Filed pursuant to Rule 424(b)(3)
Registration No. 333-49844
PROSPECTUS
VERTEX PHARMACEUTICALS INCORPORATED
$345,000,000 5% Convertible Subordinated Notes Due September 19, 2007
3,739,432 Shares of Common Stock Issuable Upon Conversion of the Notes
Noteholders may offer for sale the notes and the shares of our common stock
issuable upon conversion of the notes. See "Plan of Distribution." The notes
have the following terms:
Holders may convert their notes at any time prior to maturity into
Shares of our common stock at a conversion price of $92.26 per share, which is
subject to adjustment.
Holders may require us to repurchase their notes upon a change in
control.
- We may redeem the notes on or after September 19, 2003 if the price
of our common stock has exceeded 120% of the conversion price for more than 20
of the 30 trading days prior to redemption. Prior to that date, we may redeem
the notes if the price of our common stock has exceeded 150% of the conversion
price for more than 20 of the 30 trading days prior to redemption.
- The notes are subordinated to all of our existing and future senior
indebtedness.
Our common stock is quoted on the Nasdaq National Market under the symbol
"VRTX." On March 8, 2001, the last sale price of our common stock was $39.8125
per share. The notes are currently eligible for trading on the PORTAL market.
INVESTING IN THE NOTES OR OUR COMMON STOCK INVOLVES RISKS THAT ARE DESCRIBED IN
THE "RISK FACTORS" SECTION BEGINNING ON PAGE 9 OF THIS PROSPECTUS.
NEITHER THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION NOR ANY OTHER REGULATORY BODY HAS
APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED OF THESE SECURITIES OR PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY OR
ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL
OFFENSE.
The date of this prospectus is March 9, 2001
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
SUMMARY.................................................................................3
RISK FACTORS............................................................................10
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS..............................................................19
RATIO OF EARNINGS TO FIXED CHARGES......................................................20
USE OF PROCEEDS.........................................................................21
DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES................................................................21
DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK............................................................39
UNITED STATES FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS.........................................40
SELLING HOLDERS.........................................................................43
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION....................................................................49
LEGAL MATTERS...........................................................................51
INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS.................................................................51
WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION.....................................................51
INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN DOCUMENTS BY REFERENCE.........................................52
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SUMMARY
THIS SUMMARY MAY NOT CONTAIN ALL OF THE INFORMATION THAT YOU SHOULD CONSIDER
BEFORE INVESTING IN THE NOTES OR THE SHARES OF COMMON STOCK ISSUABLE UPON THEIR
CONVERSION. YOU SHOULD CAREFULLY READ THE ENTIRE PROSPECTUS AND THE DOCUMENTS WE
HAVE INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE INTO THE PROSPECTUS.
We design, develop and commercialize novel small molecule drugs that
address significant markets with major unmet medical needs, including the
treatment of viral diseases, cancer, autoimmune and inflammatory diseases, and
neurological disorders. Our drug design platform integrates advanced biology,
chemistry, biophysics and information technologies to make the drug discovery
process more efficient and productive. To date, we have discovered and advanced
one product that has reached the market--the HIV protease inhibitor
Agenerase-TM- (amprenavir)--and eight additional drug candidates that are now in
clinical development.
We have significant collaborations with Aventis, Eli Lilly, Glaxo
SmithKline, Kissei, Novartis, Schering AG (Germany), Serono and Taisho. These
collaborations provide us with financial support and other valuable resources
for our research programs, development of our clinical drug candidates, and
marketing and sales of our products. We believe that we are positioned to
commercialize multiple products over the next two to five years, which we expect
will generate increased milestone payments, product revenues and royalty
payments. We have additional research programs underway, and we expect novel
Vertex drug candidates for the treatment of bacterial infection, hepatitis C and
stroke to enter pre-clinical studies within the next 12 to 18 months.
We believe that the emergence of large amounts of information from
genomic research represents an unprecedented opportunity for drug discovery
directed at novel biological targets. Our approach to drug discovery, which we
call "chemogenomics," seeks to take advantage of this opportunity by combining
medicinal chemistry and molecular biology to identify and describe many of the
possible drug candidates for a drug target or group of drug targets. As part of
this approach, we are pursuing a strategy of parallel drug design directed at
gene families, which are groups of genes with similar sequences that code for
structurally similar proteins. Using this strategy, we seek to identify classes
of chemical inhibitors (drug-like molecules) that are applicable for clusters of
closely related targets that have different biological functions. We believe
that chemogenomics will enhance the speed and productivity of drug design
efforts directed at novel biological targets, secure for us valuable
intellectual property in gene families of interest and ultimately result in the
market introduction of new drugs.
We are presently applying our expertise in chemogenomics to focus on
the protein kinase and caspase gene families, two areas in which we believe we
can leverage our drug design expertise to rapidly create product candidates that
address a variety of sizable therapeutic indications. In May 2000, we entered
into a collaboration with Novartis which will provide us up to $800 million in
pre-commercial payments to discover, develop and commercialize up to eight
kinase inhibitors for the treatment of a range of diseases, including cancer,
cardiovascular diseases, and inflammatory diseases. The financial and
technological support provided by Novartis enables us to expand both our
infrastructure and chemogenomics efforts in the protein kinase gene family. In
addition, we have begun exploring other gene families. We aim to establish
additional partnerships with major pharmaceutical companies in order to obtain
the funding and resources needed to expand our discovery efforts in additional
families.
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Over the next few years, we expect to continue our research and
development efforts and to bring drug candidates through late stage clinical
development and into commercialization. We also expect to license and acquire
technologies, resources and products that have the potential to strengthen our
drug discovery platform, product pipeline and commercial capabilities.
AGENERASE
Our first product, Agenerase, received accelerated approval from the
FDA in April 1999 and was launched in May 1999. We received European Union
approval in October 2000. Agenerase, which was designed by Vertex, is marketed
in the United States by Glaxo SmithKline. We co-promote Agenerase in the United
States, and we are co-promoting Agenerase in selected areas in Europe. Total
sales of the drug for the twelve months ended September 30, 2000 were $79.1
million, resulting in $12.0 million in royalties to Vertex from Glaxo
SmithKline. More than 16,000 patients in the United States take Agenerase as
part of combination therapy for the treatment of HIV. We believe that Agenerase
is distinguished from other protease inhibitors by its:
- longer half-life, which allows for convenient twice-daily dosing and
provides high levels of the drug in the bloodstream;
- ability to be dosed effectively on a full or empty stomach; and
- lower levels of cross-resistance to other protease inhibitors.
Recent research results presented at major medical conferences have
highlighted the use of Agenerase in combination with the protease inhibitor
ritonavir, a regimen that boosts Agenerase levels in the bloodstream of
patients. We believe that based on these research results many physicians
combine Agenerase and ritonavir in clinical practice, to:
-achieve drug levels in the bloodstream sufficient to reduce viral
replication in patients who have extensive prior treatment experience
and may harbor strains of virus that is resistant to other HIV
therapies;
-offset lower blood levels of Agenerase caused by administration of
efavirenz, a reverse transcriptase inhibitor used to treat HIV; and
-reduce the overall pill count.
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PRODUCTS IN DEVELOPMENT
Agenerase is the first of many Vertex-discovered products that we
intend to commercialize, by ourselves and with partners, in the coming years.
The accompanying chart describes our product pipeline. One of our drug
candidates in development is presently in Phase III clinical development, six
are presently in Phase II clinical development, one is presently in Phase I
clinical development, four are in preclinical development.
ESTIMATED U.S.
COMPANY WITH PATIENT
MARKETING RIGHTS POPULATION
DRUG CLINICAL INDICATIONS PHASE (REGION) (MILLIONS)
- ---- -------------------- ----- -------- ----------
ANTIVIRALS
- ---------------------------------------------------
VX-175 HIV III Glaxo SmithKline (Worldwide); 0.9
vertex co-promote (U.S. and E.U.)
VX- 497 Chronic hepatitis C II Vertex (Worldwide) 2.7
Incel- TM- Multidrug resistant solid tumor II Vertex (Worldwide) 0.5 (tumor incidence
cancers in target diseases)
VX-853 Multidrug resistant solid tumor I/II Vertex (Worldwide) 0.5 (tumor incidence
cancers in target diseases)
INFLAMMATION AND AUTOIMMUNE
- ---------------------------------------------------
VX-740 Rheumatoid arthritis (RA); II Aventis (Worldwide); Vertex 2.1 (RA)
inflammatory diseases co-promote (U.S. and E.U.)
VX-745 RA; inflammatory diseases II Kissei (Japan) Vertex (R.O.W.) 2.1 (RA)
VX-148 Autoimmune diseases I Vertex (Worldwide) NA
VX-944 Autoimmune diseases Preclin Vertex (Worldwide) NA
VX-954 Inflammatory diseases Preclin Kissei (Japan); Vertex (R.O.W.), NA
VX-702 Inflammatory diseases Preclin Kissei (Japan); Vertex (R.O.W.), NA
VX-765 Inflammatory diseases Preclin Vertex (Worldwide) NA
NEUROLOGICAL
- ---------------------------------------------------
Timcodar Diabetic neuropathy II Schering AG(a) (E.U.; profit 1.3
(VX-853) sharing in U.S.)
(a) Development option
RESEARCH PROGRAMS
We have numerous research programs underway at the discovery stage,
including multitarget programs that are representative of our chemogenomics
approach, as well as numerous single target programs. We also have several
"second generation" programs where we are advancing drug candidates that will
augment existing products in development. We expect to advance numerous drug
candidates into development in the next several years that are based on this
ongoing research.
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- -------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------
MOLECULAR TARGET CLINICAL INDICATIONS COMPANY WITH MARKETING RIGHTS (REGION)
- -------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------
Caspases Stroke; cardiovascular diseases Taisho (Japan); Vertex (R.O.W.)
- -------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------
Kinases Cancer; inflammatory diseases; Novartis (Worldwide); Vertex co-promote (U.S. &
neurodegenerative diseases E.U.)
- -------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------
HCV protease Hepatitis C Eli Lilly (Worldwide); Vertex co-promote (U.S.)
- -------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------
HCV helicase Hepatitis C Vertex (Worldwide)
- -------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------
Bacterial DNA gyrase B Bacterial infections Vertex (Worldwide
- -------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------
STRATEGY
Our strategy is to:
-continue to advance our eight clinical drug candidates through
late-stage clinical development and commercialization, either alone or
with corporate partners;
-use our technological and organizational advantages to drive a strong
flow of new products into clinical development;
-maximize the long-term commercial opportunities of our research and
development programs through a series of collaborative arrangements;
and
-license and acquire technologies, resources and products that have the
potential to strengthen our drug discovery platform, product pipeline
and commercial capabilities.
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
On November 27, 2000, we announced that VX-175, an HIV protease inhibitor
discovered by Vertex and licensed by Glaxo SmithKline, had entered Phase III
clinical trials. VX-175 (also known as GW433908) is a prodrug of our HIV
protease inhibitor amprenavir. A prodrug is an alternative delivery system that
allows a more compact formulation. VX-175 has been formulated to allow a dosing
regimen in clinical trials of three pills, twice a day. VX-175 is now being
investigated in two Phase III clinical trials, both of which are being funded
and conducted by Glaxo SmithKline. Study 30001 is an open-label, randomized
study that compares three tablets of VX-175 dosed twice daily with the protease
inhibitor nelfinavir dosed twice daily in patients who have not previously
received antiretroviral therapy. All patients will also receive the reverse
transcriptase inhibitors abacavir and 3TC twice daily. This trial will enroll
210 patients at more than 30 centers in the United States and will assess the
safety and antiviral efficacy of each regimen over a period of 48 weeks. Study
30002 is an open-label study that will enroll more than 600 HIV-infected
patients who have not previously received antiretroviral therapy. Patients will
be randomized to receive either a combination of three tablets of VX-175 +
ritonavir once daily, or 1250 mg nelfinavir twice daily. All patients will also
receive abacavir and 3TC twice daily. The trial will be conducted at more than
50 research centers worldwide, and will assess safety and antiviral efficacy of
each regimen over a period of 48 weeks.
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In December 2000, we entered into a collaboration with Serono S.A. to
discover, develop, and market caspase inhibitors. Caspase inhibitors are a class
of compounds with the potential to treat serious neurological and inflammatory
diseases. Under the terms of the agreement, we could receive up to $95 million
to support and expand our drug discovery activities in the caspase protein
family, including milestone payments as drug candidates move through
development. Under the terms of the agreement, we will receive $5 million in
payments for prior research, and could also receive up to $20 million in
research funding over the next five years. We could also receive an additional
$70 million in milestone payments for the successful development and
commercialization of more than one drug candidate. In 2000, we received $3
million in payments for prior research and $1 million in payments for research
support. In 2001, we will receive $2 million in payments for prior research and
$4 million in payments for research support. The two companies will share
development costs. We will establish a joint venture with Serono for the
commercialization of products in North America, where we will share marketing
rights and profits from the sale of caspase inhibitors. Serono will have
exclusive rights to market caspase inhibitors in other territories, excluding
Japan and certain other countries in the Far East, and will pay us for the
supply of drug substance.
Serono may terminate the research portion of the agreement at the end
of September 2002 or September 2004 after giving us 90 days notice. Serono may
terminate the development and commercialization portion of the agreement at any
time after giving us six months notice.
On December 19, 2000, we announced the initiation of the first human
clinical trial with VX-148, a small molecule inhibitor of IMPDH (inosine
monophosphate dehydrogenase). Our IMPDH inhibitors have the potential to treat
viral infections, autoimmune diseases, and prevent organ transplant rejection.
We have retained all development and commercial rights to drug candidates in our
IMPDH program. The Phase I clinical trial will evaluate the safety and
pharmacokinetics of single and multiple doses of VX-148 in healthy volunteers.
The study is being conducted in Europe.
Our headquarters and main research facilities are at 130 Waverly
Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, and our telephone number is (617)
577-6000. We also have a research facility in Oxford, England. Our company was
incorporated under the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1989.
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THE OFFERING
Securities offered The resale by selling holders of $345,000,000 principal
amount of 5% Convertible Subordinated Notes due September
19, 2007 and the 3,739,432 shares of common stock into
which they are convertible.
Maturity of Notes September 19, 2007.
Interest 5% per annum, payable semiannually on March 19 and
September 19, beginning on March 19, 2001.
Conversion rights The notes are convertible, at the option of the holder,
at any time on or prior to maturity into shares of our
common stock at a conversion price of $92.26 per share,
which is equal to a conversion rate of 10.8389 shares per
$1,000 principal amount of notes. The conversion price is
subject to adjustment.
Ranking The notes are unsecured and subordinated to our existing
and future senior debt, as defined. At September 30,
2000, we had approximately $5.3 million of senior debt
outstanding. Because the notes are subordinated, in the
event of bankruptcy, liquidation, dissolution or
acceleration of payment on the senior debt, holders of
the notes will not receive any payment until holders of
the senior debt have been paid in full. The indenture
under which the notes were issued does not prevent us or
our subsidiaries from incurring additional senior debt or
other obligations.
Provisional We may redeem the notes, in whole or in part, at any time
redemption before September 19, 2003, at a redemption price equal to
$1,000 per $1,000 principal amount of notes to be
redeemed plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to the
date of the provisional redemption if:
- the closing price of our common stock has exceeded 150%
of the conversion price then in effect for at least 20
trading days within a period of 30 consecutive trading
days ending on the trading day before the date we mail
the provisional redemption notice and
- the registration statement of which this prospectus
forms a part is effective and available for use and is
expected to remain effective and available for use for
the 30 days following the provisional redemption date.
- If the price of our common stock on the provisional
redemption date exceeds the conversion price and you
elect to receive cash instead of converting your notes
into common stock, you will receive less value than if
you converted your notes into common stock.
- Upon any provisional redemption, we will make an
additional "make-whole" payment with respect to the
notes called for redemption, equal to $150.00 per
$1,000 principal amount of notes, less the amount of
any interest we have actually paid on the notes before
the provisional redemption date. We may make this
"make-whole" payment, at our option, in either cash or
our common stock (or a combination of both). If we
elect to pay you the "make-whole" payment in common
stock, the common stock will be valued at 97%
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of the average of the closing sales prices of our
common stock for the five trading days ending on the
day prior to the provisional redemption date.
