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Message: Ah Jim, where did you go wrong. I like his last line the best.
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Ah Jim, where did you go wrong. I like his last line the best.
posted on
Mar 11, 2008 03:05PM
C O M P A N Y I N T E R V I E W Patriot Scientific Corporation (PTSC) TWST: What is Patriot Scientific Corporation? Mr. Turley: Patriot Scientific is a high-tech company outside of San Diego that's been around for 20 years. We are a publicly held high-tech company and like most high-tech firms that are 20 years old, we have developed a number of different products, including radar technology, communication equipment and ISDN technology. More recently the company developed a 32-bit microprocessor chip that we sold through the 1990s and in the early part of this decade. The chip was very innovative and sold reasonably well; in fact, we still sell the chip to this day. But something that came out of that chip development is that we were granted a handful of patents on some of the technologies that fit into the chip and, much to our surprise and delight, those patents turned out to be enormously valuable and helpful to us and to the market at large. So, for the last couple of years, since the summer of 2005, we have been offering those patents under license to pretty much every chip and microprocessor company in the world. It's been enormously successful for us and in the span of just two years, we have already licensed 21 companies to our patents and we have a list of literally more than 300 companies still to go. TWST: Give us an idea of the overall platform. Is it relying on the one set of technology or is there additional development going on? Mr. Turley: The patents were granted just a few years ago during the development of our microprocessor chip, and they have many years left to go. The patents expire around 2015, so we've got a long road ahead of us. There is a portfolio of the patents; that is, we license them as a bundle rather than having people pick and choose which of the patents is applicable for their product. We say, "You know what? Just take the whole bundle at once and that way your full product line is covered moving ahead and backward." So we license the portfolio of patents and they apply to pretty much every microprocessor chip made. It's pretty boring to list details of a patent but broadly speaking, they enable technologies to make the chips run faster, which of course is something everybody wants to do. The patents also cover ways to save energy and use less electricity, which, again, is something everybody wants to do. In our analysis, we've discovered that nearly every chip company in the world is making use of this technology and therefore it is an ideal patent licensee. TWST: You are saying risk of obsolescence is not near term? Mr. Turley: No. We are not even halfway through the life of these patents. We are licensing firms at the rate of about one a month; as I said, we've got 21 licensees so far; companies like Intel and AMD took licenses early on. Hewlett-Packard is a licensee. Companies like Casio, Pentax, Fujitsu, Nikon, Lexmark - the list goes on and on. These are big companies that are using Patriot Scientific's technologies in just about every conceivable type of product from computers to digital cameras to photocopiers - it can be almost anything. TWST: What's the drag as far as signing companies? Is it simply balancing your esources against the deals to be made? Are there ways to speed up the process? Does it just have its own timing? Mr. Turley: It's a little bit of both. Although we are really happy with the rate at which we have been signing licenses, of course we prefer it to be faster. With 300 plus companies still to go, I'm going to die an old man before I can sign all of them at this rate. So having said that, we are happy with the rate, but I would prefer it to be quicker. The drag initially was that people just didn't realize that they were using technology. There is fair amount of education involved in showing people that, "gee, you are using this technology, you've put it in your products and they are working very well, but golly, we invented this a few years ago," and we so we offer them an opportunity to purchase the patent portfolio. There is some initial resistance up front simply because people are not aware. We think that awareness is going to pick up and we have some evidence that the license rate is increasing. Now that companies like Sony, AMD, Intel, Hewlett-Packard and the others are taking licenses, it's becoming clear to everybody else that it is something they are going to need to do in order to continue to innovate their own prod- So we suspect that the wheels will start turning a bit more quickly. TWST: What's the financial snapshot of the company today - balance sheet, P&L? What are the strengths? What items are you focused on for improvement? Mr. Turley: The company is doing fantastically well. We just filed our 10-K for the fiscal year 2007. It could hardly be any better. Our top line is about $49 million. That's about double what it was the year before that. The company has no debt to speak of, no debt whatsoever. We bought back outstanding warrants and reduced the overhang. We are immensely profitable, as you might expect, with $49 million in licensing revenue coming in. We have got more than $20 million in cash in the bank that we are ready to deploy to expand the company in the future. And, again, we have every expectation of more licensing revenue coming in for many years. So the revenue, the cash hoard, the shareholder equity, all of that looks like it's going up and to the right in the future. It is looking extremely good for us. TWST: What models, what strategies have you looked at as faras use of that cash? Obviously, the future business may be more dependent on how well you steward as opposed to how well you license. Mr. Turley: True enough, the licensing has been very, very good for us in the last couple of years and the company has even paid out cash dividends, not once, not twice, but three times, which almost never happens for a Pink Sheet company such as ours. We've paid three dividends to our long-time shareholders, which made them extremely happy. Going forward, we may do that again. But more than that, what I'm looking for is to turn that cash hoard into investments. What I would like to see Patriot Scientific do is start developing new products and selling new products into the market, whether that be software, whether that be microprocessor chips again, or whether that be black boxes that go into the industrial, consumer or automotive markets. I think we are going to invest that cash into R&D or acquisitions or some combination of the two, so that