Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.
Geddes Federal names new president
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Large DeWitt apartment complex sold for more than $10M
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BSK forms long-term care practice with additions
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Syracuse law firm gets new partner
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Mohawk Valley Chamber names five new board directors
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Unshackle Upstate unveils 2013 policy agenda
Pro-business group Unshackle Upstate posted a 2013 policy agenda Jan. 4 that includes allowing shale-gas drilling in New York. Other legislative changes the group is
SYRACUSE — An Albany law firm with a Syracuse office is expanding into the Buffalo market. Tully Rinckey, PLLC will open its Buffalo office Jan.
Ithaca’s Primet to begin licensing its technology
ITHACA — Primet Precision Materials, Inc., an Ithaca–based advanced materials company, plans to start licensing its technology to larger businesses. The firm’s core technology involves the production of very small particles on the micron to nano scale. Those particles have a range of applications, but Primet has been focusing on materials used in manufacturing lithium
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ITHACA — Primet Precision Materials, Inc., an Ithaca–based advanced materials company, plans to start licensing its technology to larger businesses.
The firm’s core technology involves the production of very small particles on the micron to nano scale. Those particles have a range of applications, but Primet has been focusing on materials used in manufacturing lithium ion batteries, a market worth billions of dollars, says Lawrence Thomas, Primet CEO.
“We think we have the lowest cost process for high-performance materials in that whole industry,” he says. “It’s getting to the point where it’s obvious that we have the lowest cost machine out there. If you’re not using our machine, you’re not competitive in the marketplace.”
Licensing was always a probable path forward for Primet, Thomas notes. Establishing the kinds of manufacturing plants it would take to compete with major players in the industry requires resources and expertise the company simply doesn’t have.
“Our strategy is not to sell materials,” Thomas says. “That market is dominated by multibillion dollar chemical companies. That’s not us.”
Rather than compete with those firms, Primet wants to partner with them.
But that doesn’t mean the company will stop growing in Ithaca. In fact, Primet has hired five or six people in the last four months and now employs 32.
Primet is housed in 20,000 square feet at the South Hill Business Campus in Ithaca. Its facility is home to a smaller-scale version of its production technology so potential license partners can see it in action.
Primet has been adding some new equipment lately to bring its operations to an industrial scale, Thomas says. The company can now demonstrate for partners how it can go from making grams of material to tons.
The Ithaca facility can also produce larger amounts of material so partners can have samples and enough material for sales while a partner implements Primet’s technology at its own plants, Thomas says.
The long-term goal is for Primet’s technology to be deployed across the battery industry in as many different types of batteries as possible. And once that’s done, the company’s technology has applications in other markets, Thomas says.
He says he’s already in talks with companies on potential licensing agreements. Primet announced the licensing strategy in November.
Primet has won a number of grants over the years including three from the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority for $440,000, $250,000, and $400,000. The company is also a founding member of the New York Battery and Energy Storage Technology Consortium.
New York state is an investor in Primet in the form of the New York State Foundation for Science, Technology and Innovation (NYSTAR) Small Business Technology Investment Fund. The firm’s private investors include Draper Fisher Jurvetson, the Cayuga Venture Fund, Morgan Stanley, the Onondaga Venture Capital Fund, and Tomoe Engineering, Ltd.
Primet’s technology has applications in the military as well as the private sector. The company received two research and development contracts from the Defense Department in 2010.
The Army Research Lab was impressed enough with the results that they initiated a second phase of work with the firm that is starting now.
Primet says its technology can help the Defense Department reduce the size and weight of batteries soldiers must carry with their equipment and increase their available power.
Contact Tampone at ktampone@cnybj.com
Blue Ocean caps year of growth in 2012
SYRACUSE — Blue Ocean Strategic Capital, LLC went through a growth spurt in 2012, adding two new staff members from Morgan Stanley Smith Barney in Syracuse and acquiring Hebert Financial Strategies of Liverpool. Stephen Chow and Jeffrey Moro joined Blue Ocean from Morgan Stanley Smith Barney in July. It’s one of the first times in
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SYRACUSE — Blue Ocean Strategic Capital, LLC went through a growth spurt in 2012, adding two new staff members from Morgan Stanley Smith Barney in Syracuse and acquiring Hebert Financial Strategies of Liverpool.
Stephen Chow and Jeffrey Moro joined Blue Ocean from Morgan Stanley Smith Barney in July. It’s one of the first times in Syracuse that brokers moved from a large investment house to a smaller firm like Blue Ocean, says Theodore Sarenski, Blue Ocean CEO.
It’s a trend that’s occurring nationwide, he adds.
“I think the industry is changing,” he says. “Clients want more than just transactional business. They want advice. They want guidance. It’s not just about their investments. It’s about their whole lives.”
Chow is now president at Syracuse–based Blue Ocean. The firm provides financial planning and investment management.
In August, Blue Ocean acquired Hebert Financial Strategies. Dennis Hebert and Jennifer Spagnola of Hebert Financial joined Blue Ocean as a result.
Both additions brought new clients to Blue Ocean, which took the firm from $165 million in assets under management to $270 million. Blue Ocean had $91 million in assets under management when it first formed in 2010.
The firm spun off from Syracuse accounting firm Dermody, Burke & Brown CPAs, LLC. It originally began in 1997 as Dermody’s financial-services arm.
The additions over the summer were the first of their kind for Blue Ocean, but they probably won’t be the last, Sarenski says. The firm is in talks on another potential acquisition now, which would add two more people.
Further growth is a long-term goal for Blue Ocean, Sarenski says.
Nearly half of the firm’s new business comes in the form of referrals from existing clients, he notes. Adding more clients through acquisitions means greater potential for such word of mouth.
Blue Ocean now employs 10 people and is outgrowing its 4,200-square-foot space at 443 North Franklin St. The firm will relocate in April to a 7,500-square-foot space at 333 W. Washington St. in downtown Syracuse.
The building, called Washington Station, opened in 2010 and is the headquarters of the engineering firm O’Brien & Gere. It houses several other businesses as well.
The move will give Blue Ocean room to grow in the years ahead, Sarenski says.
“We’re not filling it all right away,” he says. “We’re moving with the idea that we will continue to expand and grow in the future.”
About 20 percent of Blue Ocean’s clients are company 401(k) plans and another 10 percent are nonprofits that use Blue Ocean to manage their endowments. The rest of the firm’s clients are individuals and families.
And while much of the firm’s business started out in Upstate and Central New York, Blue Ocean now has clients in 10 states, including Michigan, Florida, Pennsylvania, and the New England area. The firm has at least five clients in four states.
Much of Blue Ocean’s business in other states results from local clients who leave the area, Sarenski says. They often stay with Blue Ocean when they move and also refer business from their new locations to the firm.
Contact Tampone at ktampone@cnybj.com
Stay up-to-date on the companies, people and issues that impact businesses in Syracuse, Central New York and beyond.