Filed by Bowne Pure Compliance
August 15, 2008
VIA EDGAR AND FACSIMILE
Mr. Jay Webb
Reviewing Accountant
Securities and Exchange Commission
Division of Corporation Finance
Mail Stop 6010
Washington, DC 20549
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Re:
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MiMedx Group, Inc.
Form 10-K for the Year Ended March 31, 2008
Filed June 27, 2008
File Number 000-52491 |
Dear Mr. Webb:
The following comments are in response to your letter dated August 4, 2008 to MiMedx Group, Inc.
(the Company) concerning the above-referenced filing.
The comments from your letter are reproduced below in bold-faced text followed by the Companys
responses.
1. Formation and nature of business; page 48
Nature of business, page 48
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We note that you accounted for the reverse merger between Alynx, Co. and MiMedx, Inc. as a
capital transaction. While we do not object to your accounting, in future filings, please
expand your disclosure, if true, to describe that the historical financial statements are a
continuation of the financial statements of the accounting acquirer and the capital structure
of the consolidated enterprise is now different from that appearing in the historical
financial statements of the accounting acquirer in earlier periods due to the
recapitalization. |
In future filings, we plan to propose to revise the paragraph that was the second paragraph of Note
1 as set forth below. The additions are underlined:
Under U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), MiMedx was deemed to
be the accounting acquirer since the shareholders of MiMedx own a substantial
majority of the issued and outstanding shares, and thus this reverse merger was
accounted for as a capital transaction. The historical financial statements
are a continuation of the financial statements of the accounting acquirer. The
capital structure of the consolidated enterprise is now different from that
appearing on the historical financial statements of the accounting acquirer in
earlier periods due to the recapitalization.
MiMedx, Inc. 3802 Spectrum Blvd., Suite 300 Tampa, FL 33612-9218 P: 813.866.0000 F: 813.866.0012 www.mimedx.com
August 15, 2008
Page 2
7. Stockholders equity: page 55
Registration rights agreement; page 57
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We note that certain shareholders of your company presently have registration rights. Please
explain to us about the major terms including penalties and liquidated damages (if any) of the
registration rights. Please explain to us how you accounted for the registration rights and
how you considered the impact of the guidance at FSP EITF 00-19-2. Please revise your
disclosure in future filings to address our concerns. |
The registration rights agreements that we refer to at Note 7 of the financial statements under the
heading Registration Rights Agreement do not impose either penalties or liquidated damages for
any reason. There is no requirement that we transfer consideration to the holders of registration
rights if the registration statement is not declared effective or maintained. Accordingly, there
is no registration payment arrangement as defined in FASB Staff Position on EITF 00-19-2,
Accounting for Registration Payment Arrangements (FSP EITF 00-19-2). We propose to revise our
Note 7 under the heading Registration Rights Agreement, in future filings to add additional
detail as to the major terms of the registration rights as set forth below. The changes are
underlined.
Registration rights:
Certain shareholders of the Company have registration rights covering 18,420,200
shares of the Companys common stock pursuant to an agreement dated July 23,
2007. The rights will be effective nine months after the Company either
closes an underwritten public offering or receives in the aggregate a minimum
of $10,000,000 in cash from the sale or a series of related sales of the
Companys securities at a time when its equity securities are registered under
Section 12 of the Exchange Act. As such, these are contingent rights subject
to events within the Companys control. When and if these events occur and the
nine month period expires, the majority of the holders of the registration
rights can demand that the Company use its best efforts to register such shares on
up to two occasions but not more than once in any 12-month period, subject to
certain restrictions. The holders of those shares also have certain piggyback
registration rights. The various registration rights expire upon the earlier of
the fifth anniversary from when the Company has its first underwritten public
offering or the date when the holder of such shares is able to sell the
registrable shares under Rule 144. Pursuant to a separate registration
rights agreement, dated February 8, 2008, the holders of approximately
17,600 additional shares of the Companys common stock have piggyback registration
rights which are substantially the same as those granted in July 2007. The
registration rights agreements do not require the Company to pay any consideration
to holders if an SEC registration statement is not declared effective or
maintained. Beginning February 9, 2009, most, if not all, of the shares subject
to the registration rights agreements will be eligible for sale pursuant to Rule
144. Approximately 966,667 of the shares are held by persons who are affiliates.
Affiliates will be subject to the condition that the Company be current in its
filings before they may utilize Rule 144, and to Rule 144 volume limitations.
