
|
[10 years from Grant Date] |
OPTIONEE
|
||
|
||
|
- 2 -
SS&C TECHNOLOGIES HOLDINGS, INC. | ||||
|
||||
By
|
||||
|
|
- 3 -
- 1 -
- 2 -
- 3 -
- 4 -
- 5 -
- 6 -
- 7 -
- 8 -
- 9 -
- 10 -
-2-
-3-
-4-
-5-
-6-
-7-
-8-
-9-
-10-
-11-
-12-
Vesting Schedule:
|
This option will vest and become exercisable in accordance with the vesting schedule set forth in Section 2 of the Stock Option Agreement. |
SS&C TECHNOLOGIES HOLDINGS, INC. | |||
|
|||
By
|
|||
|
|||
|
Title: |
1. | Grant of Option . |
2. | Vesting Schedule . |
3. | Exercise of Option . |
1 | Kenneth Daly will receive a fully vested option effective upon closing of the Companys initial public offering. |
(c) | Expiration of Option . |
4. | Tax Matters . |
-2-
5. | Nontransferability of Option . |
6. | Provisions of the Plan and Stockholders Agreement . |
7. | Definitions . |
-3-
-4-
-5-
-6-
1
2
3
SS&C TECHNOLOGIES HOLDINGS, INC.
|
||||
By: | /s/ William C. Stone | |||
Name: | William C. Stone | |||
Title: |
Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer |
|||
CARLYLE PARTNERS IV, L.P., | ||||||||
a Delaware limited partnership | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group IV, L.P., | ||||||
|
its General Partner | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group IV Managing GP, L.L.C., | ||||||
|
its General Partner | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group, L.L.C., | ||||||
|
its Managing Member | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TCG Holdings, L.L.C., | ||||||
|
its Managing Member | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | /s/ Claudius E. Watts, IV | ||||||
|
||||||||
|
Name: Claudius E. Watts, IV | |||||||
|
Title: Managing Director | |||||||
|
||||||||
CP IV COINVESTMENT, L.P., | ||||||||
a Delaware limited partnership | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group IV, L.P., | ||||||
|
its General Partner | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group IV Managing GP, L.L.C., | ||||||
|
its General Partner | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group, L.L.C., | ||||||
|
its Managing Member |
4
|
By: | TCG Holdings, L.L.C., | ||||||
|
its Managing Member | |||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | /s/ Claudius E. Watts, IV | ||||||
|
||||||||
|
Name: Claudius E. Watts, IV | |||||||
|
Title: Managing Director |
By: | /s/ William C. Stone | |||
William C. Stone | ||||
5
2
SS&C TECHNOLOGIES HOLDINGS, INC. | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | /s/ William C. Stone | ||||||
|
Name: William C. Stone | |||||||
|
Title: | Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer | ||||||
|
||||||||
CARLYLE PARTNERS IV, L.P., | ||||||||
a Delaware limited partnership | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group IV, L.P., | ||||||
its General Partner | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group IV Managing GP, L.L.C., | ||||||
its General Partner | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group, L.L.C., | ||||||
its Managing Member | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TCG Holdings, L.L.C., | ||||||
its Managing Member | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | /s/ Claudius E. Watts, IV | ||||||
|
||||||||
|
Name: Claudius E. Watts, IV | |||||||
|
Title: Managing Director | |||||||
|
||||||||
CP IV COINVESTMENT, L.P., | ||||||||
a Delaware limited partnership | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group IV, L.P., | ||||||
its General Partner | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group IV Managing GP, L.L.C., | ||||||
its General Partner | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | TC Group, L.L.C., | ||||||
its Managing Member |
3
|
By: | TCG Holdings, L.L.C., | ||||||
its Managing Member | ||||||||
|
||||||||
|
By: | /s/ Claudius E. Watts, IV | ||||||
|
||||||||
|
Name: Claudius E. Watts, IV | |||||||
|
Title: Managing Director |
4
1
2
SS&C TECHNOLOGIES HOLDINGS, INC.
|
||||
By: | /s/ William C. Stone | |||
Name: William C. Stone | ||||
Title: |
Chairman of the Board and
Chief Executive Officer |
|||
By: | /s/ Claudius E. Watts, IV | |||
Name: | Claudius E. Watts, IV | |||
Title: | Managing Director | |||
By: | /s/ William C. Stone | |||
William C. Stone | ||||
3
NAME
JURISDICTION OF ORGANIZATION
Delaware
New Jersey
Delaware
New York
New York
New Jersey
California
Connecticut
New York
New Jersey
New York
Rhode Island
Nova Scotia
Nova Scotia
United Kingdom
Netherlands
Barbados
Australia
United Kingdom
Malaysia
Japan
Netherlands
Singapore
United Kingdom
France
Netherlands Antilles
British Virgin Islands
British Virgin Islands
Bahamas
Ireland
April 24, 2008