By Keith Regan E-Commerce Times
06/18/01 10:30 AM PT
Egghead stock has traded below the
$1 level for several weeks, placing it in
danger of being kicked off the Nasdaq exchange.
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Software e-tailer Egghead.com
(Nasdaq: EGGS) said Monday it will conduct a reverse
stock split designed to boost the profile of its lagging
stock, keep it trading on the Nasdaq exchange and
help the company raise additional cash in the future.
Menlo Park, California-based Egghead, which
began life as a brick-and-mortar software chain
but is now a pure-play Web retailer, said it will trade
one new share of stock for between 5 and 10 existing shares.
"This action is part of a strategic plan to enhance
our appeal to a wider audience of potential investors
and help us attract additional capital," Egghead president and chief executive officer
Jeff Sheahan said. "In addition,
we believe it will reduce the risk of a potential
Nasdaq delisting."
Egghead has already proven its ability to land
financing in a difficult market. In March, shortly after
paring its workforce by 12 percent, Egghead
received a US$20 million line of credit
from IBM (NYSE: IBM) Global Financial.
At the time, company executives said the money
should be enough to last the software e-tailer to
profitability. However, Egghead said Monday that
it has hired Roth Capital Partners, LLC to help it
locate additional capital from the private equity markets.
Delisting Looms?
Egghead stock has traded below the
US$1 level for several weeks, placing it in
danger of being kicked off the Nasdaq exchange.
Analysts note that Nasdaq delisting has spelled
doom for several e-tailers, because it makes raising large
sums of capital from the public markets nearly impossible.
Currently, Internet e-tailer Buy.com is working
to avoid a delisting
from the Nasdaq. The Aliso Viejo, California-based company
said it has requested a formal hearing to fight the notice
of delisting.
Shift in Focus
Egghead made headlines in 1998 when it
closed its 84 brick-and-mortar retail stores to become
a Web-only business. More recently, the company has shifted its
focus away from selling to consumers. Instead,
Egghead is targeting the small- and mid-sized business
marketplace.
The company has also been reducing its
workforce. In addition to the 77 people
laid off in March, another 178 were
let go in early April.
Egghead has also moved all but its senior executives
to Vancouver, Washington, exiting the
pricey Silicon Valley area, where it had set up
shop to be near the epicenter
of the tech boom and close to venture capital outlets.
Tough Start
The year 2001 got off to a rocky start for Egghead,
which revealed that as many as 3 million credit-card
numbers in its database had been exposed during a
December hack attack. However, Egghead later said that the numbers
exposed were not used fraudulently.
In late May, Egghead sold its remaining stake in
Onsale Japan, a joint venture it had launched with Softbank. That deal included the forgiving of a $2 million
loan, and came after Egghead sold half of its original
stake in Onsale to Indigo Corporation for what Egghead
said was a 100 percent profit.