Tangoe,Inc. (OTCMKTS:TNGO) Files An 8-K Other EventsItem 8.01. Other Events.
In connection with the transaction contemplated by the previously announced Agreement and Plan of Merger, dated as of April 27, 2017, by and among Tangoe, Inc. (the “Company”), Asentinel, LLC (the “Parent”) and TAMS Inc. (the “Purchaser”), the Company is making available the unaudited consolidated statements of operations and balance sheets of the Company and its subsidiaries set forth in Exhibit 99.1 attached hereto (the “Unaudited Financial Statements”) in order to provide the Company’s stockholders with access to such information for purposes of considering and evaluating the transaction.
The Unaudited Financial Statements are preliminary, have not been prepared in conformity with United States generally accepted accounting principles and remain subject to adjustment as a result of the Company’s ongoing restatement of its financial statements for the years 2013 and 2014, all quarters therein and the first three quarters of 2015 (the “Restatement”). Among other things, the Company anticipates that the income tax provisions included in the Unaudited Financial Statements will require further adjustment in connection with the Restatement and that balance sheet totals may change as a result of ongoing customer-level review by the Company’s management of proposed Restatement adjustments. In addition, the Unaudited Financial Statements have not been reviewed by the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm and remain subject to adjustment arising out of such review.
Despite extensive efforts of the Company, counsel to the Company and consulting accountants from three firms retained by the Company or counsel to the Company, which efforts were overseen by the Audit Committee of the Company’s Board of Directors, the Company does not have audited financial statements for the Restatement periods through the present because the Company has not completed the Restatement and an audit of later periods depends upon completion of audited financial statements for some or all of the periods affected by the Restatement. The Restatement process has been expensive and time consuming for a number of reasons including that (i) the Company has over time identified various different categories of errors requiring correction; (ii) the nature of some of the errors identified later in time required extensive compilation and review of the Company’s records; (iii) the Company lacks certain records that would have facilitated attempts to more rapidly correct certain of the errors identified later in time; (iv) the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm could not specify the scope of work that it intended to perform in connection with the audit of the financial statements being restated until the Company finalized its preparation of the financial statements for the Restatement periods; (v) the scope of audit work proposed called for extensive work, including review of a very large number of transactions and extensive customer confirmations of facts, that would be time consuming and expensive to complete; (vi) the scope of audit work was not proposed until near to the end of 2016 (contemporaneously with receipt by the Company of indications of interest to acquire the Company that were not conditioned on completion of the Restatement or preparation of audited financial statements); and (vii) the Company’s Board of Directors determined at that time (after assessing the acquisition proposals, the costs that would be incurred based on proceeding immediately with the proposed scope of audit work in light of the Company’s limited cash and concern that the Company might not be able to satisfy the proposed scope of audit work at any reasonable cost, the competing demands that would be placed on management time by simultaneous pursuit of the proposed scope of audit work and the due diligence and other demands of the acquisition process, the impact on customer relations from an extensive customer confirmation process, and whether an audit could be accomplished more efficiently and quickly at less cost through use of a different independent registered accounting firm) that it was in the best interests of the Company’s stockholders to prioritize acquisition efforts (which might avoid the cost of an audit) while simultaneously exploring whether an audit could be concluded on a less burdensome basis by another independent registered accounting firm.
Item 9.01. Financial Statements and Exhibits
(d) Exhibits
See Exhibit Index attached hereto.