34 95193
34 95193
34 95193
Before the
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEEDING
File No. 3-20923
In the Matter of
VOXELJET AG
I.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (“Commission”) deems it appropriate that cease-
and-desist proceedings be, and hereby are, instituted pursuant to Section 21C of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”) against voxeljet AG and Rudolf Franz (“voxeljet” and
“Franz,” respectively, or collectively the “Respondents”).
II.
On the basis of this Order and Respondents’ Offers, the Commission finds1 that:
Summary
Respondents
Background
4. In November 2017, voxeljet entered into a Finance Contract with the EIB.
The Finance Contract provided that the EIB would disburse a credit of up to €25 million to
voxeljet, in three tranches. In December 2017, the EIB disbursed the first tranche of €10
million to voxeljet.
5. In 2019 and 2020, the €10 million loan was material to voxeljet’s current
liabilities and to its long-term liabilities. The financing provided by the EIB was also
material to voxeljet’s ability to continue as a going concern.
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The findings herein are made pursuant to the Respondents’ Offers of Settlement and are
not binding on any other person or entity in this or any other proceeding.
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before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) (hereafter, “EBITDA Covenant”).
The first testing date for the debt covenants was June 30, 2019.
8. Although the EIB took the position that it had the right to demand
repayment of the loan as a result of the noncompliance with the EBITDA Covenant, EIB
exercised its business judgment and chose to engage in discussions with voxeljet with a
view toward reaching agreement on a waiver. The Company noted the existence of these
discussions in the June 30, 2019 Compliance Certificate that it provided the EIB. If the
EIB instead had sought repayment it could also have required voxeljet to make a cash
payment to the EIB pursuant to a Synthetic Warrant Agreement between the two parties.
9. Although the EIB did not send a formal notice of breach of the EBITDA
Covenant, voxeljet remained in breach of the EBITDA Covenant throughout 2019.
10. As a result, voxeljet and the EIB thereafter engaged in discussions about the
possibility of amending the EBITDA Covenant and the issuance of a waiver of the
EBITDA Covenant. The negotiations began after the June 30, 2019 testing date, and
continued until March 2020 when the EIB ultimately issued a written waiver to voxeljet.
11. In or about June 2019, Franz became aware that voxeljet had breached the
EBITDA Covenant. During the second half of 2019, he participated in face-to-face
negotiations with EIB representatives, and written communications with them, concerning
how to remedy the breach.
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voxeljet’s Interim Financial Results
12. On August 15, 2019, on Form 6-K, voxeljet furnished to the Commission its
interim financial statements for the quarter ended June 30, 2019 (“Q2 Financial
Statements”). On November 14, 2019, voxeljet filed a Form 6-K which furnished its
interim financial statements for the quarter ended September 30, 2019 (“Q3 Financial
Statements”).
13. Franz signed the Forms 6-K through which voxeljet furnished the Q2
Financial Statements and the Q3 Financial Statements to the Commission.
In 2020, the EIB Granted a Waiver and voxeljet Disclosed the Breach
17. In 2020, the EIB granted voxeljet a waiver of the EBITDA Covenant
breach. On March 12, 2020, the EIB and voxeljet entered into an agreement in which the
EIB waived voxeljet’s covenant breach. In exchange for the waiver, voxeljet collateralized
the loan by providing the EIB a security interest in voxeljet’s land and facility in Friedberg,
Germany, valued at approximately €10 million. The Company also agreed to pay a waiver
fee of €30,000.
18. In a Form 6-K dated March 18, 2020, voxeljet for the first time disclosed
that it had breached the EBITDA Covenant.
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19. On May 7, 2020, voxeljet filed with the Commission its annual report on
Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2019. The Form 20-F also disclosed the
EBITDA Covenant breach: “We have breached our Total Net Financial Debt to EBITDA
ratio financial covenant . . . with the European Investment Bank (“EIB”), during the fiscal
year and remain in default as at December 31, 2019.” The Form 20-F further disclosed:
“Consequently, the EIB could have called the loan due, however after discussions which
started in July 2019, in March 2020, we received a waiver for the covenant breaches in
2019 . . . .”
20. The Company also disclosed in its Form 20-F that, as a result of the
EBITDA Covenant breach, voxeljet reclassified the €10 million debt from a non-current
liability to a current liability.
22. In July 2018, voxeljet’s Internal Audit staff drafted internal controls
concerning the financial covenants of the EIB loan. However, the Company had not
implemented these internal controls by the time that the Company reported the Q2 and Q3
Financial Statements.
23. Each year after voxeljet’s IPO, Company management, including Franz,
conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness of the design and operation of voxeljet’s
disclosure controls and procedures. Each year, Franz and the CEO concluded that
voxeljet’s disclosure controls were ineffective.
25. As a result of the conduct described above, during the second and third
quarters of 2019, voxeljet’s internal accounting controls were not designed or maintained to
provide reasonable assurance that the Company’s financial statements would be presented
in conformity with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS).