- We have to make this additional payment on all notes
that we call for provisional redemption, including any
notes converted after the notice date and before the
provisional redemption date.
Optional redemption We may redeem all or some of the notes on or after
September 19, 2003 at the redemption prices listed in
this prospectus, plus accrued and unpaid interest, if the
closing price of our common stock has exceeded 120% of
the conversion price then in effect for at least 20
trading days within a period of 30 consecutive trading
days ending on the trading day before the date we mail
the optional redemption notice.
If the price of our common stock on the redemption date
exceeds the conversion price and you elect to receive
cash instead of converting your notes into common stock,
you will receive less value than if you converted your
notes into common stock.
Change of control Upon a change of control event, each holder of the notes
may require us to repurchase some or all of its notes at
a purchase price equal to 100% of the principal amount of
the notes plus accrued and unpaid interest. We may, at
our option, instead of paying the change of control
purchase price in cash, pay it shares of our common stock
valued at 95% of the average of the closing sales prices
of our common stock for the five trading days immediately
preceding and including the third trading day before the
date we are required to repurchase the notes. We cannot
pay the change of control purchase price in common stock
unless we satisfy the conditions described in the
indenture under which the notes were issued.
Use of proceeds We will not receive any of the proceeds from the sale of
securities by the selling holders under this prospectus.
Trading The notes are eligible for trading in the PORTAL market;
however, we can provide no assurance as to the liquidity
of, or trading markets for, the notes. Our common stock
is traded on the Nasdaq National Market under the symbol
"VRTX."
Risk factors See "Risk Factors" and the other information in this
prospectus for a discussion of the factors you should
carefully consider before deciding to invest in the notes
or our common stock.
"Vertex" and "Incel" are trademarks of Vertex Pharmaceuticals
Incorporated. "Agenerase" is a trademark of the Glaxo SmithKline Group of
companies. "Prozei" is a trademark of Kissei Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. Other
brands, names and trademarks contained in this prospectus are the property of
their respective owners.
In this prospectus, "we," "our" and "us" refer to Vertex
Pharmaceuticals Incorporated.
All share and per share data in this prospectus give effect to the
2-for-1 stock split that we effected as a stock dividend on August 23, 2000.
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RISK FACTORS
AN INVESTMENT IN THE SECURITIES OFFERED BY THIS PROSPECTUS INVOLVES A HIGH
DEGREE OF RISK. YOU SHOULD CAREFULLY CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING FACTORS AND OTHER
INFORMATION IN THIS PROSPECTUS BEFORE DECIDING TO PURCHASE THE NOTES OR OUR
COMMON STOCK.
WE DO NOT KNOW HOW SUCCESSFUL AGENERASE WILL BE IN EUROPE, OR WHETHER U.S.
AGENERASE SALES WILL CONTINUE AT CURRENT LEVELS.
Agenerase was only recently launched in Europe. It is too early to predict the
extent to which Agenerase will be successful in Europe. Also, Agenerase's share
of the U.S. protease inhibitor market may decrease due to competitive forces and
market dynamics. Five other HIV protease inhibitors and a number of other
products, including DuPont's Sustiva and Glaxo SmithKline's Ziagen, are on the
market for the treatment of HIV infection and AIDS. Other drugs are still in
development by our competitors, including Bristol Myers Squibb and Boehringer
Ingelheim, which may have better efficacy, fewer side effects, easier
administration and/or lower costs than Agenerase. Moreover, the growth in the
worldwide market for HIV protease inhibitors has, to a certain extent, occurred
as a result of early and aggressive treatment of HIV infection with a protease
inhibitor-based regimen. Changes in treatment strategy, in which treatment is
initiated later in the course of infection, or in which treatment is more often
initiated with a regimen that does not include a protease inhibitor, may result
in less use of HIV protease inhibitors. In addition, the clinical benefit of
strategies used to boost drug levels of Agenerase by co-administering other
antiretrovirals may not prove to be effective, or may not result in increased
revenues. As a result, the total market for protease inhibitors, in the U.S. and
Europe, may decline, decreasing Agenerase sales potential. Consequently, we may
not recognize additional royalty and milestone revenues on Agenerase as soon as
we have planned. Further, although we co-promote Agenerase in the U.S. and
intend to co-promote it in Europe, Glaxo SmithKline is making most of the
marketing and sales efforts and we will have little control over the success of
those efforts. Glaxo SmithKline has the right to terminate its agreement with us
without cause upon twelve months' notice.
IF WE DO NOT SUCCESSFULLY DEVELOP OUR DRUG PIPELINE, WE MAY NOT GENERATE
SUFFICIENT FUNDS TO ACHIEVE OR SUSTAIN PROFITABILITY IN THE FUTURE.
As of December 31, 2000, our collaborators and we were conducting
clinical trials for eight product candidates resulting from our research and
development programs, including additional clinical trials of VX-175, VX-497,
VX-740 and VX-745, and preclinical testing of four product candidates from these
programs. All of the products that we are pursuing will require extensive
additional development, testing and investment, as well as regulatory approvals,
prior to commercialization. Our product research and development efforts may not
be successful. Our drug candidates may not enter preclinical or clinical studies
as or when anticipated or receive the required regulatory approvals. Moreover,
our products, if introduced, may not be commercially successful. The results of
preclinical and initial clinical trials of products under development by us are
not necessarily predictive of results that will be obtained from large-scale
clinical testing. Clinical trials of products under development may not
demonstrate the safety and efficacy of such products or result in a marketable
product. In addition, the administration alone or in combination with other
drugs of any product developed by us may produce undesirable side effects in
humans.
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The failure to demonstrate adequately the safety and efficacy of a
therapeutic drug under development could delay or prevent regulatory approval of
the product and could have a material adverse effect on our company. In
addition, the FDA may require additional clinical trials, which could result in
increased costs and significant development delays. While all or a portion of
these additional costs may be covered by payments under our collaborative
agreements, we bear all of the costs for our development candidates that are not
partnered.
IF DELAYS IN PATIENT ENROLLMENT SLOW OUR DEVELOPMENT PROCESS WE MAY LOSE OUR
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE OR BE UNABLE TO BRING OUR DRUGS TO MARKET.
The rate of completion of clinical trials of our products is dependent
upon, among other factors, the rate of patient accrual. Patient accrual is a
function of many factors, including the size of the patient population, the
proximity of patients to clinical sites, the eligibility criteria for the trial,
the level of compliance by the clinical sites to clinical trial protocols, and
the availability of clinical trial material. Our drug candidate VX-745 is the
first p38 MAP kinase inhibitor to enter Phase II clinical trials. While none of
our clinical trials are currently experiencing slower than expected patient
accrual, delays in patient enrollment in our planned clinical trials for VX-745
may result in increased costs, program delays or both, which could have a
material adverse effect on our company. While all or a portion of these
additional costs may be covered by payments under our collaborative agreements,
we bear all of the costs for our development candidates that are not partnered.
If our clinical trials are not completed, we may not be able to submit a new
drug application and any such application may not be reviewed and approved by
the FDA in a timely manner, if at all.
IF WE DO NOT OBTAIN REGULATORY APPROVAL FOR OUR PRODUCTS ON A TIMELY BASIS, OR
AT ALL, OUR REVENUES WILL BE NEGATIVELY IMPACTED.
The FDA and comparable agencies in foreign countries impose substantial
requirements on the introduction of therapeutic pharmaceutical products through
lengthy and detailed laboratory and clinical testing procedures, sampling
activities and other costly and time-consuming procedures. Satisfaction of these
requirements typically takes several years or longer and may vary substantially
based upon the type, complexity and novelty of the pharmaceutical product. Data
obtained from preclinical and clinical activities are susceptible to varying
interpretations, which could delay, limit or prevent regulatory approval. In
addition, delays or rejections may be encountered based on changes in, or
additions to, regulatory policies for drug approval during the period of product
development and regulatory review. The effect of government regulation may be to
delay or prevent the commencement of planned clinical trials for our drug
candidates in clinical development, including VX-175, VX-497, VX-740, VX-745,
VX-148 and timcodar. It may also delay the commercialization of our products, if
any are developed and submitted for approval, for a considerable period of time,
impose costly procedures upon our activities and provide competitive advantages
to companies more experienced in regulatory affairs that compete with us.
Moreover, even if approval is granted, such approval may entail limitations on
the indicated uses for which a compound may be marketed.
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IF WE ARE UNABLE TO ATTRACT AND RETAIN COLLABORATIVE PARTNERS FOR RESEARCH
SUPPORT AND THE DEVELOPMENT AND COMMERCIALIZATION OF OUR PRODUCTS, WE MAY NOT BE
ABLE TO FUND OUR RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES.
Our collaborative partners have agreed to fund portions of our research
and development programs and/or to conduct certain research and development
relating to specified products. In exchange, we have given them technology,
product and marketing rights relating to those products. Some of our corporate
partners, including Novartis, Glaxo SmithKline, Aventis and Eli Lilly, have
rights to control the planning and execution of product development and clinical
programs. The corporate partners may exercise their control rights in ways that
may negatively impact the timing and success of those programs. Our
collaborations are subject to termination rights by the collaborators. If any of
Novartis, Glaxo SmithKline, Aventis or Eli Lilly were to terminate its
relationship with us, or fail to meet its contractual obligations, it could have
a material adverse effect on our ability to undertake research, to fund related
and other programs and to develop, manufacture and market any products that may
have resulted from the collaboration. For example, if Novartis were to terminate
its collaboration with us before the end of the research term specified in the
contract, we would no longer be eligible to receive milestone payments and
reimbursements worth as much as $400 million from Novartis. We expect to seek
additional collaborative arrangements to provide research support and to develop
and commercialize our products in the future. We may not be able to establish
acceptable collaborative arrangements in the future and even if we establish
such collaborations, they may not be successful. Under certain of our
collaborative agreements, our partners have agreed to provide funding for only a
portion of our research and development activities and we are committed to
investing our own capital to fund the remainder of the agreed upon programs.
However, we may not have adequate financial resources to satisfy those
requirements.
WE ARE NOT CURRENTLY GENERATING SUFFICIENT CASH FLOW TO PAY INTEREST ON THE
NOTES.
Currently, we are not generating sufficient cash flow to satisfy the
annual debt service payments that will be required as a result of the
consummation of sale of the notes. This may require us to use a portion of the
proceeds from the sale of the notes to pay interest on the notes or borrow
additional funds or sell additional equity to meet our debt service obligations.
If we are unable to satisfy our debt service requirements, substantial liquidity
problems could result, which would negatively impact our future prospects.
IF WE LOSE OUR TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANTAGES, WE MAY NOT BE ABLE TO COMPETE IN THE
MARKETPLACE.
We believe that our chemogenomics approach and parallel drug design
strategy give us a technological advantage. However, the pharmaceutical research
field is characterized by rapid technological progress and intense competition.
As a result, we may not realize the expected benefits of these technologies. For
example, a large pharmaceutical company, with significantly more resources than
we have, could pursue a novel, systematic approach to discover drugs based on
gene families using proprietary drug targets, compound libraries, compound
approaches, structural protein analysis and information technologies. Such a
company might identify broadly applicable compound classes faster and more
effectively than we do, impeding our ability to develop and market drugs based
on our approach. Further, we believe that interest in the application of
structure-based drug design, parallel drug design and related approaches may
continue and may accelerate as the strategies become more widely understood.
Businesses, academic institutions, governmental agencies and other public and
private research
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organizations are conducting research to develop technologies that may compete
with those we use. It is possible that our competitors could acquire or develop
technologies that would render our technology obsolete or noncompetitive. For
example, a competitor could develop information technologies that accelerate the
atomic-level analysis of potential compounds that bind to the active site of a
drug target, and predict the absorption, toxicity, and relative
ease-of-synthesis of candidate compounds. If we were unable to access the same
technologies at an acceptable price, our business could be adversely affected.
IF OUR COMPETITORS BRING SUPERIOR PRODUCTS TO MARKET OR BRING THEIR PRODUCTS TO
MARKET BEFORE WE DO, WE MAY BE UNABLE TO FIND A MARKET FOR OUR PRODUCTS.
Our products in development may not be able to compete effectively with
products which are currently on the market or new products that may be developed
by others. There are many other companies developing products for the same
indications that we are pursuing in development. For example, we know of at
least 10 drugs in development for HIV, 5 drugs in development for the treatment
of hepatitis C infection, and 20 drugs in development for the treatment of
rheumatoid arthritis, by competitors in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology
industries. In order to compete successfully in these areas, we must demonstrate
improved safety, efficacy, ease of manufacturing and gain market acceptance over
competing products which have received regulatory approval and are currently
marketed. Many of our competitors, including major pharmaceutical companies such
as SmithKline, Novartis, Abbott and Merck, have substantially greater financial,
technical and human resources than we do. In addition, many of our competitors
have significantly greater experience than we do in conducting preclinical
testing and human clinical trials of new pharmaceutical products, and in
obtaining FDA and other regulatory approvals of products. Accordingly, our
competitors may succeed in obtaining regulatory approval for products more
rapidly than we do. If we obtain regulatory approval and launch commercial sales
of our products, we will also compete with respect to manufacturing efficiency
and sales and marketing capabilities, areas in which we currently have limited
experience.
THE LOSS OF THE SERVICES OF KEY EMPLOYEES OR THE FAILURE TO HIRE QUALIFIED
EMPLOYEES WOULD NEGATIVELY IMPACT OUR BUSINESS AND FUTURE GROWTH.
Because our products are highly technical in nature, only highly
qualified and trained scientists have the necessary skills to develop our
products. Our future success will depend in large part on the continued services
of our key scientific and management personnel, including Dr. Joshua S. Boger,
our Chief Executive Officer, and Dr. Vicki L. Sato, our President. While we have
entered into employment agreements with Dr. Boger and Dr. Sato, they may be
terminated by the employee with six months' notice.
We face intense competition for our scientific personnel from our
competitors, our collaborative partners and other companies throughout our
industry. Moreover, the growth of local biotechnology companies and the
expansion of major pharmaceutical companies into the Cambridge area has
increased competition for the available pool of skilled employees, especially in
technical fields, and the high cost of living in the Boston area makes it
difficult to attract employees from other parts of the country. Our failure to
retain, as well as hire, train and effectively integrate into our organization,
a sufficient number of qualified scientists and professionals would negatively
impact our business and our ability to grow our business. In addition, the level
of funding under certain of our collaborative agreements, in particular the
Novartis collaboration, depends on the number of our scientists performing
research under those agreements. If we cannot hire and retain the required
personnel, funding received under the agreements may be reduced.
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IF WE FAIL TO MANAGE OUR GROWTH EFFECTIVELY, OUR BUSINESS MAY SUFFER.
During the year 2000, we added approximately 100 employees, increasing
the size of our organization by almost 30%, and we intend to continue to grow.
This growth requires a significant investment in personnel, management systems
and resources. Our ability to commercialize our products, achieve our research
and development objectives, and satisfy our commitments under our collaboration
agreements depends on our ability to respond effectively to these demands and
expand our internal organization to accommodate additional anticipated growth.
If we are unable to manage growth effectively, there could be a material adverse
effect on our business.
WE DEPEND ON THIRD PARTY MANUFACTURERS, AND IF WE ARE UNABLE TO OBTAIN CONTRACT
MANUFACTURING ON REASONABLE TERMS, WE MAY NOT BE ABLE TO DEVELOP OR
COMMERCIALIZE OUR PRODUCTS.
Our ability to conduct clinical trials and our ability to commercialize
our potential products will depend, in part, on our ability to manufacture our
products on a large scale, either directly or through third parties, at a
competitive cost and in accordance with FDA and other regulatory requirements.
