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Report No. : |
347104 |
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Report Date : |
23.10.2015 |
IDENTIFICATION DETAILS
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Name : |
CAE HEALTHCARE, INC. |
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Registered Office : |
6300 Edgelake Drive, Sarasota, FL 34240 |
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Country : |
United States |
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Date of Incorporation : |
11.04.1996 |
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Legal Form : |
Corporation – Profit |
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Line of Business : |
Subject is designs and builds products for patient simulation,
surgical simulation, ultrasound simulation, and clinical simulation
management |
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No. of Employee : |
200 |
RATING & COMMENTS
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MIRA’s Rating : |
Ba |
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RATING |
STATUS |
PROPOSED CREDIT LINE |
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41-55 |
Ba |
Overall operation is considered normal. Capable to meet normal
commitments. |
Satisfactory |
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Status : |
Satisfactory |
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Payment Behaviour : |
Slow but correct |
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Litigation : |
Clear |
NOTES :
Any query related to this report can be made
on e-mail : infodept@mirainform.com
while quoting report number, name and date.
ECGC Country Risk Classification List – March 31, 2015
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Country Name |
Previous Rating (31.12.2014) |
Current Rating (31.03.2015) |
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United States |
A1 |
A1 |
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Risk Category |
ECGC
Classification |
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Insignificant |
A1 |
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Low |
A2 |
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Moderate |
B1 |
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High |
B2 |
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Very High |
C1 |
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Restricted |
C2 |
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Off-credit |
D |
UNITED STATES - ECONOMIC OVERVIEW
The US has the most technologically powerful economy in the world, with a per capita GDP of $54,800. In 2014, however, US GDP ran second to China’s, when compared on a Purchasing Power Parity basis; the US lost the top spot, where it had stood for more than a century. In the US, private individuals and business firms make most of the decisions, and the federal and state governments buy needed goods and services predominantly in the private marketplace. US business firms enjoy greater flexibility than their counterparts in Western Europe and Japan in decisions to expand capital plant, to lay off surplus workers, and to develop new products. At the same time, they face higher barriers to enter their rivals' home markets than foreign firms face entering US markets. US firms are at or near the forefront in technological advances, especially in computers and in medical, aerospace, and military equipment; their advantage has narrowed since the end of World War II. The onrush of technology has been a driving factor in the gradual development of a "two-tier labor market" in which those at the bottom lack the education and the professional/technical skills of those at the top and, more and more, fail to get comparable pay raises, health insurance coverage, and other benefits. But the globalization of trade, and especially the rise of low-wage producers, has put additional downward pressure on wages and upward pressure on the returns to capital. Since 1975, practically all the gains in household income have gone to the top 20% of households. Since 1996, dividends and capital gains have grown faster than wages or any other category of after-tax income. Imported oil accounts for nearly 55% of US consumption. Crude oil prices doubled between 2001 and 2006, the year home prices peaked; higher gasoline prices ate into consumers' budgets and many individuals fell behind in their mortgage payments. Oil prices climbed another 50% between 2006 and 2008, and bank foreclosures more than doubled in the same period. Besides dampening the housing market, soaring oil prices caused a drop in the value of the dollar and a deterioration in the US merchandise trade deficit, which peaked at $840 billion in 2008. The sub-prime mortgage crisis, falling home prices, investment bank failures, tight credit, and the global economic downturn pushed the United States into a recession by mid-2008. GDP contracted until the third quarter of 2009, making this the deepest and longest downturn since the Great Depression.
To help stabilize financial markets, in October 2008 the US Congress established a $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). The government used some of these funds to purchase equity in US banks and industrial corporations, much of which had been returned to the government by early 2011. In January 2009 the US Congress passed and President Barack OBAMA signed a bill providing an additional $787 billion fiscal stimulus to be used over 10 years - two-thirds on additional spending and one-third on tax cuts - to create jobs and to help the economy recover. In 2010 and 2011, the federal budget deficit reached nearly 9% of GDP. In 2012, the federal government reduced the growth of spending and the deficit shrank to 7.6% of GDP. Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan required major shifts in national resources from civilian to military purposes and contributed to the growth of the budget deficit and public debt. Through 2014, the direct costs of the wars totaled more than $1.5 trillion, according to US Government figures. US revenues from taxes and other sources are lower, as a percentage of GDP, than those of most other countries. In March 2010, President OBAMA signed into law the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, a health insurance reform that was designed to extend coverage to an additional 32 million American citizens by 2016, through private health insurance for the general population and Medicaid for the impoverished. Total spending on health care - public plus private - rose from 9.0% of GDP in 1980 to 17.9% in 2010. In July 2010, the president signed the DODD-FRANK Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, a law designed to promote financial stability by protecting consumers from financial abuses, ending taxpayer bailouts of financial firms, dealing with troubled banks that are "too big to fail," and improving accountability and transparency in the financial system - in particular, by requiring certain financial derivatives to be traded in markets that are subject to government regulation and oversight. In December 2012, the Federal Reserve Board (Fed) announced plans to purchase $85 billion per month of mortgage-backed and Treasury securities in an effort to hold down long-term interest rates, and to keep short term rates near zero until unemployment dropped below 6.5% or inflation rose above 2.5%. In late 2013, the Fed announced that it would begin scaling back long-term bond purchases to $75 billion per month in January 2014 and reduce them further as conditions warranted; the Fed ended the purchases during the summer of 2014. Long-term problems include stagnation of wages for lower-income families, inadequate investment in deteriorating infrastructure, rapidly rising medical and pension costs of an aging population, energy shortages, and sizable current account and budget deficits.