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Violations
26. As a result of the conduct described above, voxeljet violated Section 13(a)
of the Exchange Act and Rules 13a-16, and 12b-20 thereunder. Section 13(a) and Rule
12b-20 require every issuer of a security registered pursuant to Section 12 of the Exchange
Act to file with the Commission information, documents, and annual and quarterly reports
as the Commission may require, and mandate that periodic reports contain such further
material information as may be necessary to make the required statements not misleading.
Rule 13a-16 of the Exchange Act requires foreign private issuers with classes of securities
registered pursuant to Section 12 to furnish to the Commission accurate reports on Form 6-
K.
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32. voxeljet also has taken certain remedial measures, including expanding its
accounting and internal controls personnel and hiring an IFRS expert who reports to the
audit committee. In particular, the Company has implemented new controls over the
documentation, review, and reporting of the Company’s compliance with its debt
covenants.
33. In 2020, voxeljet prepared and began implementing a remediation plan (the
“Plan”). The Company then hired an outside accounting expert to review the Plan against
the 2013 Internal Control—Integrated Framework of the Committee of Sponsoring
Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO), enhance the Plan, and assist the
Company in implementing the Plan.
Undertakings
a. Complete, fully implement, and test its Plan by March 31, 2023,
unless an extension has been provided by the Commission’s staff
pursuant to paragraph 34(b) below, and submit a report to the
Commission staff no later than May 1, 2023. The report shall
describe the implementation, testing, and completion of the Plan,
and whether the Plan has, in management’s opinion, fully
remediated the material weaknesses in voxeljet’s internal control
over financial reporting identified in its 2020 and 2021 Forms 20-
F.
b. For good cause shown, the Commission’s staff may extend any of
the procedural dates set forth above in Paragraph 34(a). In the
event voxeljet decides to request an extension of any such dates, it
shall provide the Commission’s staff a written extension request
that explains the circumstances and rationale for such request. The
written extension request shall be submitted to C. Joshua Felker,
Assistant Director, no later than thirty (30) days before the
applicable deadline.
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than sixty (60) days from the date of the completion of the
undertakings.
IV.
In view of the foregoing, the Commission deems it appropriate to impose the sanctions
agreed to in Respondents voxeljet’s and Franz’s Offers.
A. Pursuant to Section 21C of the Exchange Act, Respondents voxeljet and Franz cease
and desist from committing or causing any violations and any future violations of Sections 13(a),
13(b)(2)(A), and 13(b)(2)(B) of the Exchange Act, and Rules 12b-20, and 13a-16 thereunder.
B. Respondent voxeljet shall comply with the undertakings enumerated in Paragraph 34,
above.
C. Respondents voxeljet and Franz shall, within 30 days of the entry of this Order, pay
a civil money penalty in the respective amounts of $175,000 and $50,000 to the Securities and
Exchange Commission for transfer to the general fund of the United States Treasury, subject to
Exchange Act Section 21F(g)(3). If timely payment is not made, additional interest shall accrue
pursuant to 31 U.S.C. §3717.
(2) Respondent may make direct payment from a bank account via Pay.gov
through the SEC website at http://www.sec.gov/about/offices/ofm.htm; or
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(3) Respondent may pay by certified check, bank cashier’s check, or United
States postal money order, made payable to the Securities and Exchange
Commission and hand-delivered or mailed to:
E. Amounts ordered to be paid as civil money penalties pursuant to this Order shall be
treated as penalties paid to the government for all purposes, including all tax purposes. To
preserve the deterrent effect of the civil penalty, Respondents agree that in any Related Investor
Action, Respondents shall not argue that they are entitled to, nor shall they benefit by, offset or
reduction of any award of compensatory damages by the amount of any part of Respondents’
payment of a civil penalty in this action (“Penalty Offset”). If the court in any Related Investor
Action grants such a Penalty Offset, Respondents agree that they shall, within 30 days after entry
of a final order granting the Penalty Offset, notify the Commission’s counsel in this action and pay
the amount of the Penalty Offset to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Such a payment
shall not be deemed an additional civil penalty and shall not be deemed to change the amount of
the civil penalty imposed in this proceeding. For purposes of this paragraph, a “Related Investor
Action” means a private damages action brought against Respondents by or on behalf of one or
more investors based on substantially the same facts as alleged in the Order instituted by the
Commission in this proceeding.
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V.
It is further Ordered that, solely for purposes of exceptions to discharge set forth in Section 523 of
the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §523, the findings in this Order are true and admitted by
Respondent Franz, and further, any debt for disgorgement, prejudgment interest, civil penalty or
other amounts due by Respondent Franz under this Order or any other judgment, order, consent
order, decree or settlement agreement entered in connection with this proceeding, is a debt for the
violation by Respondent Franz of the federal securities laws or any regulation or order issued under
such laws, as set forth in Section 523(a)(19) of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §523(a)(19).
By the Commission.
Vanessa A. Countryman
Secretary
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