We have no experience in manufacturing pharmaceutical or other products, and we
may not be able to develop such capabilities in the foreseeable future. In
addition, some of our current corporate partners have manufacturing rights with
respect to our products under development. We are, therefore, dependent on third
party manufacturers and our collaborative partners for the production of our
compounds for preclinical research, clinical trial purposes and commercial
production. Accordingly, if we are not able to obtain contract manufacturing
from these third parties on commercially reasonable terms, we may not be able to
conduct or complete clinical trials or commercialize our products as planned.
Further, commercial formulation and manufacturing processes have yet to be
developed for our drug candidates other than Agenerase. As a result, our
collaborators or we may encounter difficulties developing commercial
formulations and manufacturing processes for our drug candidates that could
result in delays clinical trials, regulatory submissions, regulatory approvals
and commercialization of our products.
IF OUR PATENTS DO NOT PROTECT OUR PRODUCTS, OR OUR PRODUCTS INFRINGE THIRD-PARTY
PATENTS, WE COULD BE SUBJECT TO LITIGATION AND SUBSTANTIAL LIABILITIES.
As of December 31, 2000, we had 103 patent applications pending in the
United States, as well as foreign counterparts in other countries. Our success
will depend, in significant part, on our ability to obtain and maintain United
States and foreign patent protection for our products, their uses and our
processes to preserve our trade secrets and to operate without infringing the
proprietary rights of third parties. We do not know whether any patents will
issue from any of our patent applications or, even if patents issue or have
issued, that the issued claims will provide us with any significant protection
against competitive products or otherwise be valuable commercially. Legal
standards relating to the validity of patents and the proper scope of their
claims in the biopharmaceutical field are still evolving, and there is no
consistent law or policy regarding the valid breadth of claims in
biopharmaceutical patents or the effect of prior art on them. If we are not able
to obtain adequate patent protection, our ability to prevent competitors from
making, using and selling competing products will be limited. Furthermore, our
activities may infringe the claims of patents held by third parties. We are
currently contesting a suit filed by Chiron Corporation claiming infringement of
three U.S. patents issued to Chiron. Although we believe that the ultimate
outcome of the action will not have a material impact on our consolidated
financial
-14-
position, defense and prosecution of patent claims, including those at issue in
the Chiron case, as well as participation in other inter-party proceedings, can
be expensive and time-consuming, even in those instances in which the outcome is
favorable to us. If the outcome of any such litigation or proceeding were
adverse, we could be subject to significant liabilities to third parties, could
be required to obtain licenses from third parties or could be required to cease
sales of the affected products, any of which could have a material adverse
effect on our company.
WE EXPECT TO INCUR FUTURE LOSSES AND WE MAY NEVER BECOME PROFITABLE.
We have incurred significant operating losses each year since our
inception and expect to incur a significant operating loss in 2000. We believe
that operating losses will continue beyond 2000, even if we receive significant
future payments under our existing and future collaborative agreements and
royalties on Agenerase sales, because we are planning to make significant
investments in research and development, and will incur significant selling,
general, and administrative expenses for our potential products. We expect that
losses will fluctuate from quarter to quarter and year to year, and that such
fluctuations may be substantial. We may never achieve or sustain profitability.
WE MAY NEED TO RAISE ADDITIONAL CAPITAL THAT MAY NOT BE AVAILABLE.
We expect to incur substantial research and development and related
supporting expenses as we design and develop existing and future compounds and
undertake clinical trials of potential drugs resulting from such compounds. We
also expect to incur substantial administrative and commercialization
expenditures in the future and substantial expenses related to the filing,
prosecution, defense and enforcement of patent and other intellectual property
claims. We anticipate that we will finance these substantial cash needs with:
-Agenerase royalty revenue;
-future product sales to the extent that we market products directly;
-future payments under our collaborative agreements;
-existing cash reserves, together with interest earned on those
reserves;
-facilities and equipment financing; and
-additional collaborative agreements.
We expect that funds from these sources will be sufficient to fund our
planned activities for at least the next 18 months. If not, it will be necessary
to raise additional funds through public offerings or private placements of
equity or debt securities or other methods of financing. Any equity financings
could result in dilution to our then existing securityholders. Any debt
financing, if available at all, may be on terms which, among other things,
restrict our ability to pay dividends and interest (although we do not intend to
pay dividends for the foreseeable future). The required interest payments
associated with any significant additional debt financing could materially
adversely impact our ability to service the notes. The terms of any additional
debt financing may also, under certain circumstances, restrict or prohibit us
from making interest payments on the notes. If adequate funds are not available,
we may be required to curtail significantly or discontinue one or more of our
research, drug discovery or development programs, including clinical trials, or
attempt to obtain funds through arrangements with collaborative partners or
-15-
others that may require us to relinquish rights to certain of our technologies
or products in research or development. Additional financing may not be
available on acceptable terms, if at all.
IF GOVERNMENT AND PRIVATE INSURANCE PLANS DO NOT PAY FOR AGENERASE, AGENERASE
MAY NOT BE SUCCESSFUL.
The success of Agenerase in Europe will depend, in part, upon the
extent to which a consumer will be able to obtain reimbursement for the cost of
Agenerase from government health administration authorities, third-party payors
and other organizations. Agenerase has been approved for marketing in the
European Union but reimbursement amounts are determined on a country by country
basis, and in some countries these reimbursement amounts have not yet been
finalized. Even if a product is approved for marketing, the amount paid by
reimbursing organizations may not be adequate. Also, future legislation or
regulation, or related announcements or developments, concerning the health care
industry or third-party or governmental coverage and reimbursement may adversely
affect reimbursement policies. In particular, legislation or regulation limiting
consumers' reimbursement rights could limit reimbursement amounts for the cost
of Agenerase.
OUR SALES AND MARKETING EXPERIENCE IS LIMITED.
We currently have little experience in marketing and selling
pharmaceutical products. We must either develop a marketing and sales force or
enter into arrangements with third parties to market and sell any of our product
candidates which are approved by the FDA. We currently intend to bring VX-497
and VX-745 to market ourselves. For these drug candidates and our other drug
candidates for which we have retained marketing or co-promotion rights, we may
not be able to develop successfully our own sales and marketing force. We do not
know whether we will be able to enter into marketing and sales agreements with
others on acceptable terms, if at all. If we develop our own marketing and sales
capability, we may be competing with other companies that currently have
experienced and well-funded marketing and sales operations. We have granted
exclusive marketing rights for Agenerase and VX-175 to Glaxo SmithKline
worldwide except the Far East, and for VX-740 to Aventis worldwide. Kissei has
exclusive marketing rights to Agenerase, VX-745, VX-954 and VX-702 in Japan.
Even though we retain some co-promotion rights, to the extent that our
collaborative partners have commercial rights to our products, any revenues we
receive from those products will depend primarily on the sales and marketing
efforts of others.
IF WE INCUR PRODUCT LIABILITY EXPENSES, OUR EARNINGS COULD BE NEGATIVELY
IMPACTED.
Our business will expose us to potential product liability risks that
arise from the testing, manufacturing and sales of our products. In addition to
direct expenditures for damages, settlement and defense costs, there is the
possibility of adverse publicity as a result of product liability claims. These
risks will increase as our products receive regulatory approval and are
commercialized. We currently carry $10 million (aggregate) of product liability
insurance. This level of insurance may not be sufficient. Moreover, we may not
be able to maintain our existing levels of insurance or be able to obtain or
maintain additional insurance that we may need in the future on acceptable
terms.
In addition, our research and development activities may from time to
time involve the controlled use of hazardous materials, including hazardous
chemicals and radioactive materials. Accordingly, we are subject to federal,
state and local laws governing the use, handling and disposal of these
materials. Although we believe that our safety procedures for handling and
disposing of hazardous materials comply
-16-
with regulatory requirements, we cannot completely eliminate the risk that
accidental contamination or injury from these materials could expose us to
significant liability.
EVENTS WITH RESPECT TO OUR SHARE CAPITAL COULD CAUSE THE PRICE OF OUR COMMON
STOCK TO DECLINE.
Sales of substantial amounts of our common stock in the open market, or
the availability of such shares for sale, could adversely affect the price of
our common stock. As of September 30, 2000, we had 54,601,768 shares of common
stock outstanding, excluding shares reserved for issuance upon the exercise of
outstanding stock options, employee stock purchase and 401(k) plans. As of
September 30, 2000, we had granted stock options to purchase 11,026,425 shares
of our common stock at a weighted average exercise price of approximately $13.66
per share, subject to adjustment in certain circumstances. Of this total,
5,669,495 were currently exercisable at an average exercise price of
approximately $11.35 per share. The shares of our common stock that may be
issued under the options will be freely tradable or transferable pursuant to an
effective registration statement.
WE HAVE ADOPTED ANTI-TAKEOVER PROVISIONS THAT MAY FRUSTRATE ANY ATTEMPT TO
REMOVE OR REPLACE OUR CURRENT MANAGEMENT.
Our corporate charter and by-law provisions and stockholder rights plan
may discourage certain types of transactions involving an actual or potential
change of control of Vertex which might be beneficial to the company or its
securityholders. Our charter provides for staggered terms for the members of the
Board of Directors. Our by-laws grant the directors a right to adjourn annual
meetings of stockholders, and certain provisions of the by-laws may be amended
only with an 80% stockholder vote. Pursuant to our stockholder rights plan, each
share of common stock has an associated preferred share purchase right. The
rights will not trade separately from the common stock until, and are
exercisable only upon, the acquisition or the potential acquisition through
tender offer by a person or group of 15% or more of the outstanding common
stock. We may issue shares of any class or series of preferred stock in the
future without stockholder approval and upon such terms as our Board of
Directors may determine. The rights of the holders of common stock will be
subject to, and may be adversely affected by, the rights of the holders of any
class or series of preferred stock that may be issued in the future. As a
result, shareholders or other parties may find it more difficult to remove or
replace our current management.
ADOPTION OF SAB 101 MAY DECREASE OUR REPORTED REVENUES AND INCREASE OUR REPORTED
NET LOSSES.
In December 1999, the SEC issued Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 101,
"Revenue Recognition in Financial Statements," or SAB 101, which, as amended, is
to be implemented no later than the fiscal quarter ending December 31, 2000.
Vertex and its independent accountants are continuing to review the effect that
the implementation of SAB 101 will have on the Company's net financial results.
The Company expects that the net effect of SAB 101 will be to defer revenue
recognition for some portion of the amounts received by the Company under
contract partnerships into future accounting periods. Vertex would record the
cumulative effect of this change in accounting principle as of January 1, 2000.
The implementation of SAB 101 is expected to have a material effect on the
reported financial results for the year ending December 31, 2000.
-17-
OUR STOCK PRICE MAY FLUCTUATE BASED ON FACTORS BEYOND OUR CONTROL.
Market prices for securities of companies such as Vertex are highly
volatile. Within the 12 months ended November 10, 2000 our common stock has
traded between $11.68 and $99.25. The market for our stock, like that of other
companies in the biotechnology field, has from time to time experienced
significant price and volume fluctuations that are unrelated to our operating
performance. Fluctuations in the trading price of our common stock will affect
the trading price of the notes. The future market price of our securities could
be significantly and adversely affected by factors such as:
-announcements of results of clinical trials;
-technological innovations or the introduction of new products by our
competitors;
-government regulatory action;
-public concern as to the safety of products developed by others;
-developments in patent or other intellectual property rights or
announcements relating to these matters;
-developments in domestic and international governmental policy or
regulation, for example relating to intellectual property rights; and
-developments and market conditions for pharmaceutical and
biotechnology stocks, in general.
WE INCREASED OUR OUTSTANDING INDEBTEDNESS BY ISSUING THE NOTES WHICH MAY
INCREASE OUR COSTS AND MAKE IT MORE DIFFICULT TO OBTAIN ADDITIONAL FINANCING.
As of September 30, 2000, we had approximately $348 million in
long-term debt, including $345 million from the sale of the notes. The high
level of our indebtedness will impact us by:
-making it more difficult for us to make payments on the notes;
-significantly increasing our interest expense and related debt service
costs;
-making it more difficult to obtain additional financing for working
capital, capital expenditures, debt service requirements or other
purposes; and
-constraining our ability to react quickly in an unfavorable economic
climate.
THE NOTES ARE SUBORDINATED TO ANY EXISTING AND FUTURE SENIOR DEBT.
The notes are contractually subordinated in right of payment to our
existing and future senior debt. As of September 30, 2000, we had approximately
$5.3 million of senior debt. The indenture under which the notes were issued
does not limit the creation of additional senior debt or any other indebtedness.
In connection with the expansion of our facilities, we expect that we may
significantly increase our senior debt in the near future. Any significant
additional senior debt incurred may materially adversely impact our ability to
service our debt, including the notes. Due to subordination provisions
-18-
contained in the indenture under which the notes were issued and other
agreements relating to our senior debt, in the event of our insolvency, funds
which we would otherwise use to pay the holders of the notes will be used to pay
the holders of senior debt to the extent necessary to pay the senior debt in
full. As a result of these payments, our general creditors may recover less,
ratably, than the holders of our senior debt and such general creditors may
recover more, ratably, than the holders of our notes or our other subordinated
indebtedness. In addition, the holders of our senior debt may, under certain
circumstances, restrict or prohibit us from making payments on the notes.
OUR ABILITY TO REPURCHASE NOTES, IF REQUIRED, MAY BE LIMITED.
In certain circumstances involving a change of control, each holder of
the notes may require us to repurchase some or all of the holder's notes. We may
not have sufficient financial resources at such time and we may not be able to
arrange financing to pay the repurchase price of the notes. Our ability to
repurchase the notes in such event may be limited by law, the indenture, by the
terms of other agreements relating to our senior debt and as such indebtedness
and agreements may be entered into, replaced, supplemented or amended from time
to time. We may be required to refinance our senior debt in order to make such
payments.
IF AN ACTIVE TRADING MARKET FOR THE NOTES IS NOT SUSTAINED THE VALUE OF YOUR
NOTES MAY DECREASE.
Although the notes are eligible for trading in the PORTAL market, an
active trading market for the notes may not be sustained. If an active market
for the notes fails to be sustained, the trading price of the notes could fall.
Whether or not the notes will trade at lower prices depends on many factors,
including:
-prevailing interest rates and the markets for similar securities;
-general economic conditions; and
-our financial condition, historic financial performance and future
prospects.
ANY RATING OF THE NOTES MAY CAUSE THEIR TRADING PRICE TO FALL.
If the rating agencies rate the notes, they may assign a lower rating
than expected by investors. Rating agencies may also lower ratings on the notes
in the future. If the rating agencies assign a lower than expected rating or
reduce their ratings in the future, the trading price of the notes could
decline.
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
Our disclosure in this prospectus contains some forward-looking
statements. Forward-looking statements give our current expectations or
forecasts of future events. You can identify these statements by the fact that
they do not relate strictly to historical or current facts. Such statements may
include words such as "anticipate," "estimate," "expect," "project," "intend,"
"plan," "believe" and other words and terms of similar meaning in connection
with any discussion of future operating or financial performance. In particular,
these statements include, among other things, statements relating to:
-19-
-our business strategy;
-our predicted development and commercial timelines;
-the development of our products;
-the establishment and development of collaborative partnerships;
-our ability to identify new potential products;
-our ability to achieve commercial acceptance of our products;
-our ability to scale-up our manufacturing capabilities and facilities;
-our projected capital expenditures; and
-our liquidity.
Any or all of our forward-looking statements in this prospectus may
turn out to be wrong. They can be affected by inaccurate assumptions we might
make or by known or unknown risks and uncertainties. Many factors mentioned in
our discussion in this prospectus will be important in determining future
results. Consequently, no forward-looking statement can be guaranteed. Actual
future results may vary materially.
We provide a cautionary discussion of risks and uncertainties under
"Risk Factors" beginning on page 9 of this prospectus. These are factors that we
think could cause our actual results to differ materially from expected results.
Other factors besides those listed there could also adversely affect us.
RATIO OF EARNINGS TO FIXED CHARGES
We present below the ratio of our earnings to our fixed charges.
Earnings consist of net loss from operations, income (loss) in equity affiliate
and fixed charges. Fixed charges consist of interest expense and that portion of
rental expense we believe to be representative of interest.
