bmattock
Veteran
http://www.latimes.com/business/inv...7822283.story?coll=sns-ap-investing-headlines
Kodak Is Cutting Up to 10,000 More Jobs
By BEN DOBBIN
AP Business Writer
5:26 AM PDT, July 20, 2005
ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Eastman Kodak Co., which turned picture-taking into a hobby for the masses a century ago, said Wednesday it is cutting as many as 10,000 more jobs as it posted disappointing second-quarter results amid a struggle to make the wrenching transition from film to digital photography.
Kodak, which earlier targeted 12,000 to 15,000 job cuts by 2007, made its shock announcement of more job cuts as it swung to a loss for the second quarter in a row.
The company lost $146 million, or 51 cents per share, in the April-June quarter, compared with a profit of $136 million, or 46 cents per share, in last year's second quarter.
Sales grew 6 percent to $3.69 billion from $3.46 billion a year ago.
Excluding restructuring and research charges and asset impairments from an investment in Lucky Film Co., China's largest domestic film manufacturer, Kodak posted earnings from continuing operations of 53 cents a share.
Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial had forecast earnings of 80 cents a share.
As part of its effort to fortify its digital businesses to counter a faster-than-expected decline in consumer film sales, Kodak said it will cut deeper into its work force than it set out to do in January 2004.
Several things of interest here. Some may recall - Kodak fought off Fuji in a bidding war to buy a controlling interest in China's Lucky Film Company - and invested a bunch in bringing Lucky's manufacturing capabilities up to par. They believed that China was going to be a boom photo/film market. Looks like Chinese reaching income levels that permit hobby photography are going straight to digital, bypassing film. Like how some countries have gone right to cell phones and bypassed traditional land-line telephones.
"Faster-than-expected decline in film sales." That's important, folks. Hang on, the ride is about to get bumpy.
At the same time...this just in...
http://www.masslive.com/business/republican/index.ssf?/base/business-0/112089523662510.xml&coll=1
Kanzaki's parent buys firm
Saturday, July 09, 2005
By WILLIAM FREEBAIRN
wfreebairn@repub.com
WARE - The parent company of Kanzaki Specialty Papers Inc. has purchased a Swiss firm that makes paper for printing photos from inkjet printers.
Oji Paper Co. Ltd., based in Japan, announced this week it has purchased Ilford Imaging Switzerland for an undisclosed sum.
Ilford Imaging Switzerland is part of Ilford International Holdings, in turn a subsidiary of Ilford Imaging Ltd. of the United Kingdom. Ilford Imaging Ltd. is a leading supplier of black and white film and photo paper that recently emerged from administration, the British equivalent of bankruptcy.
Ilford is cutting loose all non-film-related businesses as it circles the wagons around B&W film and film-centric supplies. No need for ink-jet paper - they need the capital for keeping competive, even though ink-jet paper is liable to be a growth industry and photographic paper most certainly is not. Concentrating on their core business, this may be a wise move on their part for their stated purposes.
It affects the small businesses:
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/233248_digi20.html
And there is more:
http://www.imaging-resource.com/NEWS/1121798123.html
Pentax changes focus as profits fall
By Michael R. Tomkins, The Imaging Resource
(Tuesday, July 19, 2005 - 14:35 EDT)
Several news articles today from Bloomberg.com cover the latest financial information released by Japanese company Pentax Corp.
Imaging Resource readers will likely best know Pentax for its lineup of Optio digital cameras, as well as a range of digital and film SLRs, lenses and accessories. The company also deals in a number of other fields, including medical imaging, sport optics, printers, and CCTV cameras, amongst others. According to Bloomberg, Pentax has today announced a 42% drop in first quarter profits, largely due to losses from its photographic unit.
...
The company intends to concentrate more on single-lens reflex digital cameras rather than compact point-and-shoot models - echoing moves from a number of other digicam manufacturers recently. The company also intends to ramp up the speed of its announcements from two models a year in the past, to three this year.
The important bit here - moving faster from point-n-shoot digicams to digital slrs, and introducing three models per year - the move away from film for the enthusiast (SLR users) is picking up speed.
Folks...do I haveta say it?
Those who insist film is not dead...well, maybe not...but the EMT has rubbed the defibrillator pads together and is shouting "CLEAR!" I'm thinking flat-line here. You?
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks