MELBOURNE
-- Fingerprint-sensor maker AuthenTec Inc. received $15
million in venture-capital funding, which is expected to
help the company add jobs and expand as it strives for
profitability.
The just-announced investment is the second bit of
good news for AuthenTec in two weeks. Last week, the
company signed a deal with Microsoft Corp. to increase
the security on handheld electronic devices that use
Windows operating systems -- like cellular phones and
personal digital assistants -- with AuthenTec's
fingerprint-detecting sensors.
The added venture-capital funds will help AuthenTec,
which employs 55, add as many as 10 jobs in the next
year.
Company officials say this latest round of financing
-- while not its largest venture infusion -- is
significant because global private-equity firm The
Carlyle Group, which manages $19 billion, led the way
with almost half of the money.
"They are a pretty powerful firm, with contacts
and influence in each of the end markets that are our
playing field, including cellular phone, personal
computer and automotive access," AuthenTec Chief
Executive Scott Moody said of The Carlyle Group.
Experts say if AuthenTec can balance growing large
enough to meet the demand for its computer chips while
remaining lean enough to stay profitable, there will be
business opportunities in its market niche.
Revenues for biometrics -- using a person's unique
features, like fingerprints, eyes or face, to restrict
access -- are expected to nearly quadruple, from $1.2
billion in 2004 to $4.6 billion in 2008, according to
the New York-based International Biometric Group.
"This is an industry that has had some dramatic
growth and continues to have it," said Samir
Nanavati, founding partner of the International
Biometric Group. "That money may help them stay in
the market long enough to capitalize on that
growth."
He said that while AuthenTec is growing, the company
also is in a "challenging position. They have a
unique technology, but they are a small company that's
got a single focus. They have nothing distracting them.
But if you look at other silicon vendors, like Fujitsu
and Sony, they are very large manufacturers with stable
sources of non-biometrics revenues."
So, if there was a slowdown in that sector,
AuthenTec's competitors likely could weather the storm
better, Nanavati said.
"If biometrics didn't sell anything for the next
10 years, Sony would be fine, but AuthenTec would have
difficulty sustaining revenues," Nanavati said.
"That's a risk because they have nothing else to
fall back on."
Still, AuthenTec believes its latest round of funding
is not just a boost of confidence for the company, but
for the biometrics industry overall.
Along with Carlyle, many of the companies that
invested in the two previous rounds of financing
invested in the latest round, which gives the resounding
message that "we have great support from an outside
investor, and past investors are bullish on the
company's future as well," AuthenTec Chief
Financial Officer Greg Teesdale said.
Since its founding in 1998, AuthenTec has raised more
than $63 million in venture funding.
Moody said, unlike many venture-capital transactions,
he wasn't actively seeking investors. Rather, they came
to him.
"We weren't asking," he said. "We
still have cash in the bank that would have gotten us to
the next level, either profitability or being cash-flow
positive. We had unsolicited offers from several venture
firms, but chose Carlyle because of its strategic value
to the company."
A future in which security is a top priority is one
of the reasons Carlyle got on board.
"As computing devices become more mobile and
more functional, enhanced security solutions have become
a key need for device makers, service providers and
consumers around the world," said Robert Grady,
managing director of Carlyle Venture Partners.
He added that "biometrics, particularly
fingerprint identification, is becoming a dynamic growth
market with exciting new, real-world applications
emerging in areas like wireless phones and devices,
computers, security access and automobiles."
Contact Monroe at 242-3655 or bmonroe@flatoday.net