Year ended Nine Months
December 31, ended September 30,
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000
---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
Ratio of earnings (1) (1) (1) (1) (1) (1)
to fixed charges
(1) For the years ended December 31, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, and 1999 and for
the nine months ended September 30, 2000, earnings were insufficient to cover
fixed charges by $21.5 million, $40.0 million, $19.8 million, $33.1 million,
$41.0 million, and $28.4 million, respectively. For this reason, no ratios are
provided.
-20-
USE OF PROCEEDS
We will not receive any of the proceeds from the sale of the notes or
of our securities by the selling holders under this prospectus.
DESCRIPTION OF THE NOTES
The notes were issued under an indenture between us and State Street
Bank and Trust Company, as trustee, dated September 19, 2000. We will make
copies of the indenture, notes and registration rights agreement available to
prospective investors in the notes upon request to us. A copy of the indenture
is filed with the SEC as an exhibit to the registration statement of which this
prospectus forms a part.
We have summarized portions of the indenture below. This summary is not
complete. We urge you to read the indenture because it defines your rights as a
holder of the notes. Terms not defined in this description have the meanings
given them in the indenture. In this section, "Vertex", "we", "our" and "us"
each refers only to Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated and not to any existing
or future subsidiary.
GENERAL
The notes are unsecured, subordinated obligations of Vertex and are
convertible into our common stock as described under "Conversion Rights" below.
The notes were issued in an aggregate principal amount of $345,000,000, and will
mature on September 19, 2007.
The notes bear interest at the rate of 5% per year from the date of
issuance of the notes, or from the most recent date to which interest had been
paid or provided for, subject to adjustment if a reset transaction occurs. See
"Interest Rate Adjustments" below. Interest is payable semi-annually on March 19
and September 19 of each year, commencing March 19, 2001, to holders of record
at the close of business on the preceding March 1 and September 1, respectively.
Interest is computed on the basis of a 360-day year comprised of twelve 30-day
months. In the event of the maturity, conversion, purchase by us at the option
of the holder or redemption of a note, interest will cease to accrue on the note
under the terms of and subject to the conditions of the indenture.
We will make payments of principal, and you may present the notes for
conversion, registration of transfer and exchange, without service charge, at
our office or agency in New York City, which shall initially be the office or
agency of the trustee in New York, New York. See "Form, Denomination and
Registration."
The indenture does not contain any financial covenants or any
restrictions on our payment of dividends, incurrence of senior debt or other
indebtedness, or issuance or repurchase of securities. The indenture contains no
covenants or other provisions to protect holders of the notes in the event of a
highly leveraged transaction or a change in control, except to the extent
described under "Interest Rate Adjustments" and under "Change of Control Permits
Purchase of Notes at the Option of the Holder" below.
INTEREST RATE ADJUSTMENTS
If a reset transaction occurs, the interest rate will be adjusted to
equal the adjusted interest rate from the effective date of the reset
transaction to, but not including, the effective date of any succeeding Reset
Transaction.
-21-
A "reset transaction" means:
-a merger, consolidation or statutory share exchange involving the
entity that is the issuer of the common stock into which the notes are
then convertible;
-a sale of all or substantially all the assets of that entity;
-a recapitalization of that common stock; or
-a distribution described in clause (4) of the fourth paragraph under
"Conversion Rights" below,
after the effective date of which transaction or distribution the notes would be
convertible into:
-shares of an entity the common stock of which had a dividend yield for
the four fiscal quarters immediately preceding the public announcement
of the transaction or distribution that was more than 2.5% higher than
the dividend yield on our common stock (or other common stock then
issuable upon conversion of the notes) for the four fiscal quarters
preceding the public announcement of the transaction or distribution;
or
-shares of prior to the effective date of the transaction or
distribution which policy, if implemented, would result in a dividend
yield on that entity's common stock for the next four fiscal quarters
that would result in such a 2.5% increase.
The "adjusted interest rate" with respect to any reset transaction will
be the rate per year that is the average of the rates quoted by two dealers
engaged in the trading of convertible securities selected by us as the rate at
which interest should accrue so that the fair market value, expressed in
dollars, of a note immediately after the later of:
-the public announcement of the reset transaction; or
-public announcement of a change in dividend policy in connection with
the reset transaction,
will equal the average trading price of a note for the 20 trading days preceding
the date of public announcement of the reset transaction. However, the adjusted
interest rate will not be less than 5% per year.
For purposes of the definition of reset transaction, the dividend yield
on any security for any period means the dividends paid or proposed to be paid
pursuant to an announced dividend policy on the security for that period divided
by, if with respect to dividends paid on that security, the average closing
price (as defined in the indenture) of the security during that period and, if
with respect to dividends proposed to be paid on the security, the closing price
of such security on the effective date of the related reset transaction.
The "trading price" of a security on any date of determination means:
-the closing sale price (or, if no closing sale price is reported, the
last reported sale price) of a security on the New York Stock Exchange
on that date;
-if that security is not listed on the NYSE on that date, the closing
sale price as reported in the composite transactions for the principal
U.S. securities exchange on which that security is listed;
-22-
- if that security is not so listed on a U.S. national or regional
securities exchange, the closing sale price as reported by the Nasdaq
National Market;
-if that security is not so reported, the last price quoted by
Interactive Data Corporation for that security or, if Interactive Data
Corporation is not quoting such price, a similar quotation service
selected by us;
-if that security is not so quoted, the average of the mid-point of the
last bid and ask prices for that security from at least two dealers
recognized as market-makers for that security; or
-if that security is not so quoted, the average of the last bid and ask
prices for that security from a dealer engaged in the trading of
convertible securities.
SUBORDINATION
The notes are unsecured obligations and are subordinated in right of
payment, as provided in the indenture, to the prior payment in full of all our
existing and future senior debt.
As of September 30, 2000, we had approximately $5.3 million of senior
debt outstanding. The indenture does not restrict the incurrence by us or our
subsidiaries of indebtedness or other obligations.
The term "senior debt" means the principal of, premium, if any,
interest (including all interest accruing subsequent to the commencement of any
bankruptcy or similar proceeding, whether or not a claim for post-petition
interest is allowable as a claim in any such proceeding) and rent payable on or
termination payment with respect to or in connection with, and all fees, costs,
expenses and other amounts accrued or due on or in connection with, our
indebtedness, whether outstanding on the date of the indenture or subsequently
created, incurred, assumed, guaranteed or in effect guaranteed by us (including
all deferrals, renewals, extensions or refundings of, or amendments,
modifications or supplements to, the foregoing), except for
-any indebtedness that by its terms expressly provides that such
indebtedness shall not be senior in right of payment to the notes or
expressly provides that such indebtedness is equal with or junior to
the notes, and
-any indebtedness between or among us and/or any of our subsidiaries, a
majority of the voting stock of which we directly or indirectly own, or
any of our affiliates.
The term "indebtedness" means, with respect to any person:
1. all indebtedness, obligations and other liabilities (contingent or
otherwise) of that person for borrowed money (including our obligations
in respect of overdrafts, foreign exchange contracts, currency exchange
agreements, interest rate protection agreements, and any loans or
advances from banks, whether or not evidenced by notes or similar
instruments) or evidenced by bonds, debentures, notes or other
instruments for the payment of money, or incurred in connection with
the acquisition of any property, services or assets (whether or not the
recourse of the lender is to the whole of the assets of such person or
to only a portion of those assets), other than any account payable or
other accrued current liability or obligation to trade creditors
incurred in the ordinary course of business in connection with the
obtaining of materials or services;
-23-
2. all reimbursement obligations and other liabilities (contingent or
otherwise) of that person with respect to letters of credit, bank
guarantees, bankers' acceptances, surety bonds, performance bonds or
other guaranty of contractual performance;
3. all obligations and liabilities (contingent or otherwise) in respect of
(A) leases of such person required, in conformity with generally
accepted accounting principles, to be accounted for as capitalized
lease obligations on the balance sheet of such person, and (B) any
lease or related documents (including a purchase agreement) in
connection with the lease of real property which provides that such
person is contractually obligated to purchase or cause a third party to
purchase the leased property and thereby guarantee a minimum residual
value of the leased property to the landlord and the obligations of
such person under such lease or related document to purchase or to
cause a third party to purchase the leased property;
4. all obligations of such person (contingent or otherwise) with respect
to an interest rate or other swap, cap or collar agreement or other
similar instrument or agreement or foreign currency hedge, exchange,
purchase or similar instrument or agreement;
5. all direct or indirect guaranties or similar agreements by that person
in respect of, and obligations or liabilities (contingent or otherwise)
of that person to purchase or otherwise acquire or otherwise assure a
creditor against loss in respect of, indebtedness, obligations or
liabilities of another person of the kind described in clauses (1)
through (4);
6. any indebtedness or other obligations described in clauses (1) through
(4) secured by any mortgage, pledge, lien or other encumbrance existing
on property which is owned or held by such person, regardless of
whether the indebtedness or other obligation secured thereby shall have
been assumed by such person; and
7. any and all deferrals, renewals, extensions, refinancings,
replacements, restatements and refundings of, or amendments,
modifications or supplements to, any indebtedness, obligation or
liability of the kind described in clauses (1) through (6).
Any senior debt will continue to be senior debt and will be entitled to
the benefits of the subordination provisions irrespective of any amendment,
modification or waiver of any of its terms.
The indenture provides that in the event of any payment or distribution
of our assets upon our dissolution, winding up, liquidation or reorganization,
the holders of our senior debt shall first be paid in respect of all senior debt
in full in cash or other payment satisfactory to the holders of senior debt
before we make any payments of principal of, or premium, if any, and interest
(including liquidated damages, if any) on the notes. In addition, if the notes
are accelerated because of an event of default, the holders of any senior debt
would be entitled to payment in full in cash or other payment satisfactory to
the holders of senior debt of all obligations in respect of senior debt before
the holders of the notes are entitled to receive any payment or distribution.
Under the indenture, we must promptly notify holders of senior debt if payment
of the notes is accelerated because of an event of default.
The indenture further provides if any default by us has occurred and is
continuing in the payment of principal of, premium, if any, or interest on, rent
or other payment obligations in respect of, any senior debt, then no payment
shall be made on account of principal of, premium, if any, or interest on the
notes (including any liquidated damages, if any) or to acquire any of the notes,
until all such payments due in respect of that senior debt have been paid in
full in cash or other payment satisfactory to the holders of that senior debt.
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During the continuance of any event of default with respect to any
designated senior debt (other than a default in payment of the principal of or
premium, if any, or interest on, rent or other payment obligations in respect of
any designated senior debt), permitting the holders thereof to accelerate the
maturity thereof (or, in the case of any lease, permitting the landlord either
to terminate the lease or to require us to make an irrevocable offer to
terminate the lease following an event of default thereunder), no payment may be
made by us, directly or indirectly, with respect to principal of, premium, if
any, or interest on the notes (including any liquidated damages, if any) for 179
days following written notice to us, from any holder, representative or trustee
under any agreement pursuant to which that designated senior debt may have been
issued, that such an event of default has occurred and is continuing, unless
such event of default has been cured or waived or that designated senior debt
has been paid in full in cash or other payment satisfactory to the holders of
that designated senior debt. However, if the maturity of that designated senior
debt is accelerated (or, in the case of a lease, as a result of such events of
default, the landlord under the lease has given us notice of its intention to
terminate the lease or to require us to make an irrevocable offer to terminate
the lease following an event of default thereunder), no payment may be made on
the notes until that designated senior debt has been paid in full in cash or
other payment satisfactory to the holders of that designated senior debt or such
acceleration (or termination, in the case of the lease) has been cured or
waived.
The term "designated senior debt" means our senior debt which, at the
date of determination, has an aggregate amount outstanding of, or under which,
at the date of determination, the holders thereof are committed to lend up to,
at least $20 million and is specifically designated in the instrument evidencing
or governing that senior debt as "designated senior debt" for purposes of the
indenture. However, the instrument may place limitations and conditions on the
right of that senior debt to exercise the rights of designated senior debt.
Borrowings under the Credit Agreement, dated December 21, 1999, by and among
Vertex and Fleet Bank, N.A. shall constitute designated senior debt. At
September 30, 2000, we had no designated senior debt outstanding.
By reason of these subordination provisions, in the event of
insolvency, funds which we would otherwise use to pay the holders of notes will
be used to pay the holders of Senior Debt to the extent necessary to pay Senior
Debt in full in cash or other payment satisfactory to the holders of Senior
Debt. As a result of these payments, our general creditors may recover less,
ratably, than holders of Senior Debt and such general creditors may recover
more, ratably, than holders of notes.
The notes are effectively subordinated to all existing and future
liabilities of our subsidiaries. Any right we have to receive assets of any of
our existing and future subsidiaries upon the latter's liquidation or
reorganization (and the consequent right of the holders of the notes to
participate in those assets) will be effectively subordinated to the claims of
that subsidiary's creditors, except to the extent that we are ourselves
recognized as a creditor of that subsidiary, in which case our claims would
still be subordinate to any security interests in the assets of that subsidiary
and any indebtedness of that subsidiary senior to that held by us. There are no
restrictions in the indenture on the ability of our subsidiaries to incur
Indebtedness or other liabilities. As of September 30, 2000, our existing
subsidiaries had no indebtedness outstanding.
We are obligated to pay reasonable compensation to the trustee and to
indemnify the trustee against any losses, liabilities or expenses incurred by it
in connection with its duties relating to the notes. The trustee's claims for
such payments will be senior to those of holders of the notes in respect of all
funds collected or held by the trustee.
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CONVERSION RIGHTS
The holders of notes may, at any time prior to the close of business on
the final maturity date of the notes, convert any outstanding notes (or portions
thereof) into our common stock, initially at a conversion price of $92.26 per
share, subject to adjustment as described below. Holders may convert notes only
in denominations of $1,000 and whole multiples of $1,000. Except as described
below, no payment or other adjustment will be made on conversion of any notes
for interest accrued thereon or dividends paid on any common stock.
If notes are converted after a record date for an interest payment but
prior to the next interest payment date, those notes must be accompanied by
funds equal to the interest payable to the record holder on the next interest
payment date on the principal amount so converted, provided that no such payment
will be required from a holder if such notes have been called for redemption. We
will not issue fractional shares of common stock upon conversion of notes and
instead will pay a cash adjustment based upon the market price of our common
stock on the last business day before the date of the conversion. In the case of
notes called for redemption, conversion rights will expire at the close of
business on the business day preceding the date fixed for redemption, unless we
default in payment of the redemption price.
A holder may exercise the right of conversion by delivering the note to
be converted to the specified office of a conversion agent, with a completed
notice of conversion, together with any funds that may be required as described
in the preceding paragraph. The conversion date will be the date on which the
notes, the notice of conversion and any required funds have been so delivered. A
holder delivering a note for conversion will not be required to pay any taxes or
duties relating to the issuance or delivery of the common stock for such
conversion, but will be required to pay any tax or duty which may be payable
relating to any transfer involved in the issuance or delivery of the common
stock in a name other than the holder of the note. Certificates representing
shares of common stock will be issued or delivered only after all applicable
taxes and duties, if any, payable by the holder have been paid. If any note is
converted within two years after its original issuance, the common stock
issuable upon conversion will not be issued or delivered in a name other than
that of the holder of the note unless the applicable restrictions on transfer
have been satisfied.