Warrants: page 60
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We note that you had 709,331 warrants outstanding at March 31, 2008. Please explain to us and
revise your future filings to describe the major terms of these warrants. Also in your
explanation, please include how you accounted for the warrants and how you considered the
guidance at SFAS 150, EITF 00-19 and SFAS 133. |
MiMedx, Inc. 3802 Spectrum Blvd., Suite 300 Tampa, FL 33612-9218 P: 813.866.0000 F: 813.866.0012 www.mimedx.com
August 15, 2008
Page 3
To determine the proper accounting treatment for the warrants, we performed a thorough review
of the accounting literature and in particular relied upon the guidance provided by the SEC Current
Accounting and Disclosure Issues in the Division of Corporation Finance on November 2006 (the
November 2006 CADI), Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 150, Accounting for Certain
Financial Instruments with Characteristics of both Liabilities and Equity (SFAS 150), and
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 133, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and
Hedging Activities (SFAS 133), EITF Issue No. 00-19, Accounting for Derivative Financial
Instruments Indexed to, and Potentially Settled in, a Companys Own Stock (EITF 00-19).
We believe that the warrants do not fall within the scope of SFAS 150 as they do not meet the
definition of any of three types of instruments covered by SFAS 150 in that they are not (1)
mandatorily redeemable financial instruments, (2) obligations to repurchase the Companys equity
shares by transferring assets or (3) obligations to issue a variable number of shares as specified
in Paragraph 12 of SFAS 150.
We then considered SFAS 133 which establishes the accounting and reporting standards for
derivative instruments. When determining whether the warrants were within the scope of SFAS 133,
the Company considered the scope exceptions discussed in paragraph 11(a) thereof. Paragraph 11(a)
of SFAS 133 provides that if the contract issued is both (1) indexed to its own stock and (2)
classified in stockholders equity in its statement of financial position, the contract is not
subject to derivative accounting and thus not subject to the guidance in SFAS 133. The warrants
are indexed to the Companys common stock thus satisfying the first criterion. In addition, under
the guidance provided by EITF 00-19, we believe the warrants should be classified in stockholders
equity. (See analysis below.) Therefore, the Company believes the scope exception of FAS 133,
paragraph 11 is satisfied and no liability must be recorded.
As discussed in the previous paragraph, we analyzed the guidance provided by EITF 00-19.
EITF 00-19 provides guidance on the proper recognition, measurement, and classification of certain
freestanding financial instruments that are indexed to, and potentially settled in, any entitys
own stock. In the analysis we particularly considered the guidance provided in paragraphs 12 31
of EITF 00-19.
Paragraph 12 of EITF 00-19 requires that contracts that include any provision that could
require net-cash settlement cannot be accounted for as equity of the Company. The warrants issued
in the Financing are not subject to any provision that could require net-cash settlement. Thus,
the guidance in paragraph 12 is not applicable to the warrants.
Paragraph 13 through 31 set forth eight conditions that must be met for an instrument to be
classified as equity. The conditions and our justification for our conclusion that the warrants
meet the conditions are described below:
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The contract permits the Company to settle in unregistered shares. |
The warrants must only be settled in shares of the Companys common stock. The terms do not
specifically require that the shares be registered, nor do they provide for any penalty should the
Company settle in unregistered shares. The warrants contain only piggyback registration rights,
which are deemed to be within the control of the Company. Of the total outstanding warrants at
March 31, 2008, piggyback registration rights related to 175,251 shares had expired and rights to
an additional 524,080 shares expired in April 2008. The piggyback rights for the remaining 10,000
shares expire in October 2008.