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Source
: CIA |
CAE HEALTHCARE, INC.
6300 Edgelake Drive, Sarasota, FL 34240 - USA
Telephone: +1
941-377-5562
Fax: +1 941-377-5590
Website: www.caehealthcare.com
Corporate ID#: 2612708
State: Delaware
Judicial form: Corporation – Profit
Date incorporated: April 11,
1996
Stock: -
Value: -
Robert AMYOT
History:
On April 5, 2012, name
changed from MEDICAL EDUCATION TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
Business:
CAE Healthcare, Inc. designs and builds products for patient simulation,
surgical simulation, ultrasound simulation, and clinical simulation management.
It offers maternal-fetal simulator for training doctors, midwives, nurses, and
allied health professionals in the management of normal childbirth and
complications arising from childbirth and pregnancy; METIman, a wireless
patient simulator to withstand various real-life indoor or outdoor learning
environments; and LapVR that gives learners the opportunity to develop
proficiency in techniques, such as suturing, knot tying, and loop litigation,
as well as some frequently performed laparascopic surgeries, such as gall bladder removal and tubal occlusion for risk-free
learning before they touch their first patient.
The company also provides CathLabVR that offers true-to- life tactile
sensations of the forces encountered when manipulating wires, catheters,
balloons, and stents within a patient; VIMEDIX, an echocardiography training
platform that offers on-demand learning without risk to live patients; VIMEDIX
Ob/Gyn Ultrasound simulator that accelerates training for obstetrical and
gynecological physicians and sonographers; ultrasound training phantoms for
ultrasound assessment and ultrasound-guided procedures, including central line
insertion, breast biopsy, and the transvaginal ultrasound exam; LearningSpace,
a audiovisual and center management system; and METIVision, a digital video and
audio management system for capturing real-time medical simulation.
It offers medical simulation scenarios for medicine, nursing, health
sciences, hospital systems, and the military clients in the United States and
internationally.
CAE Healthcare, Inc. was formerly known as Medical Education
Technologies, Inc. and changed its name to CAE Healthcare, Inc. in April 2012.
The company was founded in 1996 and is headquartered in Sarasota,
Florida.
As of August 24, 2011, Medical Education Technologies, Inc. operates as
a subsidiary of CAE Healthcare, Inc, when CAE HEALTHCARE, INC., Montreal,
Quebec, purchased the company.
EIN: 22-3737089
Staff: 200
Operations & branches:
At the headquarters, we
find the corporate office.
CAE SANTE CANADA INC.
8585 Chemin de la Cote de Liesse
Montreal, Quebec H4T 1G6 – Canada
Which is a subsidiary of:
CAE INC.
8585 Chemin de la Cote de Liesse
Montreal, Quebec H4T 1G6 – Canada
Public Company listed in Toronto under symbol CAE.
Robert AMYOT is the President, Director and CEO.
He was appointed President, CAE Healthcare in April 2014.
Dr. Amyot was previously CAE
Healthcare's Vice President for Medical Programs and Chief Medical Officer, a
position he held since January 2012.
In 2006, Dr. Amyot initiated the VIMEDIX project and is the inventor of
the
first simulator for transthoracic echocardiography to incorporate
virtual reality technology. He cofounded VIMEDIX Virtual Medical Imaging
Training
Systems, which was acquired by CAE Healthcare in January of 2010.
The CAE VIMEDIX ultrasound simulator is now used in leading medical
centres around the world, including the Mayo Clinic, Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center and Massachusetts General Hospital.
A cardiologist echocardiographer, Dr. Amyot graduated from Université de
Montréal in 1992 with a degree in medicine. He completed his residency at the
Université de Montréal, and subsequently gained fellowship from the Royal
College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada in internal medicine in 1995 and
in cardiology in 1996. In 2007, he was promoted to associate professor of
medicine at the Université de Montréal. He has published more than 60 book
chapters, abstracts and articles, and has been involved as an investigator in
more than 30 clinical trials, mostly in the field of echocardiography.
Nick LEONTIDIS is Director.
Karen TICHY is Director and Treasurer.
Jennifer JULA is Secretary.
Subsidiaries And partnership: None
In United States, privately
held corporations are not required to publish any financials.
On a direct call, nobody
accepted to answer our questions.
We sent a fax but no answer
received.
Outside sources (bank) gave
estimate sales for year 2014 in the range of
USD 40,000,000=
The business is profitable.
Banks: Citibank
Legal filings & complaints:
As of today date, there is no legal filing pending with the Courts.
Secured debts summary (UCC):
None