Quarterly report pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d)

NOTE 8 - STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT

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NOTE 8 - STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT
6 Months Ended
Jun. 30, 2015
Note 8 - Stockholders Deficit  
NOTE 8 - STOCKHOLDERS' DEFICIT

NOTE 8 – STOCKHOLDERS’ DEFICIT

Conversion of Debt

On March 31, 2015, Duos Ventures LLC converted $1,415,546 of convertible debentures which included $7,176 accrued interest into 2,211,791 shares of Common stock as a result of the closing of a reverse merger with Information Systems Associate, Inc. (ISA). The conversion was priced at a 20% discount from the ISA closing price on March 31, 2015 of $0.80 for a net conversion price of $0.64 per share in accordance with the original terms of the convertible debentures. As a result of this conversion, $37,120 of accrued debt premium relating to the 3% provision (see Note 3) was reclassified to equity and a $352,093 interest expense was recognized and recorded as a debt premium on March 31, 2015 pursuant to the resolution of the contingency under ASC 480 and reclassified to equity.

 

Reverse Merger

On April 1, 2015, the Company completed a reverse triangular merger, pursuant to an Agreement and Plan of Merger (the “Merger Agreement”) among the Company (“Duos”), Information Systems Associates, Inc. (ISA), a publicly traded company, and Duos Acquisition Corporation, a Florida corporation and wholly owned subsidiary of ISA (“Merger Sub”). Under the terms of the Merger Agreement, Merger Sub merged with and into Duos, with Duos remaining as the surviving corporation and a wholly-owned subsidiary of ISA (the “Merger”). The Merger was effective as of April 1, 2015, upon the filing of a copy of the Merger Agreement and articles of merger with the Secretary of State of the State of Florida (the “Effective Time”). As part of the merger agreement, ISA confirmed to Duos executives that its stockholders would receive 60,000,000 common shares of ISA. The Company intends to carry on Duos’ business as a line of business following the Merger. The Company also intends to continue ISA's existing operations through its existing wholly owned subsidiary, TrueVue 360, Inc. Duos made the decision to become a public company to give it broader access to the public financial markets to support its growth goals.  The objective was to streamline the merger process by finding a clean, operating entity with no “toxic” debt and that was not and had never been a shell company.

 

The merger is being accounted for as a reverse merger using the acquisition method under ASC 805-40 with ISA deemed to be the acquired company for accounting purposes.  This determination is based on Duos shareholders obtaining an approximate 98% voting control as well as management and Board control of the combined entity. Accordingly, the assets and liabilities and historical operations that are reflected in the consolidated financial statements after the merger are those of Duos stated at historical cost and the assets and liabilities of ISA were recorded at their fair values at the merger date. The results of operations of ISA are only consolidated with the results of operations starting on the merger date. An analysis of Duos Technologies established a total enterprise valuation of $19,350,000 using a relative values approach. At the time of the merger, it was estimated that ISA shareholders would own approximately 2% of the outstanding stock after issuance of 60,000,000 shares to Duos shareholders.  This resulted in a purchase price of $393,929. The difference between the recorded historical value of assets acquired and liabilities assumed totaling $1,578,816 was allocated $165,000 for trade name and technology and a further $250,000 for existing customer relationships both of which will be amortized over 2 years.  These trade name and technology amounts are based on the value of a secured loan against the patent and software and the customer relationships is calculated based on the estimated gross margin for the next two years for certain customer relationships.  The remaining $1,163,816 is allocated to Goodwill which is the expected synergies that will benefit the combined entity. Goodwill is not expected to be deductible for income tax purposes. For accounting purposes, the Company is deemed to have issued 1,246,870 common shares to the ISA shareholders for a purchase price of $393,929.

 

In connection with the merger, the Company incurred acquisition costs of $36,718 in 2014 of which $16,425 is included in professional fees, $10,000 is included in salaries, wages and contract labor and $10,293 is included in general and administrative expenses on the December 31, 2014 statements of operations. In addition, the Company incurred $75,489 in 2015 of which $31,812 is included in professional fees, $35,000 is included in salaries, wages and contract labor and $8,677 is included in general and administrative expenses as of March 31, 2015.

 

The fair value of the assets acquired and liabilities assumed in the merger are as follows:

 

Assets acquired:        
Cash   $ 1,347  
Trade name and technology     165,000  
Customer relationships     250,000  
Goodwill     1,163,816  
Total assets     1,580,163  
         
Liabilities assumed:        
Accounts payable     216,461  
Loans payable     748,426  
Accrued expenses     35,275  
Accrued salary     184,263  
Deferred revenue     1,809  
Total liabilities     1,186,234  
Purchase price   $ 393,929  

 

The estimates of fair values and the purchase price allocation is subject to change pending the finalization of the valuation of assets acquired and liabilities assumed.

The following unaudited pro forma consolidated results of operations have been prepared as if the merger occurred on January 1, 2014:

 

  Three Months Ended March 31, 2015   Year Ended December 31, 2014
Net Revenues   $ 1,107,166     $ 4,603,768  
Net Loss   $ (1,338,399 )   $ (3,049,378 )
Net Loss per Share   $ (.02 )   $ (.05 )

 

Pro forma data does not purport to be indicative of the results that would have been obtained had these events actually occurred at the beginning of the periods presented and is not intended to be a projection of future results.

 

All share and per share data in the accompanying financial statements and footnotes have been retroactively reflected for the exchange. On June 30, 2015, the Company assessed the valuation of its intangible assets and goodwill acquired in the April 1, 2015 merger and determined to charge $1,578,816 to operations as a loss on impairment.

 

Common stock issued for services and settlements

 

On May 27, 2015 the Company settled a $33,000 payable to an investor relations firm with 41,250 common shares. There was no gain or loss.

 

On May 20, 2015, the Company entered into a 1-year agreement with a third party for consulting services.  The prepaid vested shares were issued in June 2015 and valued on that day at the closing price of the stock on the previous day of $0.65 per share for a total of $65,000. The $65,000 was recorded as a prepaid asset which is being amortized to expense over the agreement term.

 

On March 31, 2015, the Company issued 50,000 of common stock to a software engineering vendor for a $20,000 partial settlement of an outstanding payable. The shares were valued at $0.336 per share, or $16,800, based on contemporaneous conversions of the Company's Preferred Stock Series A & B to Common Stock. The Company recorded a $3,200 gain on the settlement of this payable which is included in Other Income in the statement of operations.

In conjunction with and subsequent to the merger agreement, ISA Warrant Holders were granted 19,387 common shares in exchange for existing warrants.  The difference between the fair value of the warrants surrendered and the shares issued resulted in a loss on a settlement of $3,082 charged to operations.

 

On June 30, 2015, the Company’s CFO agreed to exchange $56,482 of accrued salary for restricted shares of the Company.  The Company issued 141,205 shares based on a closing trading price of $0.40 per share.  The shares were further divided and allocated by the CFO to three other parties including two charitable organizations and the son of the CFO with the CFO retaining 45,000 shares. There was no gain or loss on the settlement.