IDK but in the linked to article it says "The KPP2 pension fund currently has a deficit of £1.5bil ($2.7 bil)..."
so it must mean they are loosing £ .
The Kodak Pension Plan is the historic plan - the one that benefits the past employees of Kodak Limited, which was the UK subsidiary of Eastman Kodak.
Kodak Limited was the oldest and largest of all the "International" Kodaks and had many, many employees over the very long time it operated.
Like many defined benefit pension plans, the amounts invested over the years by Eastman Kodak through its subsidiary Kodak Limited were based on the actuarial projections of the time and assumptions about the likely investment return on those monies. And like many of those plans, those projections and assumptions turned out to be incorrect.
There is a lot of money in the plan - just not as much as those stubbornly long-lived Kodak Limited retirees are projected to need.
I can't put my fingers on the projected pension shortfall at the time of the bankruptcy, but I think that it was larger than the current numbers - Kodak Alaris' and other's efforts have been productive.
And by the way, the tax loss numbers referred to in that report are most likely connected to Kodak Alaris having available to them large deductions against income that came across with the purchase of its assets - not the more simple type of losses that come from making sales at a cost less than the cost of production.