Thus, we believe we are permitted to settle the warrants in unregistered shares.
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The Company has sufficient authorized and unissued shares available to settle the contract
after considering all other commitments that may require the issuance of stock during the
maximum period the derivative contract could remain outstanding. |
The Company has sufficient authorized and unissued shares available to settle the warrants
after considering all other commitments.
MiMedx, Inc. 3802 Spectrum Blvd., Suite 300 Tampa, FL 33612-9218 P: 813.866.0000 F: 813.866.0012 www.mimedx.com
August 15, 2008
Page 4
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The contract contains an explicit limit on the number of shares to be delivered in a share
settlement. |
The number of shares issuable under the warrants is limited to a maximum number of shares, as
specified in each Warrant. The exercise price is fixed and subject to change only as the result of
normal anti-dilution provisions.
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There are no required cash payments to the counterparty in the event the company fails to
make timely filings with the SEC. |
The warrants are not subject to any cash payments to the holders in the event that the Company
fails to make timely filings with the SEC.
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There are no required cash payments to the counterparty if the shares initially delivered
upon settlement are subsequently sold by the counterparty and the sales proceeds are
insufficient to provide the counterparty with full return of the amount due (that is, there
are no cash settled top-off or make-whole provisions). |
There are no top-off or make-whole provisions related to the warrants.
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The contract requires net-cash settlement only in specific circumstances in which holders of
shares underlying the contract also would receive cash in exchange for their shares. |
The warrants do not provide for any circumstance that would trigger net-cash settlements.
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There are no provisions in the contract that indicate that the counterparty has rights that
rank higher than those of a shareholder of the stock underlying the contract. |
The warrants do not have any provisions that grant the Investor any rights that rank higher
than those of a common stock holder. In the event the holders exercise their warrants, the shares
issued to them would be shares of common stock, with the holders having the same rights as current
holders of the Companys common stock.
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There is no requirement in the contract to post collateral at any point or for any reason. |
The warrants do not require the Company to post any type of collateral at any point for any
reason.
In future filings, we plan to provide additional disclosure as it relates to warrants in a format
similar to the disclosure provided below:
The Company grants common stock warrants to placement agents in connection with
direct equity share purchases by investors and as additional compensation to
consultants and advisors. The warrants are granted at negotiated prices in
connection with the equity share purchases and at the market price of the common
stock in other instances. Warrants issued to date have terms of 5 years.
At March 31, 2008 we had 709,331 warrants outstanding. Of the total amount
outstanding, 524,080 warrants with an exercise price of $1.25 per share,
related to placement agent fees paid in conjunction with our Series A Convertible
Preferred Stock offering which occurred in March 2007. On May 16, 2008 the
warrant holder executed a cashless exercise related to these warrants and we
issued 417,594 shares of our common stock.
MiMedx, Inc. 3802 Spectrum Blvd., Suite 300 Tampa, FL 33612-9218 P: 813.866.0000 F: 813.866.0012 www.mimedx.com
August 15, 2008
Page 5
Warrants totaling 175,251, with exercise prices of $1.80 per share and
expiration dates of October 24, 2009, were assumed by the Company in
conjunction with our acquisition of Spinemedica Corp. in July 2007.
Warrants for 10,000 shares, with an exercise price of $3.00 per share,
were issued in October 2007 for services provided by a consultant. These warrants
have piggyback registration rights which expire on October 9, 2008 and do not
require the Company to pay any consideration to the holder if a registration
statement is not declared effective or maintained.
Warrants may be exercised in whole or in part by:
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notice given by the holder accompanied by payment of an amount equal to the warrant
exercise price multiplied by the number of warrant shares being purchased; or |
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election by the holder to exchange the warrant (or portion thereof) for that number
of shares equal to the product of (a) the number of shares issuable upon exercise of
the warrant (or portion) and (b) a fraction, (x) the numerator of which is the market
price of the shares at the time of exercise minus the warrant exercise price per share
at the time of exercise and (y) the denominator of which is the market price per share
at the time of exercise. |
The warrants require that the Company deliver shares as part of a physical
settlement or a net-share settlement, at the option of the holder, and do not
provide for a net-cash settlement.
