Well done, one of my best students: "Questions Surround Firm That Promises IPO Play
By AARON ELSTEIN THE WALL STREET JOURNAL INTERACTIVE EDITION
With initial public offerings in Internet companies shooting through the stratosphere, individual investors pounced when Sara Hallitex Corp. said it will offer buyers of its stock first crack at IPOs of its majority-owned Internet startups.
Sara Hallitex, a Marina del Rey, Calif., firm that bills itself as an incubator for emerging companies, helped stoke the fire by comparing itself to CMGI Inc. and Safeguard Scientifics Inc., two popular venture-capital firms that set aside a piece of the Internet IPOs they create for their stockholders.
Investors pushed the company's OTC Bulletin Board shares as high as 20 1/8 in April from a low of 1 11/16 after word of the IPO plan made the rounds. But the stock has since retreated to around 7 amid mounting concerns about the company.
Critics on the Internet have raised questions about the credibility of Sara Hallitex and of its chairman, Garrett K. Krause, a 32-year-old Canadian.
Mr. Krause, a former minor-league hockey player, restaurant entrepreneur, sports promoter, and investment banker, was suspended from the securities business in Canada for seven years in 1992 for selling unregistered stock. He also acknowledges paying a stock promoter to push Sara Hallitex. The stock promoter was banned from the securities business in Canada for 18 years in 1996 for stock manipulation.
And that's not all. Financial Stock Marketing Inc., a financial-services public-relations firm, prepared a bullish research report on Sara Hallitex in December without disclosing its close relationship with the firm. Sara Hallitex also has been featured on a stock-promoting Web site (www.stockpicks.com), which it owns but didn't disclose on the site until recently.
Critics have hammered Mr. Krause and Sara Hallitex in message boards on the Silicon Investor (www.techstocks.com) and Raging Bull (www.ragingbull.com) Web sites. Mr. Krause dismisses their criticisms as the work of investors trying to manipulate the company's stock. "I'm pretty sure the people on the boards are being paid by short-sellers," Mr. Krause says. Short sellers are investors who sell borrowed stock hoping to buy it back later at a lower price and pocket the difference.
Mr. Krause insists he's been honest with Sara Hallitex shareholders. He says he didn't tell them of his 1992 suspension in Canada for securities violations because he didn't have to. "There was no form in which I had to say any of that, and, in any case, if people want to find out something about me, they can," he said. "If I've had a DUI or filed for bankruptcy, it's out there on a computer somewhere."
Nevertheless, it's tough for any investor to get an objective view of Sara Hallitex. The company's books haven't been independently audited. Nor is the company required to file disclosure documents with securities regulators about its stock offerings, which it calls an "IPO Dividend Spinoff Program." Sara Hallitex avoids such scrutiny because its shares trade on the OTC Bulletin Board, which has minimal disclosure requirements compared with the Nasdaq Stock Market and the major exchanges.
The National Association of Securities Dealers, which oversees the OTC Bulletin Board, is starting to require companies like Sara Hallitex to disclose basic financial information. Mr. Krause says his firm is preparing an annual report to file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission at the end of this month in anticipation of listing on Nasdaq. In the meantime, Mr. Krause said he plans to hire a brokerage firm to underwrite some of Sara Hallitex's coming spin-offs. "We plan to elevate everything so it's all above-board," he says.
Sara Hallitex first gained the attention of investors in March, when it started issuing press releases comparing itself to CMGI and Safeguard Scientifics, two firms renowned for financing nascent Internet companies. CMGI, of Andover, Mass., finances such well-established e-commerce companies as Lycos Inc. and GeoCities, which was recently acquired by Yahoo! Inc. The past endeavors of Safeguard, of Wayne, Pa., include Novell Inc. and USData Corp. Sara Hallitex ventures include, Janus International, which owns a crab-fishing fleet and harvests timber in Brazil. The stock has floundered. It now trades for 1 5/8.
Nevertheless, Sara Hallitex the company has generated excitement with its shift to Internet-related companies and its IPO program. Participants on online message boards seem thrilled to find in Sara Hallitex what appears to be a cheap way into the Internet IPO action. "It might take us a year but CMGI took 10 years to get where they are now," said one writer on Silicon Investor. "I do not need the profit now as I can wait for those dividends."