The initial conversion price will be adjusted for certain events, including:
1. the issuance of our common stock as a dividend or distribution on our
common stock;
2. certain subdivisions and combinations of our common stock;
3. the issuance to all holders of our common stock of certain rights or
warrants to purchase our common stock (or securities convertible into
our common stock) at less than (or having a conversion price per share
less than) the current market price of our common stock;
4. the dividend or other distribution to all holders of our common stock
of shares of our capital stock (other than common stock) or evidences
of our indebtedness or our assets (including securities, but excluding
those rights and warrants referred to in clause (3) above and dividends
and distributions in connection with a reclassification, change,
consolidation, merger, combination, sale or conveyance resulting in a
change in the conversion consideration pursuant to the second
succeeding paragraph below and dividends or distributions paid
exclusively in cash);
5. dividends or other distributions consisting exclusively of cash to all
holders of our common stock (excluding any cash that is distributed
upon a reclassification, change, merger, consolidation, statutory share
exchange, combination, sale or conveyance as described in the second
succeeding
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paragraph hereof or as part of a distribution referred to in clause (4)
above) to the extent that such distributions, combined together with
(A) all other such all-cash distributions made within the preceding 12
months for which no adjustment has been made plus (B) any cash and the
fair market value of other consideration paid for any tender or
exchange offers by us or any of our subsidiaries for our common stock
concluded within the preceding 12 months for which no adjustment has
been made, exceeds 10% of our market capitalization on the record date
for such distribution; market capitalization is the product of the then
current market price of our common stock times the number of shares of
our common stock then outstanding; and
6. payments to holders of our common stock pursuant to a tender or
exchange offer made by us or any of our subsidiaries to the extent that
the same involves aggregate consideration that, together with (A) any
cash and the fair market value of any other consideration paid in any
other tender or exchange offer by us or any of our subsidiaries for our
common stock expiring within the 12 months preceding such tender or
exchange offer for which no adjustment has been made plus (B) the
aggregate amount of any all-cash distributions referred to in clause
(5) above to all holders of our common stock within 12 months preceding
the expiration of such tender or exchange offer for which no
adjustments have been made, exceeds 10% of our market capitalization on
the expiration of such tender or exchange offer.
No adjustment in the conversion price will be required unless such
adjustment would require a change of at least 1% in the conversion price then in
effect at such time. Any adjustment that would otherwise be required to be made
shall be carried forward and taken into account in any subsequent adjustment.
Except as stated above, the conversion price will not be adjusted for the
issuance of our common stock or any securities convertible into or exchangeable
for our common stock or carrying the right to purchase any of the foregoing.
In the case of:
-any recapitalization, reclassification or change of our common stock
(other than changes in par value or resulting from a subdivision or
combination),
-a consolidation, merger or combination involving us,
-a sale, conveyance or lease to another corporation of all or
substantially all of our property and assets, or
-any statutory share exchange,
in each case as a result of which holders of our common stock are entitled to
receive stock, other securities, other property or assets (including cash or any
combination thereof) with respect to or in exchange for our common stock, the
holders of the notes then outstanding will be entitled thereafter to convert
those notes into the kind and amount of shares of stock, other securities or
other property or assets (including cash or any combination thereof) which they
would have owned or been entitled to receive upon such recapitalization,
reclassification, change, consolidation, merger, combination, sale, conveyance
or statutory share exchange had such notes been converted into our common stock
immediately prior to such recapitalization, reclassification, change,
consolidation, merger, combination, sale, conveyance or statutory share
exchange. We may not become a party to any such transaction unless its terms are
consistent with the foregoing.
If a taxable distribution to holders of our common stock or other
transaction occurs which results in any adjustment of the conversion price, the
holders of notes may, in certain circumstances, be deemed
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to have received a distribution subject to U.S. income tax as a dividend. In
certain other circumstances, the absence of an adjustment may result in a
taxable dividend to the holders of common stock. See "United States Federal
Income Tax Considerations."
We may from time to time, to the extent permitted by law, reduce the
conversion price of the notes by any amount for any period of at least 20 days.
In that case we will give at least 15 days' notice of such decrease. We may make
such reductions in the conversion price, in addition to those set forth above,
as our board of directors deems advisable to avoid or diminish any income tax to
holders of our common stock resulting from any dividend or distribution of stock
(or rights to acquire stock) or from any event treated as such for income tax
purposes.
PROVISIONAL REDEMPTION
We may redeem the notes, in whole or in part, at any time prior to
September 19, 2003, at a redemption price equal to $1,000 per $1,000 principal
amount of notes to be redeemed plus accrued and unpaid interest, if any, to, but
excluding, the provisional redemption date if:
-the closing price of our common stock has exceeded 150% of the
conversion price then in effect for at least 20 trading days within a
period of 30 consecutive trading days ending on the trading day prior
to the date of mailing of the provisional redemption notice (which date
shall be at least 20 but not more than 60 days prior to the provisional
redemption date); and
-the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part is
effective and available for use and is expected to remain effective for
the 30 days following the provisional redemption date.
If the price of our common stock on the provisional redemption date
exceeds the conversion price and you elect to receive cash instead of converting
your notes into common stock, you will receive less value than if you converted
your notes into common stock.
Upon any provisional redemption, we will make an additional
"make-whole" payment with respect to the notes called for redemption to holders
on the notice date in an amount equal to $150.00 per $1,000 principal amount of
notes, less the amount of any interest actually paid on the notes prior to the
provisional redemption date. We may make this "make-whole" payment, at our
option, either in cash or in our common stock or a combination of cash and
common stock, if a registration statement for the common stock underlying the
"make-whole" payment is effective and expected to remain effective and available
for use for the 30 days following the provisional redemption date and if we
satisfy certain other conditions specified in the indenture. We will specify the
type of consideration for the "make-whole" payment in the redemption notice.
"Make-whole" payments made in our common stock will be valued at 97% of the
average of the closing sales prices of our common stock for the five trading
days ending on the day prior to the provisional redemption date.
WE WILL BE OBLIGATED TO MAKE THIS ADDITIONAL PAYMENT ON ALL NOTES
CALLED FOR PROVISIONAL REDEMPTION, INCLUDING ANY NOTES CONVERTED AFTER THE
NOTICE DATE AND BEFORE THE PROVISIONAL REDEMPTION DATE.
REDEMPTION OF NOTES AT OUR OPTION
There is no sinking fund for the notes. On and after September 19,
2003, we are entitled to redeem some or all of the notes on at least 20 but not
more than 60 days' notice, at the redemption prices set out below, together with
accrued and unpaid interest to, but excluding, the date fixed for redemption, if
the closing price of our common stock has exceeded 120% of the conversion price
then in effect for at
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least 20 trading days within a period of 30 consecutive trading days ending on
the trading day prior to the date of mailing of the optional redemption notice.
However, if a redemption date is an interest payment date, the semi-annual
payment of interest becoming due on such date shall be payable to the holder of
record as of the relevant record date and the redemption price shall not include
such interest payment.
The table below shows redemption prices of a note per $1,000 principal
amount if redeemed during the periods described below.
PERIOD REDEMPTION PRICE
- ------ ----------------
September 19, 2003 through September 18, 2004...................................... 102.857%
September 19, 2004 through September 18, 2005...................................... 102.143%
September 19, 2005 through September 18, 2006...................................... 101.429%
Thereafter......................................................................... 100.714%
If we do not redeem all of the notes, the trustee will select the notes
to be redeemed in principal amounts of $1,000 or whole multiples of $1,000 by
lot, on a pro rata basis or in accordance with any other method the trustee
considers fair and appropriate. If any notes are to be redeemed in part only, a
new note or notes in principal amount equal to the unredeemed principal portion
thereof will be issued. If a portion of a holder's notes is selected for partial
redemption and the holder converts a portion of its notes, the converted portion
will be deemed to be taken from the portion selected for redemption.
If the price of our common stock on the redemption date exceeds the
conversion price and you elect to receive cash instead of converting your notes
into common stock, you will receive less value than if you converted your notes
into common stock.
CHANGE OF CONTROL PERMITS PURCHASE OF NOTES AT THE OPTION OF THE HOLDER
If a change of control occurs, each holder of notes will have the right
to require us to repurchase all of that holder's notes not previously called for
redemption, or any portion of those notes that is equal to $1,000 or a whole
multiple of $1,000, on the date that is 45 days after the date we give notice at
a repurchase price equal to 100% of the principal amount of the notes to be
repurchased, together with interest accrued and unpaid to, but excluding, the
repurchase date.
Instead of paying the repurchase price in cash, we may pay the
repurchase price in common stock. The number of shares of common stock a holder
will receive will equal the repurchase price divided by 95% of the average of
the closing sales prices of our common stock for the five trading days
immediately preceding and including the third trading day prior to the
repurchase date. However, we may not pay in common stock unless we satisfy
certain conditions prior to the repurchase date as provided in the indenture.
Within 30 days after the occurrence of a change of control, we are
required to give notice to all holders of notes, as provided in the indenture,
of the occurrence of the change of control and of their resulting repurchase
right. We must also deliver a copy of our notice to the trustee. To exercise the
repurchase right, a holder of notes must deliver prior to or on the 30th day
after the date of our notice irrevocable written notice to the trustee of the
holder's exercise of its repurchase right, together with the notes with respect
to which the right is being exercised.
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A "change of control" will be deemed to have occurred at such time
after the original issuance of the notes when the following has occurred:
-the acquisition by any person of beneficial ownership, directly or
indirectly, through a purchase, merger or other acquisition transaction
or series of transactions of shares of our capital stock entitling that
person to exercise 50% or more of the total voting power of all shares
of our capital stock entitled to vote generally in elections of
directors, other than any acquisition by us, any of our subsidiaries or
any of our employee benefit plans;
-our consolidation or merger with or into any other person, any merger
of another person into us, or any conveyance, transfer, sale, lease or
other disposition of all or substantially all of our properties and
assets to another person, other than: any transaction (A) that does not
result in any reclassification, conversion, exchange or cancellation of
outstanding shares of our capital stock and (B) pursuant to which
holders of our capital stock immediately prior to the transaction are
entitled to exercise, directly or indirectly, 50% or more of the total
voting power of all shares of our capital stock entitled to vote
generally in the election of directors of the continuing or surviving
person immediately after the transaction; or any merger solely for the
purpose of changing our jurisdiction of incorporation and resulting in
are classification, conversion or exchange of outstanding shares of
common stock solely into shares of common stock of the surviving
entity;
-during any consecutive two-year period, individuals who at the
beginning of that two-year period constituted our board of directors
(together with any new directors whose election to our board of
directors, or whose nomination for election by our stockholders, was
approved by a vote of a majority of the directors then still in office
who were either directors at the beginning of such period or whose
election or nomination for election was previously so approved) cease
for any reason to constitute a majority of our board of directors then
in office; or
-we are liquidated or dissolved or our stockholders pass a resolution
approving a plan of liquidation or dissolution.
The beneficial owner shall be determined in accordance with Rule 13d-3
promulgated by the SEC under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The term
"person" includes any syndicate or group which would be deemed to be a "person"
under Section 13(d)(3) of the Exchange Act.
Rule 13e-4 under the Exchange Act, as amended, requires the
dissemination of certain information to security holders if an issuer tender
offer occurs and may apply if the repurchase option becomes available to holders
of the notes. We will comply with this rule to the extent applicable at that
time.
We may, to the extent permitted by applicable law, at any time purchase
the notes in the open market or by tender at any price or by private agreement.
Any note so purchased by us may, to the extent permitted by applicable law, be
reissued or resold or may be surrendered to the trustee for cancellation. Any
notes surrendered to the trustee may not be reissued or resold and will be
canceled promptly.
The foregoing provisions would not necessarily protect holders of the
notes if highly leveraged or other transactions involving us occur that may
adversely affect holders.
Our ability to repurchase notes upon the occurrence of a change of
control is subject to important limitations. The occurrence of a change of
control could cause an event of default under, or be prohibited or limited by,
the terms of existing or future Senior Debt. As a result, any repurchase of the
notes would,
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absent a waiver, be prohibited under the subordination provisions of the
indenture until the Senior Debt is paid in full. Further, we cannot assure you
that we would have the financial resources, or would be able to arrange
financing, to pay the repurchase price for all the notes that might be delivered
by holders of notes seeking to exercise the repurchase right. Any failure by us
to repurchase the notes when required following a change of control would result
in an event of default under the indenture, whether or not such repurchase is
permitted by the subordination provisions of the indenture. Any such default
may, in turn, cause a default under existing or future Senior Debt. See
"Subordination" above.
CONSOLIDATION, MERGER AND SALE OF ASSETS
We may, without the consent of the holders of notes, consolidate with,
merge into or transfer all or substantially all of our assets to any
corporation, limited liability company, partnership or trust organized under the
laws of the United States or any of its political subdivisions provided that:
-the surviving entity assumes all our obligations under the indenture
and the notes;
-at the time of such transaction, no event of default, and no event
which, after notice or lapse of time, would become an event of default,
shall have happened and be continuing; and
-an officers' certificate and an opinion of counsel, each stating that
the consolidation, merger or transfer complies with the provisions of
the indenture, have been delivered to the trustee.
INFORMATION REQUIREMENT
We have agreed that, during any period in which we are not subject to
the reporting requirements of the Exchange Act, to make available to holders of
the notes, or beneficial owners of interests therein, or any prospective
purchaser of the notes, the information required by Rule 144A(d)(4) to be made
available in connection with the sale of notes or beneficial interests in the
notes. We are not required, however, to furnish such information in connection
with any request made on or after the date which is two years from the later of
the date such notes were last acquired by us or an affiliate.
EVENTS OF DEFAULT
Each of the following constitutes an event of default under the indenture:
1. our failure to pay when due the principal of or premium, if any, on any of
the notes at maturity, upon redemption or exercise of a repurchase right or
otherwise, whether or not such payment is prohibited by the subordination
provisions of the indenture;
2. our failure to pay an installment of interest (including liquidated damages,
if any) on any of the notes for 30 days after the date when due, whether or
not such payment is prohibited by the subordination provisions of the
indenture;
3. our failure to deliver shares of common stock, together with cash instead of
fractional shares, when those shares of common stock or cash instead of
fractional shares, are required to be delivered following conversion of a
note, and that failure continues for 10 days;
4. our failure to perform or observe any other term, covenant or agreement
contained in the notes or the indenture for a period of 60 days after
written notice of such failure, requiring us to remedy the same, shall have
been given to us by the trustee or to us and the trustee by the holders of
at least 25% in aggregate principal amount of the notes then outstanding;
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5. our failure to make any payment by the end of the applicable grace period,
if any, after the maturity of any Indebtedness for borrowed money in an
amount in excess of $5 million, or there is an acceleration of Indebtedness
for borrowed money in an amount in excess of $5 million because of a default
with respect to such Indebtedness without such Indebtedness having been
discharged or such acceleration having been cured, waived, rescinded or
annulled, in either case, for a period of 30 days after written notice to us
by the trustee or to us and the trustee by holders of at least 25% in
aggregate principal amount of the notes then outstanding; and
6. certain events of our bankruptcy, insolvency or reorganization.
If an event of default specified in clause (6) above occurs and is
continuing, then the principal of all the notes and the interest thereon shall
automatically become immediately due and payable. If an event of default shall
occur and be continuing, other than with respect to clause (6) above, the
trustee or the holders of at least 25% in aggregate principal amount of the
notes then outstanding may declare the notes due and payable at their principal
amount together with accrued interest, and thereupon the trustee may, at its
discretion, proceed to protect and enforce the rights of the holders of notes by
appropriate judicial proceedings. Such declaration may be rescinded and annulled
with the written consent of the holders of a majority in aggregate principal
amount of the notes then outstanding subject to the provisions of the indenture.
The holders of a majority in aggregate principal amount of notes at the
time outstanding through their written consent, or the holders of a majority in
aggregate principal amount of notes then outstanding represented at a meeting at
which a quorum is present by a written resolution, may waive any existing
default or event of default and its consequences except any default or event of
default:
-in any payment on the notes;
-in respect of the conversion rights of the notes; or
-in respect of the covenants or provisions in the indenture that may
not be modified or amended without the consent of the holder of each
note affected as described in "Modification, Waiver and Meetings"
below.
Holders of a majority in aggregate principal amount of the notes then
outstanding through their written consent, or the holders of a majority in
aggregate principal amount of the notes then outstanding represented at a
meeting at which a quorum is present by a written resolution, may direct the
time, method and place of conducting any proceeding for any remedy available to
the trustee or exercising any trust or power conferred upon the trustee, subject
to the provisions of the indenture. The indenture contains a provision entitling
the trustee, subject to the duty of the trustee during a default to act with the
required standard of care, to be indemnified by the holders of notes before
proceeding to exercise any right or power under the indenture at the request of
such holders. The rights of holders of the notes to pursue remedies with respect
to the indenture and the notes are subject to a number of additional
requirements set forth in the indenture.
