Introduction:
This post is part of a series in an attempt to understand the influence and
involvement of Bain Capital (and venture capital / private equity
generally) in Pennsylvania.
To do this I searched through newspapers and business databases to
locate the names of Pennsylvania companies that had some connection to
Bain, then looked for general information on those firms. Chain stores
do not count unless the company is headquartered in Pennsylvania.
I have made a concerted effort to confirm information found in the press
but sometimes this was not possible. A similar effort was made to
construct a search strategy in such a way that published corrections
would also be found. That being said, I am working primarily with
self-reported corporate information and published media, not from
original research. Citations are provided so interested parties can
reviews the research for themselves, and they are encouraged to do so.
This is not intended to be exhaustive research, though the intent was to
be thorough.
SunGard is a software and technology firm with a
corporate headquarters in Wayne, Pennsylvania.
According to the history section of Sungard’s website (www.sungard.com), it was spun off
from Sun Oil Co. in the 1970’s. From
1986 to 2005 it was a publically traded company. In August, 2005 the company was taken private
by “Kholberg Kravis Roberts, Silver Lake Partkners, Bain Capital, Blackstone
Group, Goldman Sachs Capital Partners, Providence Equity Partners, and Texas
Pacific Group” (Parker, 08/21/2006). An
article in the Allentown Morning Call said it was the second largest buyout of
a public company by a private investor, costing $11.4 billion (“Sungard,” 3/29/2005). An article in Euromoney said
“At $3.5
billion, it was the largest equity cheque written for an LBO, the largest ever
buyout of a technology company, and included the largest ever consortium of
sponsors. On top of that, it was the
biggest buyout since the RJR Nabisco deal 16 years earlier” (Tully, 2/2006).
The difference between the $3.5 billion check
and the $11.4 billion cost was borrowed (“Sungard,” 3/29/2005).
That loan has had long term ramifications. As noted by the Inquirer in 2011:
“The company has reported a lost each year
since 2005. [Sungard spokesman Brian]
Robins says that’s due partly to amortization of the $11 billion that Silver
Lake Partners and other buyout firms paid to buy SunGard that year.”
(DiStefano, 5/17/2011).
A company
profile by MarketLine published in 2012 gave a SWOT analysis of the firm. It is overall positive. The only weakness listed is a high debt level,
a result of the company being taken private (SunGard, 7/17/2012)
Research uncovered several articles providing
employee numbers but a correction in the Inquirer on July 21, 2011 (“Clearing”)
states that Sungard does not release the number of employees for any given
site, so none of that data will be provided here. Interested parties are encouraged to search
for that information themselves.
Sources
“Clearing the record,” Philadelphia Inquirer, July
21, 2011
DiStefano, Joseph N., Conde to leave as head of
SunGard Data,” Philadelphia Inquirer, May 17, 2011
Parker, Akweli, “Sungard’s CEO relishes private
ownership,” Philadelphia Inquirer, August 21, 2006
SunGard Data Systems Inc. MarketLine, July 17, 2012.
“Sungard’s CEO relishes private ownership,” Akweli
Parker, Philadelphia Inquirer, August 21, 2006
Tully, Kathryn, “Sungard Data Systems $11.3 billion
LBO,” Euromoney 37 #442, February, 2006.
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