BTW, the decrease in film sales is far beyond what anyone here comprehends. Kodak was once in the $20 B US in film sales and now is in the high $M or very low $B US in film sales. (IDK what the figure is but it is not in the billions like it was anymore. Revenues are coming from digital sales now.
Dear PE,
that is definitely not true. Please read Kodaks quarterly reports they had to publish for their shareholders and the stock market.
Kodaks profits are coming from their traditional analog products, not from the digital products. With their digital products they loose a lot of money. That's the situation for years.
Best regards,
Henning
Sorry Ron,Is that film or combined film + digital. The figures I have put digital ahead of film in this last quarter and film production at about 1/5th of previous production.
Kodak said:For the third quarter of 2006:
• Sales totaled $3.204 billion, a decrease of 10% from $3.553 billion in the third quarter of 2005, largely attributable to a 19% decline in traditional sales. Third-quarter traditional revenue totaled $1.402 billion, compared to $1.725 billion in the year-ago quarter, while digital revenue totaled $1.793 billion, as compared to $1.814 billion in the year-ago quarter.
• The company’s earnings from continuing operations in the quarter, before interest, other income (charges), net, and income taxes, were $2 million, compared with a loss from operations of $123 million in the year-ago quarter.
• On the basis of generally accepted accounting principles in the U.S. (GAAP), the company reported a third-quarter net loss of $37 million, or $0.13 per share, which
includes after-tax restructuring costs of $202 million, or $0.70 per share. By comparison, the third quarter 2005 GAAP net loss was $914 million, or $3.18 per share. The difference is largely driven by the inclusion in last year’s third quarter of a $778 million, or $2.71 per share, non-cash charge to record a valuation allowance against the net deferred tax assets in the U.S.
• Digital earnings were $105 million, compared with $7 million in the year-ago quarter, marking the first time that the company’s quarterly digital earnings growth exceeded the quarterly decline in traditional earnings. This performance was primarily due to operational improvements throughout the digital portfolio, the impact of a non-recurring licensing arrangement within the Consumer Digital Group, and strong results in the Graphic Communications Group.
My small machine if you look closely coated 5" wide and the low estimate was based on that premise. The design of the machine used a 'helical' dryer that minimized space but maximized area.
I will make a bold statement at this juncture...Make a jump to coating your own film and paper at this time and I can guarantee that you will see the demise of all film and paper. In fact I will take any and all bets on that.
The sky is not falling...
I don't see this thread degenrating that way Don. I do think, to which I am a guilty contributor, that it is slightly off track in looking at Kodak's financial health.It seems that this thread has degenerated into a "My look at how bad the film industry is because of Kodak's history...and furthermore because Kodak is having these bad results that means that film is going away in the next six weeks if not sooner". This is a very limited view of things at the very best interpertation.
I agree with this, but I do see opportunities for traditional to 'elevate' itself. Which I think is the intent of the analogy to the micro-brewery. (ie beer from a MB is real beer compared to the left over mop slop coming from Coors or Bud)I will make a bold statement at this juncture...Make a jump to coating your own film and paper at this time and I can guarantee that you will NOT {my addition} see the demise of all film and paper. In fact I will take any and all bets on that.
The sky is not falling...
I think I've missed something :confused: Do you mean the machine you referred to in your post with the overview of the process? Or is there an image or more info on a machine somewhere that I've missed?
Henning;
Read the Rochester D&C. The last quarterly report said that Kodak digital sales surpassed conventional sales for the first time. Digital products were paying for themselves for the first time.
Kodak reorganized so that each division had to be self supporting.
PE
Also keep in mind APUG is most likely a VERY tiny segment of the film shooters out there globally. I think some see APUG and say "wow, only 18,000 film shooters left!".. far from the case I think..The sky is not falling...
It seems that your view of "trends" is coming solely from Kodak since that is all that has been mentioned.
Hallo PE,
sorry, it seems that I've missed their last quarterly report.
Best regards,
Henning
Donald;
So, the trend is coming solely from Kodak? Ok then, I guess we will have to refer to Agfa's quarterly report for info. Ooops, where is it? Hmm, I guess they vanished for some reason other than declining sales?
Lets try Ferrania. Oh, in bankruptcy but still producing? Ok, Fuji? Oh, big decllines in sales. Hmm, is there a trend here somewhere that tells us something.
IDK.
Kodak is a reasonable microcosm of the entire industry in view of what is going on and can perform as a sounding board for generalizations useful to this discussion.
PE
Ok then, I guess we will have to refer to Agfa's quarterly report for info. Ooops, where is it? Hmm, I guess they vanished for some reason other than declining sales?
...until George Fischer, there were no managers hired from outside the company, all were promoted from within and that may have been part of the problem. Some say George brought in some new, fresh approaches and ideas.
He was a marketing person selected over Carl Kohrt who came up through Research and many thought that this selection was very bad for Kodak, as they needed technical guidance and an overhaul of marketing...
PE
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