we return to being a product company in the next 12 to 15 months. TWST: What historically has been the shareholder base with the company? Has that base undergone any recent changes? Mr. Turley: It hasn't really. We are extremely broad-based, with 16,000 shareholders, none of whom holds more than about 8% of the company. There are no major shareholders. There is nobody with undue influence on the company. It's spread out among retail shareholders, institutional shareholders, private equity firms; it's all across the map. TWST: In your discussions with the investment community, are there any recurring questions or misperceptions? Is the story understood? Mr. Turley: Unfortunately, the story is not very well understood, which is part of my job as the President and chief communicator of the company, to explain the fantastic opportunity we're sitting on. The patents that the company holds are fundamental to pretty much every sort of chip making, and, as I said, many of the largest companies out there have already purchased a license. We've got hundreds to go; it's like holding a patent to water. Everybody needs it, all we need is our share, our recognition; it is something that the company developed that we have a right to license. Obviously, we are very happy to license it. We don't litigate; we don't go around suing people for using the technology. We'd much rather license people in very friendly and open and businesslike way. It's working for us very well. A lot of Patriot Scientific's long-time shareholders get that, but people who are new to the firm don't quite realize what a gold mine the company is sitting on, how fundamental our technology is, how vital our technology is, and the enormous upside that is ahead of us in licensing our technology to electronics companies around the world. TWST: Introduce us to your top-level management team, two or three of your key individuals. Mr. Turley: I'm Chief Executive; I have been on board for the last three months. I succeeded our previous Chief Executive, David Pohl. Our Chief Financial Officer has been on board for a couple of years and he has done a fantastic job of righting the financial ship, as it were. We've gone through Sarbanes-Oxley, Section 404, you name it. We have the most fantastically squeaky-clean balance sheet I have ever seen. If people are interested in it, they can download the 10-K. Again, we have no debt. The financial health of the company never been better and we have our CFO and Controller to thank for that. We have a very active Board of Directors, people who have been with the company for a long time. We have an Audit Committee, and we have technology people. In fact, we just recently appointed a new Board member. Dr. Nick Tredennick from Silicon Valley has joined our Board of Directors and he has a fantastic track record in technology startups and technology investments, and we are really, really pleased to have him on board. With his guidance and the guidance of the rest of Board, we are really looking forward to the next phase in Patriot Scientific's growth. TWST: At this point, what should investors focus on as we track and assess your performance? Are there key metrics or events or combinations to focus on? What should matter to the investor? What matters to you? Mr. Turley: Right now, I think the key thing that investors focus on is new licensing revenue. As I said, we have licensed 21 companies so far. We have 300 still to go and so what everybody watches for is the announcement of new license. Who did we sign today, who can we sign tomorrow? So that's the pipeline, that's the short-term upside. Longer term, we are going to take the money that we received from our licensing and turn that toward acquisitions or R&D or some combination of those, so that we start a second revenue stream. In addition to the licensing revenue, which will continue for many years, we want to start a second revenue stream as a product company. Again, it could be software, it could be services, hardware or it could be microprocessors. We will announce that when we are ready. And then, for the very long term, for our longer-term investors, we have the wonderful combination of both licensing fees from our patent portfolio and the product revenue from our second product line, which puts us in a very strong position to do more acquisitions, to fund our own R&D, to be completely self-sustained, keep the debt off the balance sheet and to watch the Patriot Scientific share price grow and grow TWST: What compels investors today to include Patriot as part of their current portfolios and part of their longer-term investment strategies? Mr. Turley: The number one thing that makes the company exciting as an investment is that it is sitting on a goldmine of fundamental electronic technologies that pretty much every chipmaker in the world needs but doesn't yet have. So that represents fantastic upside for us. If investors need confirmation that the patent portfolio is as valuable as we say, they only have to look at the 21 companies that have already bought them. Sony, Epson, Nikon, AMD, Hewlett Packard, Intel, companies like that. Those companies don't roll over and sign a license for frivolous reasons. They are truly buying into fundamental technology that they use in their product. So that establishes the credibility and value of our patent portfolio. It doesn't take a lot of imagination to see the enormous upside ahead of the company. But, as if that weren't enough, we are going to take the revenue from that patent licensing and build a whole second revenue stream based around a shipping product. We intend to do that either through acquisition or through R&D or some combination of those. And it's going to be soon; it's going to be, I think, in the next 12 to 18 months when we'll show the world what our second product line is. So we'll have really a twopronged approach for building Patriot Scientific for the future. TWST: Does it actually pay to stay public, to go through that expense when you have a plan that can be executed? Mr. Turley: Now that we are public, we intend to stay so. We have been through the Sarbanes- Oxley compliance, we have a fantastic 10-K. We have a great financial team in place. Going public is very difficult. If we weren't public already, I'd certainly think twice about it. But now that we are here and we have this process down cold, I don't see any reason to take the company private. Furthermore, it gives us a little bit of added leverage as we go out on the acquisition trail because if we were to acquire a private firm, we would then offer them a public listing, which may be attractive to them. We have our big war chest but we might also be attractive to potential acquisition targets. I think we have got it pretty well figured out.