The right of any holder:
-to receive payment of principal, premium, if any, the change of
control purchase price and interest in respect of the notes held by
that holder on or after the respective due dates expressed in the
notes;
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-to convert those notes; and
-to bring suit for the enforcement of any such payment on or after the
respective due dates expressed in the notes, and the right to convert;
will not be impaired or affected without that holder's consent.
The indenture provides that the trustee shall, within 90 days of the
occurrence of a default of which the trustee has received written notice, give
to the registered holders of the notes notice of all uncured defaults known to
it, but the trustee shall be protected in withholding such notice if it, in good
faith, determines that the withholding of such notice is in the best interest of
such registered holders, except in the case of a default in the payment of the
principal of, or premium, if any, or interest on, any of the notes when due or
in the payment of any redemption or repurchase obligation.
We are required to furnish annually to the trustee a statement as to
the fulfillment of our obligations under the indenture. In addition, we are
required to file with the trustee a written notice of the occurrence of any
default or event of default within five business days of our becoming aware of
the occurrence of any default or event of default.
MODIFICATION, WAIVER AND MEETINGS
The indenture contains provisions for convening meetings of the holders
of notes to consider matters affecting their interests.
The indenture (including the terms and conditions of the notes) may be
modified or amended by us and the trustee, without the consent of the holder of
any note, for the purposes of, among other things:
-adding to our covenants for the benefit of the holders of notes;
-surrendering any right or power conferred upon us;
-providing for conversion rights of holders of notes if any
reclassification or change of our common stock or any consolidation,
merger or sale of all or substantially all of our assets occurs;
-providing for the assumption of our obligations to the holders of
notes in the case of a merger, consolidation, conveyance, transfer or
lease;
-reducing the conversion price, provided that the reduction will not
adversely affect the interests of holders of notes in any material
respect;
-complying with the requirements of the SEC in order to effect or
maintain the qualification of the indenture under the Trust Indenture
Act of 1939;
-making any changes or modifications to the indenture necessary in
connection with the registration of the notes under the Securities Act
of 1933 as contemplated by the registration rights agreement, provided
that this action does not adversely affect the interests of the holders
of the notes in any material respect;
-curing any ambiguity or correcting or supplementing any defective
provision contained in the indenture, provided that such modification
or amendment does not, in the good faith opinion of
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our board of directors and the trustee, adversely affect the interests
of the holders of the notes in any material respect; or
-adding or modifying any other provisions which we and the trustee may
deem necessary or desirable and which will not adversely affect the
interests of the holders of notes in any material respect.
Modifications and amendments to the indenture or to the terms and
conditions of the notes may also be made, and noncompliance by us with any
provision of the indenture or the notes may be waived, either:
-with the written consent of the holders of at least a majority in
aggregate principal amount of the notes at the time outstanding; or
-by the adoption of a resolution at a meeting of holders at which a
quorum is present by at least a majority in aggregate principal amount
of the notes represented at such meeting.
-However, no such modification, amendment or waiver may, without the
written consent or the affirmative vote of the holder of each note
affected:
-change the maturity of the principal of or any installment of interest
on any note (including any payment of liquidated damages);
-reduce the principal amount of, or any premium, if any, on any note;
-reduce the interest rate or interest (including any liquidated
damages) on any note;
-change the currency of payment of principal of, premium, if any, or
interest on any note;
-impair the right to institute suit for the enforcement of any payment
on or with respect to, or the conversion of, any note;
-modify our obligations to maintain an office or agency in New York
City;
-except as otherwise permitted or contemplated by provisions of the
indenture concerning specified reclassifications or corporate
reorganizations, adversely affect the conversion rights of holders of
the notes;
-adversely affect the repurchase option of holders upon a change of
control;
-modify the subordination provisions of the notes in a manner adverse
to the holders of notes;
-reduce the percentage in aggregate principal amount of notes
outstanding necessary to modify or amend the indenture or to waive any
past default; or
-reduce the percentage in aggregate principal amount of notes
outstanding required for the adoption of a resolution or the quorum
required at any meeting of holders of notes at which a resolution is
adopted.
The quorum at any meeting called to adopt a resolution will be persons
holding or representing a majority in aggregate principal amount of the notes at
the time outstanding.
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SATISFACTION AND DISCHARGE
We may discharge our obligations under the indenture while notes remain
outstanding, subject to certain conditions, if:
-all outstanding notes will become due and payable at their scheduled
maturity within one year; or
-all outstanding notes are scheduled for redemption within one year,
and, in either case, we have deposited with the trustee an amount sufficient to
pay and discharge all outstanding notes on the date of their scheduled maturity
or the scheduled date of redemption.
FORM, DENOMINATION AND REGISTRATION
The notes are issued in fully registered form, without coupons, in
denominations of $1,000 principal amount and whole multiples of $1,000.
GLOBAL NOTES: BOOK-ENTRY FORM. The notes were offered only to qualified
institutional buyers as defined in Rule 144A under the Securities Act. Except
as provided below, the notes are and will continue to be evidenced by one or
more global notes deposited with the trustee as custodian for The Depository
Trust Company, New York, New York, and registered in the name of Cede & Co. as
DTC's nominee. Prior to resale under this prospectus, the global notes and any
notes issued in exchange for the global notes are subject to the restrictions on
transfer in the global notes and in the indenture. Record ownership of the
global notes may be transferred, in whole or in part, only to another nominee of
DTC or to a successor of DTC or its nominee, except as set forth below.
A QIB may hold its interests in a global note directly through DTC if
such QIB is a participant in DTC, or indirectly through organizations which are
direct DTC participants. Transfers between direct DTC participants will be
effected in the ordinary way in accordance with DTC's rules and will be settled
in same-day funds. QIBs may also beneficially own interests in the global notes
held by DTC through certain banks, brokers, dealers, trust companies and other
parties that clear through or maintain a custodial relationship with a direct
DTC participant, either directly or indirectly.
So long as Cede & Co., as nominee of DTC, is the registered owner of
the global notes, Cede & Co. for all purposes will be considered the sole holder
of the global notes. Except as provided below, owners of beneficial interests in
the global notes will not be entitled to have certificates registered in their
names, will not receive or be entitled to receive physical delivery of
certificates in definitive form, and will not be considered holders thereof. The
laws of some states require that certain persons take physical delivery of
securities in definitive form. Consequently, the ability to transfer a
beneficial interest in the global notes to such persons may be limited.
We will wire, through the facilities of the trustee, principal,
premium, if any, and interest payments on the global notes to Cede & Co., the
nominee for DTC, as the registered owner of the global notes. Vertex, the
trustee and any paying agent will have no responsibility or liability for paying
amounts due on the global notes to owners of beneficial interests in the global
notes.
It is DTC's current practice, upon receipt of any payment of principal
of and premium, if any, and interest on the global notes, to credit
participants' accounts on the payment date in amounts proportionate to their
respective beneficial interests in the notes represented by the global notes, as
shown on the
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records of DTC, unless DTC believes that it will not receive payment on the
payment date. Payments by DTC participants to owners of beneficial interests in
notes represented by the global notes held through DTC participants will be the
responsibility of DTC participants, as is now the case with securities held for
the accounts of customers registered in "street name."
If you would like to convert your notes into common stock pursuant to
the terms of the notes, you should contact your broker or other direct or
indirect DTC participant to obtain information on procedures, including proper
forms and cut-off times, for submitting those requests.
Because DTC can only act on behalf of DTC participants, who in turn act
on behalf of indirect DTC participants and other banks, your ability to pledge
your interest in the notes represented by global notes to persons or entities
that do not participate in the DTC system, or otherwise take actions in respect
of such interest, may be affected by the lack of a physical certificate.
Neither Vertex nor the trustee, nor any registrar, paying agent or
conversion agent under the indenture, will have any responsibility for the
performance by DTC or direct or indirect DTC participants of their obligations
under the rules and procedures governing their operations. DTC has advised us
that it will take any action permitted to be taken by a holder of notes,
including, without limitation, the presentation of notes for conversion as
described below, only at the direction of one or more direct DTC participants to
whose account with DTC interests in the global notes are credited and only for
the principal amount of the notes for which directions have been given.
DTC has advised us as follows: DTC is a limited purpose trust company
organized under the laws of the State of New York, a member of the Federal
Reserve System, a "clearing corporation" within the meaning of the Uniform
Commercial Code and a "clearing agency" registered pursuant to the provisions of
Section 17A of the Exchange Act. DTC was created to hold securities for DTC
participants and to facilitate the clearance and settlement of securities
transactions between DTC participants through electronic book-entry changes to
the accounts of its participants, thereby eliminating the need for physical
movement of certificates. Participants include securities brokers and dealers,
banks, trust companies and clearing corporations and may include certain other
organizations such as the initial purchasers of the notes. Certain DTC
Participants or their representatives, together with other entities, own DTC.
Indirect access to the DTC system is available to others such as banks, brokers,
dealers and trust companies that clear through, or maintain a custodial
relationship with, a participant, either directly or indirectly.
Although DTC has agreed to the foregoing procedures in order to
facilitate transfers of interests in the global notes among DTC participants, it
is under no obligation to perform or continue to perform such procedures, and
such procedures may be discontinued at any time. If DTC is at any time unwilling
or unable to continue as depositary and a successor depositary is not appointed
by us within 90 days, we will cause notes to be issued in definitive form in
exchange for the global notes. None of Vertex, the trustee or any of their
respective agents will have any responsibility for the performance by DTC,
direct or indirect DTC participants of their obligations under the rules and
procedures governing their operations, including maintaining, supervising or
reviewing the records relating to, or payments made on account of, beneficial
ownership interests in global notes.
According to DTC, the foregoing information with respect to DTC has
been provided to its participants and other members of the financial community
for informational purposes only and is not intended to serve as a
representation, warranty or contract modification of any kind.
CERTIFICATED NOTES. The notes represented by a global note are exchangeable for
notes in definitive form of like tenor as that global note in denominations of
$1,000 and in any greater amount that is an integral multiple of $1,000 if:
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-DTC notifies us in writing that it is unwilling or unable to continue
as depositary for that global note or if at any time DTC ceases to be a
clearing agency registered under the Exchange Act and a successor
depositary is not appointed by us within 90 days;
- we, at our option, notify the trustee in writing that we elect to
issue the notes in definitive form in exchange for all or any part of
the notes represented by the global notes; or
-there is, or continues to be, an event of default and the registrar
has received a request from DTC for the issuance of definitive notes in
exchange for the global notes.
Any note that is exchangeable pursuant to the preceding sentence is
exchangeable for notes registered in the names which DTC will instruct the
trustee. DTC's instructions may be based upon directions received by DTC from
its participants with respect to ownership of beneficial interests in that
global note. Subject to the foregoing, a global note is not exchangeable except
for a global note or global notes of the same aggregate denominations to be
registered in the name of DTC or its nominee.
RESTRICTIONS ON TRANSFER; LEGENDS. Prior to resale under this prospectus,
certificates evidencing the notes will bear a restrictive legend as described in
the indenture.
NOTICES
Except as otherwise provided in the indenture, notices to holders of
notes will be given by mail to the addresses of holders of the notes as they
appear in the note register.
GOVERNING LAW
The indenture, the notes and the registration rights agreement will be
governed by, and construed in accordance with, the law of the State of New York.
INFORMATION REGARDING THE TRUSTEE
State Street Bank and Trust Company, as trustee under the indenture,
has been appointed by us as paying agent, conversion agent, registrar and
custodian with regard to the notes. EquiServe Limited Partnership is the
transfer agent and registrar for our common stock. The trustee or its affiliates
may from time to time in the future provide banking and other services to us in
the ordinary course of their business.
REGISTRATION RIGHTS OF HOLDERS OF THE NOTES
When we issued the notes, we entered into a registration rights
agreement with the initial purchasers of the notes. As required under that
agreement, we have filed with the SEC, at our expense, a shelf registration
statement, of which this prospectus forms a part, covering the resale by holders
of the notes and the common stock issuable upon conversion of the notes. Under
the terms of the registration rights agreement, we have agreed to use our best
efforts to keep the registration statement effective until September 19, 2002 or
such earlier date when the holders of the notes and the common stock issuable
upon conversion of the notes are able to sell all such securities immediately
without restriction pursuant to the volume limitation provisions of Rule 144
under the Securities Act or any successor rule thereto or otherwise.
We have also agreed to provide to each registered holder copies of this
prospectus and take other actions that are required to permit unrestricted
resales of the notes and the common stock issuable upon
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conversion of the notes. A holder who sells the notes and the common stock
issuable upon conversion of the notes pursuant to the shelf registration
statement of which this prospectus forms a part must be named as a selling
stockholder in this prospectus (or a supplement to this prospectus) and must
deliver this prospectus (together with any prospectus supplement) to the
purchasers. The holder is also bound by the provisions of the registration
rights agreement including certain indemnification provisions.
Each holder must notify us not later than three business days prior to
any proposed sale by that holder pursuant to the shelf registration statement.
This notice will be effective for five business days. We may suspend the
holder's use of the prospectus for a reasonable period not to exceed 45 days (60
days under certain circumstances relating to a proposed or pending material
business transaction, the disclosure of which would impede our ability to
consummate such transaction) in any 90-day period, and not to exceed an
aggregate of 90 days in any 12-month period, if we, in our reasonable judgment,
believe we may possess material non-public information the disclosure of which
would have a material adverse effect on us and our subsidiaries taken as a
whole. Each holder, by its acceptance of a note, agrees to hold any
communication by us in response to a notice of a proposed sale in confidence.
If any of the following events, which we refer to as a registration
default, occurs:
-the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part ceases
to be effective or fails to be usable without being succeeded within
five business days by a post-effective amendment or a report filed with
the SEC pursuant to the Exchange Act that cures the failure of the
registration statement to be effective or usable; or
-on the 45th or 60th day, as the case may be, of any period that the
prospectus has been suspended as described in the preceding paragraph,
such suspension has not been terminated,
then additional interest as liquidated damages will accrue on the notes, from
and including the day following the registration default to but excluding the
day on which the registration default has been cured. Liquidated damages will be
paid semi-annually in arrears, with the first semi-annual payment due on the
first interest payment date, as applicable, following the date on which such
liquidated damages begin to accrue, and will accrue at a rate per year equal to:
-an additional 0.25% of the principal amount to and including the 90th
day following the registration default; and
-an additional 0.5% of the principal amount from and after the 91st day
following the registration default.
In no event will liquidated damages accrue at a rate per year exceeding
0.5%. If a holder has converted some or all of its notes into common stock, the
holder will be entitled to receive equivalent amounts based on the principal
amount of the notes converted.
The specific provisions relating to the registration described above
are contained in the registration rights agreement between Vertex and the
initial purchasers of the notes, which is available to holders upon request to
us, and a copy of which has been filed with the SEC.
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DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK
Vertex's authorized capital stock consists of 100,000,000 shares of
common stock, $.01 par value, and 1,000,000 shares of preferred stock, $.01 par
value.
COMMON STOCK
As of September 30, 2000, there were 54,601,768 shares of common stock
outstanding held by approximately 200 stockholders of record.
Holders of common stock are entitled to one vote for each share held on
all matters submitted to a vote of stockholders and do not have cumulative
voting rights. Accordingly, holders of a majority of the shares of common stock
entitled to vote in any election of directors may elect all of the directors
standing for election. Holders of common stock are entitled to receive ratably
such dividends, if any, as may be declared by the Board of Directors out of
funds legally available therefor, subject to any preferential dividend rights of
any outstanding preferred stock. Upon the liquidation, dissolution or winding up
of Vertex, the holders of common stock are entitled to receive ratably the net
assets of Vertex available after the payment of all debts and other liabilities
and subject to any prior rights of any outstanding preferred stock. Holders of
common stock have no preemptive, subscription, redemption or conversion rights.
The shares of common stock issuable upon conversion of the notes, when issued
and paid for, will be, fully paid and nonassessable. The rights, preferences and
privileges of holders of common stock are subject to, and may be adversely
affected by, the rights of the holders of shares of any series of preferred
stock which we may designate and issue in the future.
