Best case scenario is that nothing changes, Perez is fired and barred from corporate positions, Kodak rises and reclaims it place as head honcho.
Realistic case - the label on the box changes from Kodak to some other company like foma or something. Kodak formula based stock would be very profitable to non-mega corporations I can deal with this, I like the products, not the name (If I cared about the name that much I'd have stopped buying tri-x when they replaced the green text with black text)
Worst case, I stock up on an insane amount of XTOL.
This isn't going to put me off buying Kodak film (or film using the same emulsion) until it's gone for good, and it shouldn't put any current users off buying until there is none - if the sales drop off, it just proves 'the man' right (Long day and it's midnight, can't get the words right - something about the beancounters not being able to see what's keeping them afloat going "aha! film sales have dropped since we announced the sale of the division, but that's correlation and not causality, looks like we got out before film production was really unprofitable!").
I've actually got an order of 80 rolls of 35mm Tri-x I'm arranging for my 2013 stash, as well as 12 or 24 rolls of 120, some Portra in 120 and 35mm in 400, 160 and 800 varieties as well as four more bags of XTOL because it's always better to have more chems than you need. I'll probably be buying Ultramax to tide me over when I finish off my last brick of tri-x until I can't stand it anymore. I know my couple of hundred dollars are just a drop in the bucket but every dollar is another ballet entry that says "This still makes money". Guess I'll go out nail and tooth
But worst comes to worse, what's the Ilford equivalent of XTOL? I can live with the slightly more noticable grain at IS0 800 on HP5, but I'm really not too fond of the idea of pushing without a full speed developer.