Canadian biometric access control provider Bioscrypt Inc. announced Monday that it has signed an agreement to be acquired by Stamford, Conn..-based L-1 Identity Solutions Inc. in a stock-for-stock transaction worth about $44 million.
Under the definitive agreement, L-1 plans to buy the Markham, Ont.-based Bioscrypt for 55 cents a share; which stands at a 53 per cent premium over last Fridayโs closing price. Rob Douglas, Bioscryptโs chief executive officer, sees the deal as a positive one for his company and feels its expertise in the biometrics space led L-1 to make the purchase.
Before acquiring Bioscryptโs shares, L-1 still needs approval from two-thirds of Bioscryptโs shareholders and the Ontario Superior Court.
โThis is going to take Bioscrypt to the next level and at a very deep level I believe in this initiative,โ Douglas said. โWe looked at our strategic options and all the choices we could have made, but by far, this is the best one to serve all our shareholders, employees, partners and customers. We wish to accelerate profitable growth and this provides a key building block to achieving that.โ
As for any changes at Bioscrypt, Douglas did not rule out the possibility of some job cuts resulting out of the merger.
โAny refinements we make in the business model we would do anyway, because weโre seeking to accelerate profitable growth and weโre currently not profitable,โ Douglas said. โWeโve built a plan on how to refine our business model out into the future and my belief and expectation is that L-1 will continue with those refinements.โ
On the other side of the exchange, L-1 said the need for automated access control for biometric technology โ which describes the use of biological properties, such as fingerprints, retina scans, voice recognition, to identify individuals โ was a key contributor to the deal.
โBioscrypt has established itself as a worldwide leader by creating access control software and hardware solutions that are biometrically enabled,โ Joseph Atick, executive vice-president and chief strategic officer for L-1, said. โFor us, it completes elements to our end-to-end solution. We already have divisions that issue physical credentials and capture the biometric, but we still needed to give customers the ability to utilize those credentials in the physical access space.โ
According to James Quin, senior research analyst at London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group, the move was not surprising, considering the rampant activity in the security space lately.
โThe security market in general has been going through a tremendous amount of consolidation over the last 12 to 24 months and we really donโt see that slackening off at all in the next little while,โ Quin said. โTraditionally, itโs been quite a fractured market with the bigger companies sitting pat on commodity solutions โ letting the little guys really develop specialization capabilities and niche markets โ and then later snapping those smaller companies up. So, this is really just a continuing trend that has been established in the market.โ
And while Quin said that itโs a positive move for any company to grow its portfolio in an established area, he feels the biometrics space still has a way to go in before it becomes the growth area companies like L-1 would like it to be. Despite this, he sees L-1 coming out ahead in the deal when itโs all said and done.