PREFERRED STOCK
Our Board of Directors has the authority, without further action by the
stockholders, to issue up to 1,000,000 shares of Preferred Stock in one or more
series and to fix the rights, preferences, privileges and restrictions thereof,
including dividend rights, conversion rights, voting rights, terms of
redemption, liquidation preferences, sinking fund terms and the number of shares
constituting any series or the designation of such series, without any further
vote or action by stockholders. The issuance of Preferred Stock could adversely
affect the voting power of holders of our common stock and the likelihood that
such holders will receive dividend payments and payments upon liquidation and
could have the effect of delaying, deferring or preventing a change in control.
We have no present plan to issue any shares of Preferred Stock.
OPTIONS
As of September 30, 2000, there were outstanding options for the
purchase of 11,026,425 shares of our common stock at exercise prices ranging
from $3.88 per share to $89.65 per share. Options for the purchase of 5,669,495
shares were exercisable as of that date.
STOCKHOLDER RIGHTS PLAN
Pursuant to our Stockholder Rights Plan, each share of common stock has
an associated preferred share purchase right. Each right entitles the holder to
purchase from Vertex one half of one-hundredth of a share of Series A Junior
Participating Preferred Stock, $.01 par value, of Vertex at a price of $135 per
one half of one-hundredth of a Junior Preferred Share, subject to adjustment.
The rights are not exercisable until after acquisition by a person or group of
15% or more of the outstanding common stock (an "acquiring person") or after the
announcement of an intention to make or commencement of a tender offer
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or exchange offer the consummation of which would result in the beneficial
ownership by a person or group of 15% or more of the outstanding common stock
(the earlier of such dates being called the "Distribution Date"). Until a right
is exercised, the holder thereof will have no rights as a stockholder of Vertex.
Until the Distribution Date (or earlier redemption or expiration of the Rights),
the Rights will be transferred with and only with the common stock.
In the event that any person or group becomes an acquiring person, each
holder of a right, other than rights beneficially owned by the acquiring person,
will thereafter have the right to receive upon exercise that number of shares of
common stock having a market value of two times the purchase price, and in the
event that Vertex is acquired in a business combination transaction or 50% or
more of its assets are sold, each holder of a right will thereafter have the
right to receive upon exercise that number of shares of common stock of the
acquiring company which at the time of the transaction will have a market value
of two times the purchase price.
At any time after any person becomes an acquiring person and prior to
the acquisition by such person or group of 50% or more of the outstanding common
stock, our Board of Directors may cause the rights (other than rights owned by
such person or group) to be exchanged, in whole or in part, for common stock or
junior preferred shares, at an exchange rate of one share of common stock per
right or one half of one-hundredth of a junior preferred share per right.
At any time prior to the acquisition by a person or group of beneficial
ownership of 15% or more of the outstanding common stock, our Board of Directors
may redeem the rights in whole at a price of $.01 per right.
The rights have certain anti-takeover effects, in that they will cause
substantial dilution to a person or group that attempts to acquire a significant
interest in Vertex on terms not approved by the Board of Directors.
PROVISIONS OF OUR CHARTER AND BY-LAWS RELATING TO A CHANGE IN CONTROL
Our corporate charter and by-law provisions and Stockholder Rights Plan may
discourage certain types of transactions involving an actual or potential change
in control of Vertex which might be beneficial to the company or its
stockholders. Our charter provides for staggered terms for the members of the
Board of Directors. Our by-laws grant the directors a right to adjourn annual
meetings of stockholders, and certain provisions of the by-laws may be amended
only with an 80% stockholder vote.
TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR
The Transfer Agent and Registrar for our common stock is EquiServe
Limited Partnership. The Transfer Agent's address is P.O. Box 8040, Boston, MA
02266-8040, and its telephone number is 781-575-3120.
UNITED STATES FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS
The following is a discussion of the material U.S. federal income tax
considerations to a U.S. holder relating to the purchase, ownership and
disposition of the notes and common stock into which the notes may be converted.
This discussion is based upon the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended,
existing and proposed Treasury Regulations, and judicial decisions and
administrative interpretations thereunder, as of the date hereof, all of which
are subject to change, possibly with retroactive effect. There can be no
assurance that the Internal Revenue Service will not challenge one or more of
the tax
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results described herein, and we have not obtained, nor do we intend to obtain,
a ruling from the IRS with respect to the U.S. federal tax consequences of
acquiring or holding notes or common stock.
This discussion does not purport to address all tax considerations that
may be important to a particular U.S. holder in light of the U.S. holder's
particular circumstances (such as the alternative minimum tax provisions of the
Code), or to certain categories of investors (such as certain financial
institutions, tax-exempt organizations, dealers in securities, persons who hold
notes or common stock as part of a hedge, conversion or constructive sale
transaction, or straddle or other risk reduction transaction or persons who are
not U.S. holders) that may be subject to special rules. This discussion is
limited to U.S. holders of notes who hold the notes and any common stock into
which the notes are converted as capital assets. This discussion also does not
address the tax consequences arising under the laws of any foreign, state or
local jurisdiction.
PERSONS CONSIDERING THE PURCHASE OF A NOTE SHOULD CONSULT THEIR OWN TAX
ADVISORS AS TO THE PARTICULAR TAX CONSEQUENCES TO THEM OF ACQUIRING, HOLDING,
CONVERTING OR OTHERWISE DISPOSING OF THE NOTES AND COMMON STOCK, INCLUDING THE
EFFECT AND APPLICABILITY OF STATE, LOCAL OR FOREIGN TAX LAWS. PERSONS THAT ARE
NOT UNITED STATES PERSONS (WITHIN THE MEANING OF SECTION 7701(a)(30) OF THE
CODE) THAT ARE CONSIDERING THE PURCHASE OF A NOTE SHOULD CONSULT THEIR OWN TAX
ADVISORS AS TO THE UNITED STATES FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES OF AN
INVESTMENT IN THE NOTES, INCLUDING THE POTENTIAL APPLICATION OF THE UNITED
STATES WITHHOLDING TAXES.
For purposes of this discussion, the term "U.S. holder" means a
beneficial owner of a note or common stock that is for U.S. federal income tax
purposes:
-a natural person who is a citizen or resident of the United States,
-a corporation or partnership created or organized in or under the laws
of the United States or any state thereof, or
-an estate or trust that is a United States person (within the meaning
of section 7701(a)(30) of the Code).
TAX CONSEQUENCES TO U.S. HOLDERS
We believe that the notes and the common stock into which the notes
will be converted will be treated as described below. The description below
assumes, and we believe, that the possibility of our making certain payments
(other than principal and stated interest) with respect to the notes is remote,
and also that the possibility of an additional payment in connection with a
provisional redemption does not result in the notes being treated as "contingent
payment debt instruments." Persons that are considering the purchase of a note
should consult their own tax advisors as to the foregoing.
PAYMENTS OF INTEREST. Payments of stated interest on a note will be includable
in the income of a U.S. holder as ordinary income at the time it accrues or is
received in accordance with the U.S. holder's method of accounting for federal
income tax purposes. The notes will not be treated as bearing original issue
discount for federal income tax purposes.
SALE, EXCHANGE OR RETIREMENT OF NOTES. Upon the sale, exchange or retirement of
a note, a U.S. holder will recognize taxable gain or loss equal to the
difference between such holder's adjusted tax
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basis in the note and the amount realized on the sale, exchange or retirement
(including any additional payment received upon a provisional redemption but
excluding amounts representing interest not previously included in income). A
U.S. holder's adjusted tax basis in a note will generally equal the cost of the
note to such holder. In general, gain or loss realized on the sale, exchange or
retirement of a note will be capital gain or loss.
Prospective investors should consult their tax advisers regarding the
treatment of capital gains (which may be taxed at lower rates than ordinary
income for taxpayers who are individuals, trust or estates and have held their
notes for more than one year) and losses (the deductibility of which is subject
to limitations).
CONVERSION OF NOTES. A U.S. holder's conversion of a note into common stock will
generally not be a taxable event, except for (i) any cash received instead of a
fractional share of common stock, as described below, and (ii) any cash received
as an additional payment following conversion of a note after receiving notice
of a provisional redemption, to the extent described below. The receipt of cash
in lieu of a fractional share of common stock should generally result in capital
gain or loss (measured by the difference between the cash received for the
fractional share interest and the U.S. holder's tax basis in the fractional
share interest), the taxation of which is described above in "Sale, Exchange or
Retirement of Notes." Although the treatment of any cash payment that we will be
required to make in connection with a provisional redemption is unclear, it is
likely that you will be required to recognize gain, if any, that you realize to
the extent not in excess of such cash payment. Any gain so recognized will
generally be capital gain. A U.S. holder's basis in the common stock received on
conversion of a note generally will be the same as the U.S. holder's basis in
the note at the time of conversion, increased by the amount of gain, if any,
recognized or as a result of the additional payment in connection with a
provisional redemption, and reduced by the amount of such additional payment and
by any tax basis allocable to a fractional share. The holding period for the
common stock received on conversion will include the holding period of the note
converted. If we repurchase a note in exchange for common stock after a change
of control, although the matter is not entirely clear, such exchange should be
treated in the same manner as a conversion of the note as described in this
paragraph (except with respect to any common stock received that is attributable
to accrued interest on the notes).
OWNERSHIP AND DISPOSITION OF COMMON STOCK. Dividends, if any, paid on the common
stock generally will be includable in the income of a U.S. holder as ordinary
income to the extent of the U.S. holder's ratable share of our current or
accumulated earnings and profits. Upon the sale or exchange of common stock, a
U.S. holder generally will recognize capital gain or capital loss equal to the
difference between the amount realized on such sale or exchange and the holder's
adjusted tax basis in such shares. Prospective investors should consult their
tax advisers regarding the treatment of capital gains (which may be taxed at
lower rates than ordinary income for taxpayers who are individuals, trust or
estates and have held their common stock for more than one year) and losses (the
deductibility of which is subject to limitations).
ADJUSTMENT OF CONVERSION PRICE. If at the time we make a distribution to
shareholders that would be taxable to such shareholders as a dividend for
federal income tax purposes (for example, distributions of evidence of
indebtedness or assets, but generally not stock dividends or rights to subscribe
for common stock) and, pursuant to the anti-dilution provisions of the
indenture, the Conversion Price of the notes is reduced, such reduction may be
deemed to represent the payment of a taxable dividend to the U.S. holders of
notes in a corresponding amount. If the Conversion Price is reduced at our
discretion or in certain other circumstances, such reduction also may be deemed
to represent the payment of a taxable dividend to U.S. holders of notes in a
corresponding amount. Moreover, in certain other circumstances, the absence of
such an adjustment to the Conversion Price of the notes may result in a taxable
dividend to the holders of common stock.
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INFORMATION REPORTING REQUIREMENTS AND BACKUP WITHHOLDING
Information reporting will apply to payments of interest or dividends
made by us on, or the proceeds of the sale or other disposition of, the notes or
shares of common stock with respect to certain noncorporate U.S. holders, and
backup withholding at a rate of 31% may apply unless the recipient of such
payment supplies a taxpayer identification number, certified under penalties of
perjury, as well as certain other information or otherwise establishes an
exemption from backup withholding. Any amount withheld under the backup
withholding rules is allowable as a credit against the U.S. holder's federal
income tax, provided that the required information is provided to the IRS.
SELLING HOLDERS
The notes were originally issued by us and sold by Merrill Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated, Credit Suisse First Boston Corporation,
Robertson Stephens, Inc., Chase Securities Inc. and J.P. Morgan Securities Inc.
as the initial purchasers in transactions exempt from the registration
requirements of the Securities Act to persons reasonably believed by the initial
purchasers to be qualified institutional buyers. Selling holders, including
their transferees, pledgees or donees or their successors, may from time to time
offer and sell any or all of the notes and the common stock into which the notes
are convertible pursuant to this prospectus. The selling holders may offer all,
some or none of the notes and the common stock into which the notes are
convertible.
The table below sets forth information, as of November 7, 2000, as
updated by information provided to us by selling holders, with respect to the
selling holders and the principal amounts of notes and amounts of common stock
beneficially owned by each selling holder that may be offered under this
prospectus by the selling holders. The information is based on information
provided by or on behalf of the selling holders. The selling holders identified
below may have sold, transferred or otherwise disposed of all or a portion of
their notes or common stock since the date on which they provided the
information regarding their notes or common stock in transactions exempt from
the registration requirements of the Securities Act.
Because the selling holders may offer all or some portion of the notes
or the common stock to be offered by them, we cannot estimate the amount of the
notes or our common stock that will be held by the selling holders upon
completion of any sales.
No selling holder named in the table below beneficially owns one
percent or more of our common stock, assuming conversion of a selling holder's
notes. None of the selling holders has had any material relationship with us or
our affiliates within the past three years, except that Robertson Stephens, Inc.
and J.P. Morgan Securities Inc. acted as initial purchasers of the notes.
PRINCIPAL NUMBER OF SHARES OF
AMOUNT OF COMMON STOCK ISSUABLE
NOTES UPON CONVERSION OF
OWNED AND BENEFICIALLY THE NOTES
NAME OF SECURITY HOLDER OFFERED(1) THAT MAY BE OFFERED
- ----------------------- ---------- ----------------------
AAM/Zazove Institutional Income Fund L.P. $ 1,250,000 13,548
AIG/National Union Fire Insurance $ 975,000 10,567
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Alexandra Global Investment Fund 1 Ltd $ 3,000,000 32,516
AllState Insurance Company $ 2,000,000 21,677
Alpine Associates $ 6,600,000 71,536
Alpine Partners, L.P $ 1,100,000 11,922
Alta Partners Holdings, LDC $ 5,000,000 54,194
American Motorist Insurance Company $ 763,000 8,270
Arapahoe County Colorado $ 75,000 812
Arkansas Teachers Retirement $ 5,850,000 63,407
Argent Classic Arbitrage fund (Bermuda) L.P. $ 4,400,000 47,691
Argent Classic Convertible Arbitrage Fund (Bermuda) L.P $ 5,400,000 58,530
Argent Classic Convertible Arbitrage Fund L.P $ 1,600,000 17,342
Associated Electric & Gas Insurance Services Limited $ 400,000 4,335
Attorney's Title Insurance Fund, Inc $ 500,000 5,419
Bank Austria Cayman Island, L $ 5,800,000 62,865
Baptist Health Southern Florida $ 367,000 3,977
BNP Cooper Neff Convertible Strategies Fund, L.P. $ 188,000 2,037
Boilermakers Blacksmith Pension Trust $ 1,650,000 17,884
Boston Museum of Fine Arts $ 151,000 1,636
Boulder II Limited $ 2,850,000 30,891
BP Amoco PLC Master Trust $ 1,758,000 19,054
California Public Employees Retirement System $ 3,000,000 32,516
Nominee Name Surfboard & Co.
