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I tend to think that Kodak is going to make this tight corner and survive; I think they're making all the right moves now. I hope it is not too late, I'd hate to see Kodak go. However, it is a thought-provoking article.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks
Misplaced Enthusiasm Over Kodak
By DAN DORFMAN
December 16, 2005
In November of 2003, corporate raider Carl Icahn picked as his latest prey photographic biggie Eastman Kodak, a one-time institutional darling that had fallen on hard times. The shares were then trading in the low $30s when the raider announced he had gotten regulatory approval to buy a large stake in the company. That, in turn, touched off a wave of takeover speculation and not surprisingly pushed the stock price a bit higher.
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Noting that Kodak has missed consensus earnings estimates in each of its last two quarters and has stopped giving guidance for future periods - both clearly negative signs - the newsletter is urging subscribers to short the stock (a bet its price will fall).
Kodak's chief problem, it points out, is its inability to make a successful transition from its rapidly declining traditional film business to the next big thing, digital products and services.
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But its traditional businesses, which account for half its revenues, keep dwindling. Yet another blow: the impending switch by movie theaters to digital equipment.
I tend to think that Kodak is going to make this tight corner and survive; I think they're making all the right moves now. I hope it is not too late, I'd hate to see Kodak go. However, it is a thought-provoking article.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks