SCHEDULE 14A
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a)
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No. )
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LANTRONIX, INC.
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
TL Investment GmbH
Bernhard Bruscha
Manfred Rubin-Schwarz
Frederick G. Thiel
Hoshi Printer
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
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On October 24, 2010, the following article appeared in the Orange County Business Journal:
Board Fight Looming for Irvines Lantronix
TECHNOLOGY: Key owner seeks ouster of CEO, chairman
By Sarah Tolkoff
Sunday, October 24, 2010
The founder, longtime director and biggest shareholder of Irvines Lantronix Inc. is spoiling for a fight.
Bernhard Bruscha, who owns nearly 40% of Lantronix, said hes mounting a board challenge after more than a year of agitating for change at the maker of networking electronics.
Bruscha, 57, is backing himself and two other change-minded candidates for spots on the companys nine-member board.
Lantronix is set to elect directors at its December shareholder meeting.
Bruschas seeking the ouster of Chief Executive Jerry Chase and Chairman Lew Solomon as well as changes to the companys bylaws.
Something needs to be done, Bruscha said. I have been trying to push for change inside the boardroom. The next logical step is doing what Im doing.
Bruschas slate also includes Fred Thiel, a former Lantronix chief executive from 1998 to 2002, and Hoshi Printer, a former chief financial officer with Irvines Autobytel Inc.
Lantronix makes small electronic devices that allow vending machines, thermostats, retail terminals, ATMs and other machines to be accessed via the Internet or other computers.
The companys biggest customers are technology products distributors Ingram Micro Inc. of Santa Ana and Floridas Tech Data Corp., which supply Lantronix devices to technology consultants.
Lantronix is losing money as sales have been on a continuous slide.
For the 12 months through June, Lantronix had sales of $46 million, down 5% from a year earlier. The company lost $1.5 million, widened from a $780,000 loss a year earlier.
Lantronix had a market value of about $30 million last week. Its shares are flat since the start of the year despite a run-up that brought a 40% rise by May.
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SEC Filings
Last week, Bruscha laid out his case against Lantronix in a letter and Securities and Exchange Commission filings that argue that management and directors have presided over lackluster results and have a lack of vision.
James Kerrigan, a former Lantronix finance chief, and former chief executive Marc Nussbaum co-signed the letter.
They take issue with Lantronixs product strategy and lack of growth. They charge management with wasting time and resources pursuing dead-end markets.
The companys leadership has not kept up with the marketplaces changing landscape, Bruscha said in his letter. As a result, Lantronix today is becoming less and less compelling.
Lantronix fired back last week in an SEC filing from Chairman Solomon that defended Chief Executive Chase, who joined Lantronix in 2008 from Santa Clara-based Terayon Communications Systems Inc.
Chase, a former Marine pilot turned technology executive, was recruited by a team that included Bruscha to stem years of poor results at Lantronix.
At the time, Jerry seemed like a good choice, Bruscha said. Hes a good presenter, and a very professional person. Hes a good project management person. But hes not a technology visionary.
A turnaround guy, Chase early on oversaw a big round of job cuts and other cost-cutting measures. Hes revamped the companys sales teams, made amends with customers and installed managers.
The board stands behind Chase, who Solomon said has faced an extremely challenging time but has seen notable successes.
Solomons filing placed blame for part of Lantronixs problems on prior chief Nussbaum, who left in 2006.
Bruscha contends Chases efforts have failed to bear fruit.
Roughly two-thirds of the companys sales come from older products that were brought to market before Chase came onboard, Bruscha said.
All Ive been hearing is that Jerry needs more time to prove his strategy works, he said. When you hear it the first time, you believe it. But when you hear it the second, third and fourth time, it gets tougher.
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Lantronix lacks a coherent strategy, Bruscha said, to tackle a market thats seen as growing as medical devices and other products start to link to computer networks.
Chase and Solomon both hail from Terayon Communications, a maker of digital video software. Solomon served as a director there for a decade.
