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Tech firm moves to increase profit

Share conversion will raise $400,000 for OMT
Wednesday, June 2nd, 2004
By Martin Cash

Shareholders of OMT Inc. agreed at the company's annual general meeting on Monday to a mechanism to convert preferred shares into common shares as part of a larger process of transforming the company and making it more profitable. 


Scott Farr, OMT'S CEO, said the conversion will eventually take about $400,000 in dividends off the books, which would help the company's bottom line. The changes to the conversion formula are seen as necessary as part of the company's attempts to raise about $2.5 million in a private placement. That effort was originally announced in March.

Farr said despite recent financial results that show declining sales, OMT Inc. is operating more profitably.

"In 2003 our gross profit margin was 42 per cent, but in the first quarter of 2004 it was 62 per cent," he said in an interview.

In June 2003, OMT sold its Oakwood Broadcast equipment distribution business that had generated 40 per cent of gross revenue, but only 13 per cent of profit. Farr said the decision was made to concentrate on its software business, and in November the Winnipeg-based company purchased the assets of a Toronto company, which now gives it one of the largest libraries of digital music files in the world.

OMT has created a new division called Intertain, and recently signed a contract with Best Buy to provide music and movie trailer preview stations in Best Buy's new store in Calgary and possibly in other Best Buy stores.

"We have gone from operating with a total market capacity of $250 million to one with an entire capacity of close to $4 billion," the CEO of the media and broadcast-focused technology company said.

"Although the top line is most directly affected, the bottom line will get better," he said, adding expectations are for the company to post a net profit by early in 2005.

He said gross profit margins of the Intertain division have already replaced those generated by the Oakwood division, and revenues from the Intertain division will completely pay for the acquisition by the second quarter of this year.

For the first quarter ending March 31, the company reported sales declined to $916,000 this year from $2.36 million the previous year.

The Renaissance Fund, controlled by Wellington West Capital, and the ENSIS Growth Fund and its associated fund, ENSIS Investment Limited Partnership, each control about 2.5 million preferred shares. The ENSIS and the Renaissance investments originally totalled $1 million each. ENSIS is also owed about $500,000 in the form of a separate debt instrument.

OMT's shares, which gained one cent in trading Monday on the TSX Venture Exchange, closed unchanged at 15 cents yesterday.

martin.cash@freepress.mb.ca


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