The Company has evaluated the terms of each of these warrants and determined that
they qualify for equity accounting.
Controls and Procedures, page 63
Evaluation of Disclosure controls and Procedures, page 64
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We note you did not complete the evaluation of disclosure control and procedures as of the
end of the period as required by Item 307 of Regulation S-K. Please provide us with a detailed
discussion of your basis for your conclusion that you did not have to complete the evaluation
and include managements conclusion in this 10-K. |
The Companys predecessor, Alynx, Co. was previously a shell company with the objective to acquire
an existing business. On February 8, 2008, Alynx, Co. acquired MiMedx, Inc., a privately-held,
development-stage company, and its affiliated companies, in a transaction accounted for as a
reverse merger ( the Acquisition). Upon consummation of the Acquisition, Alynx, Co.s former
internal controls and management were supplanted by those of MiMedx, Inc. and its affiliates.
Because of the abbreviated period of less than two months during which the Company, operating as
MiMedx, was a reporting company during the fiscal year ended March 31, 2008, management had not
completed as of March 31, 2008, an assessment of the Companys internal control over financial
reporting under a recognized control framework, and reported as such in Item 9A(T) Managements
Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting in our Form 10-K for the year ended March 31,
2008.
We erroneously relied on the above fact pattern to conclude that we were also not required and did
not complete an evaluation and conclude on our disclosure controls and procedures.
MiMedx, Inc. 3802 Spectrum Blvd., Suite 300 Tampa, FL 33612-9218 P: 813.866.0000 F: 813.866.0012 www.mimedx.com
August 15, 2008
Page 6
Upon receipt of your letter, we have reevaluated our disclosure as required by Item 307 of
Regulation S-K, and as a result, performed an evaluation of our disclosure controls and procedures
as they existed at March 31, 2008.
Based on the limited number of employees and the relatively low volume of transactions and events
which occurred during our history, our procedures and controls as of March 31, 2008 were primarily
informal, and we relied on frequent communication amongst our executive group to ensure that
information required to be disclosed in the reports that we file or submit under the Exchange Act
is accumulated and communicated to the Companys management team.
Our formal procedures and controls which we followed prior to filing or submitting reports to the
SEC under the Exchange Act, were as follows:
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We distributed completed forms and supplemental information to appropriate executives
and others with adequate knowledge of related transactions or forms for a review of the
factual accuracy of the documents. |
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We facilitated reviews and edited reports, as necessary, based on comments and
discussions we had with our legal counsel and independent auditors. |
Based on the above evaluation, our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer have
concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures at March 31, 2008 were effective.
Our management recognizes it is responsible for establishing and maintaining a system of disclosure
controls and procedures and has performed an evaluation for the period ended June 30, 2008 and will
perform an evaluation for each quarterly period in the future. Management has included its
evaluation of disclosure controls and procedures, in which it has determined that such controls are
effective, for the period ended June 30, 2008, in the Companys Form 10-Q, dated August 14, 2008.
The Company acknowledges:
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the Company is responsible for the adequacy and accuracy of the disclosures in its
filings; |
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staff comments or changes to disclosure in response to staff comments do not
foreclose the Commission from taking any action with respect to the filings; and |
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the Company may not assert staff comments as a defense in any proceeding initiated
by the Commission or any person under the federal securities laws of the United
States. |
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Sincerely,
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/s/ John C. Thomas, Jr.
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John C. Thomas, Jr. |
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Chief Financial Officer and Secretary |
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MiMedx, Inc. 3802 Spectrum Blvd., Suite 300 Tampa, FL 33612-9218 P: 813.866.0000 F: 813.866.0012 www.mimedx.com