Chase streamlined Terayon by selling two of its three unprofitable units, tripling its sales and, a few years ago, selling the company to Motorola Inc. for $140 million.
When Chase came to Lantronix, the company was struggling to recover from a 2001 accounting error in which it recorded shipments to Transtec AG, a distributor in Germany thats majority owned by Bruscha, whos also its chairman.
The sales were booked only to have the products returned later, after Lantronix completed a stock sale.
Lantronix ended up restating revenue for 18 months in 2000 and 2001, eliminating about $7 million in sales.
Bruscha board candidate Thiel was at the helm during Lantronixs accounting problems. Bruscha was a director at the time.
Both were part of a 2001 company probe and a subsequent SEC investigation. Neither was found to have committed wrongdoing.
Lantronixs troubled past hasnt been a concern during Bruschas talks with shareholders, he said.
I believe that I have the support of others, he said. Thats not an issue here.
Milwaukees Heartland Advisors Inc. is Lantronixs next biggest shareholder at about 14%.
Bruscha, a German of Italian descent who has a home in Laguna Beach, said hes looking for a Lantronix leader whos more aggressive.
We need someone who will tell us where to attack the market, he said. We need a general.
He declined to give names of those he sees as potential leaders of Lantronix.
So is little Lantronix worth the fight?
Bruscha, a seasoned investor, said cutting his losses at the company isnt an option.
I dont need the money, he said. Selling at this point is like an admission of losing. It could be Im a bit emotionally attached to the company and to the people who work there. I want it to do well.
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IMPORTANT ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
SECURITY HOLDERS ARE ADVISED TO READ THE PROXY STATEMENT, GOLD PROXY CARD AND OTHER DOCUMENTS RELATED TO THE SOLICITATION OF PROXIES BY TL INVESTMENT, BERNHARD BRUSCHA, MANFRED RUBIN-SCHWARZ, FREDERICK G. THIEL AND HOSHI PRINTER, FROM THE SHAREHOLDERS OF LANTRONIX, INC., FOR USE AT THE 2010 ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS OF LANTRONIX, WHEN THEY ARE AVAILABLE BECAUSE THEY WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION. SUCH MATERIALS WILL, ALONG WITH OTHER RELEVANT DOCUMENTS, BE AVAILABLE AT NO CHARGE AT THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSIONS WEBSITE AT HTTP://WWW.SEC.GOV OR BY CONTACTING D.F. KING & CO., INC., THE PARTICIPANTS PROXY SOLICITOR, TOLL-FREE FOR SHAREHOLDERS AT (800) 628-8532, AND FOR BANKS AND BROKERAGE FIRMS AT (212) 269-5550, OR AT PROXY@LTRXSHAREHOLDERS.COM.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION RELATING TO THE ABOVE-NAMED PARTICIPANTS IN THIS PROXY SOLICITATION, INCLUDING THEIR DIRECT OR INDIRECT INTERESTS IN LANTRONIX, BY SECURITY HOLDINGS OR OTHERWISE, IS CONTAINED IN THE PRELIMINARY PROXY STATEMENT FILED BY TL INVESTMENT AND THE OTHER PARTICIPANTS WITH THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION ON OCTOBER 13, 2010, WHICH DOCUMENT IS AVAILABLE AT NO CHARGE AT THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSIONS WEBSITE AT HTTP://WWW.SEC.GOV. WHEN COMPLETED, A DEFINITIVE PROXY STATEMENT WILL BE AVAILABLE TO SHAREHOLDERS OF LANTRONIX, INC. AT NO CHARGE AT THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSIONS WEBSITE AT HTTP://WWW.SEC.GOV OR BY CONTACTING D.F. KING & CO., INC., THE PARTICIPANTS PROXY SOLICITOR, TOLL-FREE FOR SHAREHOLDERS AT (800) 628-8532, AND FOR BANKS AND BROKERAGE FIRMS AT (212) 269-5550, OR AT PROXY@LTRXSHAREHOLDERS.COM.
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