Thursday, March 30, 2006

Out with the old?

Research Frontiers, ever full of surprises (or full of something, anyway), submitted its 10-K for fiscal year 2005 yesterday, a full two days ahead of the deadline. For the year, they amassed $138,742 in "fee income", the lowest level since 1999. (Ironic that the stock should have done so well that year!)

One point of interest that has come up is the assertion that REFR will have sufficient funds to make it into Q1 2007 without additional funding (a necessary assertion to avoid the dreaded "going concern" clause in their filing).

But elsewhere in the filing, the numbers don't quite add up to support that claim. Cash as of the end of 2005 was pegged at $3,644,685, while "net cash used in operating activites" for 2005 was $3,920,835. The same figure in 2004 was slightly less than $3.64 million, but that included a non-repeating cash gain from the remnants of SPD Inc.

Any way you cut it, the company, as it is, seems to come up a little bit short of being able to make it to years' end solvent. Presumably, then, REFR has some kind of plan to cut costs to allow themslves to stretch their cash out until December.

Given that the details of how REFR spends its cash are a bit murky to say the least, it's hard to speculate just where the cuts might come, but one sizeable item suggests itself.

Chairman, founder and director Robert Saxe has devoted 40 years to... well, whatever it is REFR does, and by all standards figures to be ready to move on to an enjoyable retirement. (Paid for by... well, let's not go there today.) If Saxe were to announce his retirement at the annual meeting this year, that would, based on his 2004 salary, trim roughly $250,000 from REFR's expenses for the year. In and of itself that's still not quite enough, but that gets the target into range, wherein a simple matter of deferring a couple of payables by a month or two, or maybe a handful of exercises of cheap stock options, gets them across the December 31st finish line intact.

So could that be it? Could this be Saxe's last ride? Will this officially become Joe Harary's company before the year is out? And if so, will Harary display the same kind of, er, patience as Saxe has over the years? Stay tuned.

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