And there's a lot more than just press releases. There are the bullish research reports commissioned by the company. "Modest investors can participate in potentially explosive projects at ground level," said the report in December by Financial Stock Marketing. "This is your Window to Worldwide Entrepreneurial Ingenuity!"
Financial Stock Marketing was run by Holmes Stoner, Sara Hallitex's own investor-relations director. Mr. Stoner says that he had little to do with the report.
Mr. Stoner also is president of Wilmington Rexford Inc., a primary investor in Sara Hallitex and the companies it finances. Mr. Stoner assumed the reins in the middle of 1996 from Mr. Krause, who founded Wilmington Rexford. Mr. Krause says he is no longer affiliated with the company or any of its subsidiaries as an officer.
Meanwhile, regulatory filings show that a company that Mr. Krause says he had a role in creating has registered to sell a big block of Sara Hallitex shares. In June 1998, Future Vest America registered to sell shares of Sara Hallitex that were worth $925,000 at the time.
Nevertheless, investor appetite for Internet-related IPOs is so strong that investors have piled into Sara Hallitex's stock to get shares in the majority-owned Internet firms it is spinning off.
The first Internet spinoff was for a company called SolutionNet International, a software maker. Sara Hallitex pitched the offering by telling investors that SolutionNet's clients include such major corporations as Citibank, a unit of Citigroup Inc. But a spokeswoman for Citibank said the company has no relationship with SolutionNet. Sara Hallitex officials referred questions to V. Suresh, the head of SolutionNet, which is based in Singapore.
Mr. Suresh did not return telephone calls or respond to e-mail messages for this article.
Sara Hallitex's second Internet offering came in May, for an entity the company describes as a "leading Internet incubator," USlab.com. USlab.com owns three Web sites. One is Stockpicks.com, the site that recommended Sara Hallitex shares without disclosing the relationship between the companies. Another site, Xselnet.com (www.xselnet.com), offers nothing but a link to Uslab.com (www.uslab.com). And the third site, Dietadvice.com (www.dietadvice.com), features a newsletter on nutrition, plus links to chiropractors, lawyers, a travel agency and a link back to Stockpicks.com.
Some message board writers weren't pleased about the undisclosed Sara Hallitex affiliations and Mr. Krause's past securities-law violations. Floyd Schneider, a New Jersey mortgage banker, who goes by the name "Truthseeker" on the Raging Bull message boards, criticized Sara Hallitex so strongly that Mr. Krause posted a response on Sara Hallitex's Web site. He rebutted the criticism and dismissed it as part of smear campaign orchestrated by short-sellers.
Some investors, also have complained that they didn't realize the company was selling restricted shares they are mandated to hold for at least one year. Mr. Krause said the shares are restricted because Sara Hallitex shareholders are considered insiders and the dividends are a result of Sara passing its inside position to shareholders. "All has been disclosed," he said.
Mr. Krause's "IPO Dividend Spinoff Program" works like this: Investors receive restricted stock and warrants in a Sara Hallitex spinoff based on how many Sara Hallitex shares they own. Mr. Krause requires people to purchase Sara Hallitex's stock by a certain date to acquire shares in the spinoff. It is similar to Safeguard Scientifics's program, but there are key differences. For example, after Safeguard Scientifics announces a spinoff, it files a prospectus with the SEC that all potential shareholders can review before investing. Sara Hallitex makes no such filings for its spinoffs. And holders of Safeguard's spinoffs can buy or sell their shares whenever they wish. Holders of Sara Hallitex's spinoffs have no choice but to hold their shares for at least a year.
Steven Wallman, a former SEC commissioner, said that it is up to company officials to ensure that investors understand exactly what they are getting when they distribute shares to stockholders. Otherwise, he said, they "are potentially misleading their investors" which violates securities law. The SEC declined to comment on Sara Hallitex.
Harvey Pitt, a partner at the law firm Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson and former general counsel at the SEC, said calling a restricted-share offering for an IPO "troublesome," because the term IPO suggests the shares can be freely bought and sold. "Perhaps they would argue that 'IPO' means 'initial private offering,' " he said.
As for the future, Mr. Krause said he has up to 10 more transactions in the works, and his first spinoff using an outside underwriter will be for a new venture-capital unit called Saraonline.com. "It will be a 100% Internet financing company," Mr. Krause said. "You know, a la CMGI." |