Ian Grant
Subscriber
Isn't or wasn't the CEO of Kodak one of Trump's controversial economic advisers ?
Ian
Ian
Lol, they are just doing this out in the open now. I'd be surprised if Kodak actually manages to survive this massive looting expedition.
I think the reference to looting is a reference to the stock volatility, not the loan.Looting? They are not being looted. They have a specialty chemical business already, and it just got a huge injection of cash.
I think the reference to looting is a reference to the stock volatility, not the loan.
Kodak doesn't own the film division, that's Kodak Alaris which was spun off as part of it's bankruptcy settlement. And if the wire stories are accurate Kodak is in talks with a Chinese holding company to sell off it remaining photography and imaging assets including it's color paper plant in Colorado.
Eastman Kodak still makes all the film, and its film manufacturing business isn't the one that is up for sale.Should have mentioned that Kodak makes movie film and related film materials which is as I read is not part of the deal with Sino Holding.
Eastman Kodak still makes all the film, and its film manufacturing business isn't the one that is up for sale.
Eastman Kodak still markets the motion picture film, and that business is not up for sale.
Kodak Alaris is the entity that has the worldwide marketing rights for Kodak still film (which is actually manufactured by Eastman Kodak) as well as the worldwide manufacturing and marketing rights for Kodak Colour paper and Kodak photo chemistry. They subcontract the manufacture of Kodak Colour paper and Kodak photo chemistry. It is their marketing rights for colour paper and photo chemistry that are up for sale - nothing to do with Eastman Kodak.
Ok, I got confused, but doesnt Kodak Eastman still make color paper in Colorado, and that plant is on the table?
Kodak Alaris did receive a partial interest in that plant as part of the bankruptcy settlement, although that interest was most likely a leasehold interest which may have now expired.Plant is Colorado is owned by "Carestream" which was Kodak's medical imaging (X-ray) business. it coats colour paper on contract basis for Kodak Alaris.
I love film as much as anyone but this has nothing to do with film production. I'm not a chemical engineer so I don't know how transferable Kodak's photochemical knowledge and infrastructure is to the medical field, but I'm going to guess not very, at least not easily. There are *hundreds* of companies more qualified to receive a stimulus loan for pharmaceutical production.
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I love film as much as anyone but this has nothing to do with film production. I'm not a chemical engineer so I don't know how transferable Kodak's photochemical knowledge and infrastructure is to the medical field, but I'm going to guess not very, at least not easily.
I love film as much as anyone but this has nothing to do with film production. I'm not a chemical engineer so I don't know how transferable Kodak's photochemical knowledge and infrastructure is to the medical field, but I'm going to guess not very, at least not easily. There are *hundreds* of companies more qualified to receive a stimulus loan for pharmaceutical production.
Here's some of the interesting press this whole thing is generating so far:
Kodak executive chairman addresses jump in trading activity before government deal was announced
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/07/29/kod...ity-before-government-deal-was-announced.html
Kodak Pivots to Drugs After Failing at Photography and Crypto
“We are puzzled by the Trump Administration’s decision,” analysts at SVB Leerink wrote in a research note. “In particular, we find it puzzling why generic pharmaceutical companies who have the capabilities and know-how for this have not yet been awarded such contracts.”
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...drugs-after-failing-at-photography-and-crypto
The Government’s Plan to Turn Kodak Into a Pharmaceutical Company Sure Seems Underdeveloped
https://www.cato.org/blog/governments-plan-turn-kodak-pharmaceutical-company-sure-seems-underdeveloped?
If anyone can find an explanation for why this is a *good* thing for Kodak, I'd love to see it. What I'm not going to love is seeing what happens when the stock price crashes back down.
Revamping Kodak into pharmaceutical work isn't crazy. I don't have detailed knowledge of Kodak industrial synthesis facilities, but from their website it looks like they are active in contract work over a useful scale (kilos to tons), all of which requires correct infrastructure and know-how. Many pharmaceutical companies don't have these capabilities, in part, because they do a lot of R&D with the ultimate goal of producing marketable drugs (the real pay-off for them). Rochester itself is a worthwhile location: strong manufacturing infrastructure, top flight universities, and a reasonable cost of living.
From my previous life as a professor of biochemistry with a chemistry background, I can tell that offshore chemical outsourcing is extensive at all levels in the pharmaceutical industry. This even happens at the academic level. I had some colleagues that even operated two academic research labs, one in the US and one in China. Other colleagues set up Chinese 'collaborations' as mechanism to outsource much of their academic research. This wasn't the majority of labs, but not unheard of.
One of our lessons from Covid-19, is that there are clear strategic reasons to not offshore critical industries, pharmaceuticals being one of them. I'm not even sure what the money is earmarked for. Perhaps it is required to transition Kodak to GMP (good manufacturing practices) production, a requirement for pharmaceutical production.
I hope this isn't a pork project, but on the face of it, I don't see anything crazy about it.
Does this means Plus-X is coming back?
lol
Does this means Plus-X is coming back?
lol
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