CALAMOS Market Neutral Fund-CALAMOS Investment Trust $ 1,670,000 18,101
Canyon Value Realization (Cayman) Ltd. $ 11,000,000 119,228
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CFFX, LLC $ 2,000,000 21,677
Chrysler Corporation Master Retirement Trust $ 1,935,000 20,973
CIBC World Markets $ 6,000,000 65,033
City of New Orleans $ 315,000 3,414
City University of New York $ 185,000 2,005
The Class IC Company $ 1,550,000 16,800
Clinton Riverside Convertible Portfolio Limited $ 5,500,000 59,614
Conseco Fund Group - Convertible Securities Fund $ 3,250,000 35,226
Conseco Health Insurance Company - Convertible $ 1,500,000 16,258
Conseco Senior Health Insurance Company Convertible $ 1,500,000 16,258
Conseco Variable Insurance Company - Convertible $ 750,000 8,129
Consulting Group Capital Markets Funds $ 450,000 4,877
Cove Bond Debenture Fund $ 500,000 5,419
D.E. Shaw Investments, L.P. $ 800,000 8,671
D.E. Shaw Valence, L.P $ 3,200,000 34,684
Deephaven Domestic Convertible Trading Co $ 1,000,000 10,838
Delphi Financial Group, Inc. $500,000 5,419
Delaware PERS $ 1,840,000 19,943
Deutsche Bank Securities $ 48,500,000 525,688
Elf Aquitaine $ 200,000 2,167
Engineers Joint Pension Fund $ 621,000 6,730
Enterprise Convertible Securities Fund $ 108,000 1,170
Employee Benefit Convertible Securities Fund $ 200,000 2,167
Franklin and Marshall College $ 245,000 2,665
First Republic Bank $ 225,000 2,438
Fuji U. S. Income Open $ 500,000 5,419
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Gaia Offshore Master Fund Ltd. $ 2,500,000 27,097
Goldman Sachs and Company $ 52,000 564
Grady Hospital Foundation $ 161,000 1,745
Granville Capital Corporation $ 6,000,000 65,033
Hamilton Partners Limited $ 4,000,000 43,355
HFR Master Fund, Ltd $ 130,000 1,409
Highbridge International LLC $ 18,000,000 195,100
Hotel Union & Hotel Industry of Hawaii $ 980,000 10,622
ICI American Holdings Trust $ 980,000 10,622
Independence Blue Cross $ 138,000 1,495
Island Holdings $ 60,000 650
ITG, Inc $ 203,000 2,200
J.P. Morgan Securities, Inc. $ 10,950,000 118,686
Jeffries & Company Inc. $ 11,000 119
Kentfield Trading, Ltd. $ 3,760,000 40,754
Lazard Freres & Co. LLC $ 1,000,000 10,838
Lehman Brothers International Europe $ 1,550,000 16,800
Lipper Convertibles Series II, L.P.'s $ 1,875,000 20,323
Lipper Offshore Convertibles, L.P. $ 1,875,000 20,323
Lipper Offshore Convertibles, L.P. #2 $ 750,000 8,129
Lippers Convertibles, L.P.'s $ 14,781,000 160,210
Local Initiatives Union $ 72,000 780
Lord Abbett Bond Debenture Fund $ 2,000,000 21,677
Lord Abbett Bond Debenture Fund $ 500,000 5,419
Lumberman's Mutual Casualty $ 643,000 6,969
Mainstay Convertible Fund $ 5,000,000 54,194
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Mainstay VP Convertible Portfolio $ 1,000,000 10,838
McMahan Securities $2,150,000 23,303
Morgan Stanley & Co. $ 5,000,000 54,194
Motion Picture Industry Health Plan - Active Member Fund $ 225,000 2,439
Motion Picture Industry Health Plan - Retiree Member Fund $ 110,000 1,192
Nabisco Corporation $45,000 487
Nalco Chemical Company $ 335,000 3,631
Nations Convertible Securities Fund $ 3,300,000 35,768
New Orleans Firefighters Pension/Relief Fund $ 166,000 1,799
New York Life Insurance and Annuity Corporation $ 1,400,000 15,174
New York Life Insurance Company $ 18,100,000 196,184
Nicholas Applegate Convertible Fund $ 2,107,000 22,837
OCM Convertible Trust $ 950,000 10,297
Occidental Petroleum Corporation $ 305,000 3,305
Onex Industrial Partners $ 1,850,000 20,052
Onyx Capital Management, LLC $ 5,000,000 54,195
Oxford, Lord Abbett & Co, $ 800,000 8,671
Pacific Life Insurance Company $ 500,000 5,419
Partner Reinsurance Company Ltd. $ 385,000 4,173
Pebble Capital Inc. $ 700,000 7,587
Penn Treaty Network America Insurance Company $ 295,000 3,197
Peoples Benefit Life Insurance Company Teamsters $ 3,725,000 40,375
PGEP IV, LLC $ 113,000 1,224
Physicians Life $ 487,000 5,278
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PIMCO Convertible Bond $ 3,000,000 32,516
Pro Mutual $ 1,171,000 12,692
The Putnam Advisory Company, Inc. on behalf of: University $ 30,000 325
of Rochester
The Putnam Advisory Company, Inc. on behalf of: $ 50,000 541
Parker-Hammifin Corporation
The Putnam Advisory Company, Inc. on behalf of: Museum of $ 30,000 325
Fine Arts, Boston
The Putnam Advisory Company, Inc. on behalf of: ProMutual $ 100,000 1,083
Putnam Investment Management Inc. on behalf of: Putnam $ 190,000 2,059
Asset Allocation Funds-Balanced Portfolio
Putnam Investment Management, Inc. on behalf of: Putnam $ 130,000 1,409
Asset Allocation Funds - Conservative Portfolio
Putnam Investment Management, Inc. on behalf of: Putnam $ 1,000,000 10,838
Convertible Income-Growth Trust
Putnam Investment Management, Inc. on behalf of: Putnam $ 70,000 758
Convertible Opportunities and Income Trust
Ramius Capital Group Holdings, Ltd. $ 900,000 9,755
Raytheon Master Pension Trust $ 829,000 8,985
RCG Latitude Master Fund, Ltd. $ 300,00 3,251
RJ Reynolds (RJR) $ 143,000 1,549
Quattro Global Capital, LLC $ 1,500,000 16,258
Quattro Global Capital, LLC $ 1,500,000 16,258
Robertson Stephens $ 30,000,000 325,168
San Diego City Retirement $ 1,247,000 13,516
San Diego County Convertible $ 2,674,000 28,983
San Diego Employees Retirement Association $ 1,920,000 20,810
Screen Actors Guild Convertible $ 662,000 7,175
Shell Pension Trust $ 642,000 6,958
Silvercreek Limited Partnership $ 1,100,000 11,923
Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance $ 600,000 6,503
State Employees' Retirement Fund of the State of Delaware $ 975,000 10,568
State of Connecticut Combined Investment Funds $ 2,130,000 23,087
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State of Maryland Retirement Agency $ 3,880,000 42,055
State of Oregon Equity $ 5,975,000 64,762
State Street Bank custodian For GE Pension Trust $ 1,805,000 19,564
Starvest Combined Portfolio $ 1,185,000 12,844
Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association $ 3,500,000 37,936
The Estate of James Campbell $ 895,000 9,700
TQA Master Fund $ 500,000 5,419
Tracor, Inc. Employees Retirement Plan $ 172,000 1,846
Transamerica Life Insurance and Annuity Company $ 8,000,000 86,711
Transamerica Premier Balanced Fund $ 1,000,000 10,838
UBS O'Connor LLC, F/B/O UBS Global Equity Arbitrage Master $ 500,000 5,419
Limited
Value Realization Fund B, LP $450,000 4,877
Value Realization Fund, LP $ 8,000,000 86,711
Vanguard Convertible Securities Fund, Inc. $ 2,290,000 24,821
Viacom Inc. Pension Plan Master Trust $ 68,000 737
Wake Forest University $ 1,163,000 12,605
Writers Guild Convertible $ 385,000 4,172
Wyoming State Treasurer $ 1,329,000 14,404
Zeneca Holdings Trust $765,000 8,291
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Zurich HFR Master Hedge Fund Index Ltd $ 100,000 1,083
Zurich HFR Calamos Holding Limited $ 80,000 867
Zurich HFR Master Hedge Fund Index Ltd $ 200,000 2,167
1976 Distribution Trust FBO A.R. Lauder/Zinterhofer $ 21,000 227
1976 Distribution Trust FBO Jane A. Lauder $ 21,000 227
(1) The number of securities beneficially owned is determined under the rules of
the SEC and the information is not necessarily indicative of beneficial
ownership for any other purpose. Under those rules, beneficial ownership
includes any securities as to which the individual has sole or shared voting
power or investment power and also any securities which the individual has the
right to acquire within 60 days after the date the selling holder provided this
information, through the exercise of any stock option or other right. The
inclusion in the table of securities, however, does not constitute an admission
that the selling holders are direct or indirect beneficial owners of those
securities. The selling holders have sole voting power and investment power with
respect to all securities of capital stock listed as owned by the selling
holders.
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION
The selling holders and their successors, including their transferees,
pledgees or donees or their successors, may sell the notes and our common stock
into which the notes are convertible directly to purchasers or through
underwriters, broker-dealers or agents, who may receive compensation in the form
of discounts, concessions or commissions from the selling holders or the
purchasers. These discounts, concessions or commissions as to any particular
underwriter, broker-dealer or agent may be in excess of those customary in the
types of transactions involved.
The notes and common stock issuable upon conversion of the notes may be
sold in one or more transactions at fixed prices, at prevailing market prices at
the time of sale, at prices related to the prevailing market prices, at varying
prices determined at the time of sale, or at negotiated prices. These sales may
be effected in transactions, which may involve crosses or block transactions:
-on any national securities exchange or U.S. inter-dealer system of a
registered national securities association on which the notes or our
common stock may be listed or quoted at the time of sale;
-in the over-the-counter market;
-otherwise than on these exchanges or systems or in the
over-the-counter market;
-through the writing of options, whether the options are listed on an
options exchange or otherwise; or
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-through the settlement of short sales.
In connection with the sale of the notes and common stock issuable upon
conversion of the notes, the selling holders may enter into hedging transactions
with broker-dealers or other financial institutions, which may in turn engage in
short sales of the notes or common stock in the course of hedging the positions
they assume. The selling holders may also sell the notes or common stock
issuable upon conversion of the notes short and deliver these securities to
close out their short positions, or loan or pledge the notes or common stock to
broker-dealers that in turn may sell these securities.
The aggregate proceeds to the selling holders from the sale of the
notes or common stock offered by them will be the purchase price of the notes or
common stock less discounts and commissions, if any. Each of the selling holders
reserves the right to accept and, together with their agents from time to time,
to reject, in whole or in part, any proposed purchase of notes or common stock
to be made directly or through agents. We will not receive any of the proceeds
from the sales by the selling holders.
Our common stock is quoted on the Nasdaq National Market under the
symbol "VRTX." The notes are currently eligible for trading on the PORTAL
market. However, we do not intend to list the notes for trading on any national
securities exchange or on the Nasdaq National Market and can give no assurance
about the development of any trading market for the notes.
In order to comply with the securities laws of some states, if
applicable, the notes and common stock may be sold in these jurisdictions only
through registered or licensed brokers or dealers. In addition, in some states
the notes and common stock may not be sold unless they have been registered or
qualified for sale or an exemption from registration or qualification
requirements is available and is complied with.
The selling holders and any underwriters, broker-dealers or agents that
participate in the sale of the notes and common stock may be "underwriters"
within the meaning of Section 2(11) of the Securities Act. Any discounts,
commissions, concessions or profit they earn on any resale of the shares may be
underwriting discounts and commissions under the Securities Act. Selling holders
who are "underwriters" within the meaning of Section 2(11) of the Securities Act
will be subject to the prospectus delivery requirements of the Securities Act.
The selling holders have acknowledged that they understand their obligations to
comply with the provisions of the Exchange Act and the rules thereunder relating
to stock manipulation, particularly Regulation M.
In addition, any securities covered by this prospectus which qualify
for sale pursuant to Rule 144 or Rule 144A of the Securities Act may be sold
under Rule 144 or Rule 144A rather than under this prospectus. A selling holder
may not sell any notes or common stock described in this prospectus and may not
transfer, devise or gift these securities by other means not described in this
prospectus.
To the extent required, the specific notes or shares of our common
stock to be sold, the names of the selling holders, the respective purchase
prices and public offering prices, the names of any agent, dealer or
underwriter, and any applicable commissions or discounts with respect to a
particular offer will be set forth in an accompanying prospectus supplement or,
if appropriate, a post-effective amendment to the registration statement of
which this prospectus is a part.
We entered into a registration rights agreement for the benefit of
holders of the notes to register their notes and our common stock under
applicable federal and state securities laws under specific circumstances and at
specific times. The registration rights agreement provides for
cross-indemnification of the selling holders and us and our respective
directors, officers and controlling persons against specific liabilities in
connection with the offer and sale of the notes and our common stock, including
liabilities under the Securities Act. We will pay substantially all of the
expenses incurred by the selling holders of incident to their
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offering and sale of the notes and our common stock. We estimate that our total
expenses of the offering of the notes and common stock will be approximately
$150,750.
LEGAL MATTERS
Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, PC will pass upon the
legality of the issuance of the notes and the shares of common stock offered in
this prospectus on our behalf.
INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
The financial statements incorporated in this prospectus by reference
to the Annual Report on Form 10-K for Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated for
the year ended December 31, 1999 have been so incorporated in reliance on the
report of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, independent accountants, given on the
authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
With respect to the unaudited financial information of Vertex
Pharmaceuticals Incorporated for the three-month periods ended March 31, 2000
and 1999, for the three and six-month periods ended June 30, 2000 and 1999, and
for the three and nine-month periods ended September 30, 2000 and 1999,
incorporated by reference in this Prospectus, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
reported that they have applied limited procedures in accordance with
professional standards for a review of such information. However, their separate
reports dated April 28, 2000, July 25, 2000 and October 24, 2000 incorporated by
reference herein, state that they did not audit and they do not express an
opinion on that unaudited financial information. Accordingly, the degree of
reliance on their reports on such information should be restricted in light of
the limited nature of the review procedures applied. PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
is not subject to the liability provisions of Section 11 of the Securities Act
of 1933 for their reports on the unaudited financial information because those
reports are not a "report" or a "part" of the registration statement prepared or
certified by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP within the meaning of Sections 7 and 11
of the Act.
WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION
We are subject to the information and reporting requirements of the
Exchange Act, as amended, under which we file periodic reports, proxy statements
and other information with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Copies of the
reports, proxy statements and other information may be examined without charge
at the Public Reference Section of the Securities and Exchange Commission, 450
Fifth Street, N.W. Room 1024, Washington, D.C. 20549, and the Securities and
Exchange Commission's Regional offices located at 500 West Madison Street, Suite
1400, Chicago IL 60661, and 7 World Trade Center, 13th Floor, New York, NY 10048
or on the Internet at www.sec.gov. Copies of all or a portion of such materials
can be obtained from the Public Reference Section of the Securities and Exchange
Commission upon payment of prescribed fees. Please call the Securities and
Exchange Commission at 800-SEC-0330 for further information about the Public
Reference Room. These reports, proxy statements and other information may also
be inspected at the offices of Nasdaq Operations, 1735 K Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20006.
We have agreed that if, at any time that the notes or the common stock
issuable upon conversion of the notes are "restricted securities" within the
meaning of the Securities Act and we are not subject to the information
reporting requirements of the Exchange Act, we will furnish to holders of the
notes and such common stock and to prospective purchasers designated by them the
information required to be delivered pursuant to Rule 144A(d)(4) under the
Securities Act to permit compliance with Rule 144A in connection with resales of
the notes and such common stock.
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INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN DOCUMENTS BY REFERENCE
The SEC allows us to "incorporate" into this prospectus information
that we file with the SEC in other documents. This means that we can disclose
important information to you by referring to other documents that contain that
information. The information incorporated by reference is considered to be part
of this prospectus. Information contained in this prospectus and information
that we file with the SEC in the future and incorporate by reference in this
prospectus automatically updates and supersedes previously filed information. We
incorporate by reference the documents listed below and any future filings we
make with the SEC under Sections 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act,
prior to the sale of all the notes and shares of our common stock covered by
this prospectus.
(1) Our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1999
(Commission File No. 000-19319);
(2) Our Current Reports on Form 8-K (Commission File No. 000-19319) filed
with the SEC on:
-March 27, 2000;
-August 1, 2000;
-September 11, 2000;
-September 14, 2000;
-September 15, 2000;
-September 19, 2000;
-October 5, 2000; and
-December 21, 2000.
(3) Our Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q (Commission File No. 000-19319) for
the quarters ended March 31, 2000, June 30, 2000 and September 30,
2000.
(4) The description of our common stock contained in our Registration
Statement on Form 8-A, as that description is amended from time to
time.
You may request, orally or in writing, a copy of these documents, which
we will provide to you at no cost, by contacting:
Corporate Communications
Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated
130 Waverly Street
Cambridge, MA 02139
Telephone: (617) 577-6000