Kodak Patent Sale Could Save Photography Company From Bankruptcy

Kodak Patent Sale

By BEN DOBBIN   10/30/11 12:30 PM ET   AP

ROCHESTER, N.Y. -- Picture this: Kodak – the company that invented the first digital camera in 1975, and developed the photo technology inside most cellphones and digital devices – is in the midst of the worst crisis in its 131-year history.

Now, caught between ruin and revival, Eastman Kodak Co. is reaching ever more deeply into its intellectual treasure chest, betting that a big cash infusion from the sale of 1,100 digital-imaging inventions will see it through a transition that has raised the specter of bankruptcy.

Kodak popularized photography over a century ago. It marketed the world's first flexible roll film in 1888 and transformed picture-taking into a mass commodity with the $1 Brownie camera in 1900. But for too long the world's biggest film manufacturer stayed firmly focused on its 20th-century cash cow, and failed to capitalize quickly on its new-wave know-how in digital photography.

As a result, Kodak has been playing catch-up. Pummeled by Wall Street over its dwindling cash reserves – and its stumbling attempts to reinvent itself as a profitable player in digital imaging and printing – Kodak has been hawking the digital patents since July. Many financial analysts foresee the portfolio fetching $2 billion to $3 billion.

But others think Kodak can haul in far more than that – and carry it off within a few months. That's because patents have become highly valuable to digital device makers who want to protect themselves from intellectual property lawsuits. In July, an alliance made up of Apple and Microsoft purchased a raft of patents from Nortel Networks for $4.5 billion. A month later, Google bought Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion, in part, to gain hold of the company's 17,000 patents.

"The size of the (Kodak) deal could blow your socks off," predicts Los Angeles money manager Ken Luskin, whose Intrinsic Value Asset Management owns 3.8 million Kodak shares.

"It's pocket change for Google and Apple to go pay $3-or-$4-or-$5 billion for these patents," concurs Christopher Marlett, chief executive of MDB Capital, an investment bank based in Santa Monica, Calif., that specializes in intellectual property. "There is an all-out nuclear war right now for global dominance in smartphones, tablets and mobile devices, and Kodak has one of the largest cache of weapons sitting there." Marlett says he owns Kodak stock, but wouldn't disclose how much.

Even a hefty return, skeptics counter, won't solve Kodak's struggle to close out a nearly decade-long transformation and return to profitability in 2012 after running up losses in six of the last seven years.

"All the extra cash does is give you a lifeline for a short period. And then, poof, you're back in the same position without the assets to sell," says analyst Shannon Cross of Cross Research in Livingston, N.J. "If you're burning cash and not finding a way to generate recurring earnings, it doesn't matter."

Kodak's grim financial picture should become clearer when it reports third-quarter results Thursday.

Agitated investors will likely focus on the company's latest borrowing activities and cash woes – it had $957 million in cash in June, down from $1.6 billion in January. They will also want to know what kind of progress Kodak made in the July-September period in building up a high-margin ink business to replace shriveling film sales.

Kodak has poured hundreds of millions of dollars into new lines of inkjet printers that are finally on the verge of turning a profit. Home photo printers, high-speed commercial inkjet presses, workflow software and packaging are viewed as the company's new core. Kodak projects that sales from those four businesses will double to nearly $2 billion in revenue in 2013, accounting for 25 percent of all sales.

In the meantime, Kodak needs to tap other sources of revenue before those areas have time to pay off – and mining its inventions has become indispensable.

Kodak's chief executive, Antonio Perez, has signed confidentiality agreements with potential buyers but hasn't given a time frame for a deal. The patents for capturing, storing, organizing, editing and sharing digital images do not apply to the four core businesses, Kodak spokesman Gerard Meuchner says.

"One thing I would stress is: It is our intention to retain a license to any of the intellectual property we sell," Meuchner says. "It's like you sell the property but still get to live in the house."

A sale represents a sharp tactical shift. Kodak picked up just $27 million in patent-licensing fees in the first half of 2011 after amassing nearly $2 billion in the previous three years.

In the heated environment for patents, "it makes more sense for us to sell the portfolio than it does to license it company by company, which takes lots of time and expense and can involve litigation," Meuchner says.

Michael Fitzgerald, chief executive of Next Techs Technologies, a patent buying-and-selling intermediary in Houston, says that while the portfolio is valuable, "I just don't view it necessarily as a `strategic' acquisition that multiple players will fall all over themselves on."

Investor fears sent Kodak stock tumbling to an all-time closing low of 78 cents a share on Sept. 30 after it hired Jones Day, a major restructuring law firm, as an adviser. Kodak insisted it had no intention of filing for bankruptcy protection.

Kodak is also involved in a royalty dispute with iPhone behemoth Apple and BlackBerry maker Research in Motion Ltd. The case centers on a 2001 patent now on the auction block – a method that enables a camera to preview low-resolution versions of a moving image while recording still images at higher resolutions.

The 21-month-old battle before the U.S. International Trade Commission, a trade-dispute arbiter in Washington, D.C., was due to be revisited on Monday, but was recently shelved until December 30.

Chief Executive Antonio Perez thinks a favorable ruling could enable Kodak to draw up to $1 billion in fees from its deep-pocketed rivals. In 2009, the commission ruled that South Korean mobile phone makers Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics infringed the same patent, resulting in $964 million in payouts.

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ROCHESTER, N.Y. -- Picture this: Kodak – the company that invented the first digital camera in 1975, and developed the photo technology inside most cellphones and digital devices – is in t...
ROCHESTER, N.Y. -- Picture this: Kodak – the company that invented the first digital camera in 1975, and developed the photo technology inside most cellphones and digital devices – is in t...
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04:15 PM on 11/01/2011
Mama don't take my kodachrome,
Mama don't take my kodachrome,
Mama don't take my kodachrome awaAaAy.
01:26 PM on 11/01/2011
Kodak did invent the digital camera but they didn't actually advertise or create one people cared about until it was 100 years too late. In that time, Nikon/Canon/everyone else took their idea, made it infinitely better, marketed the cameras, and sold absurd numbers of them. Good job.
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photo
PLAYS WELL WITH OTHERS
Your BELIEFS do not trump my RIGHTS...
11:34 AM on 11/01/2011
It appears that Momma IS gonna take my Kodachrome away.......................................
07:40 AM on 11/01/2011
Innovate or D I E...
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tooncesrocks
my micro bio is empty
06:17 AM on 11/01/2011
how can anyone hope to create a new product with the 100,000's of patents that are out just for smart phones... ???
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kidphaco
Living life more liberally everyday!
03:21 AM on 11/01/2011
Make those 1100 new products here in the United States. Expand the American work force and market the changes as a recommitment to manufacturing in in the US! Maybe there will be a return of the brand loyalties we formerly enjoyed!
01:03 PM on 11/01/2011
Their market is global and you're only 3.6% of the world's population. Any company whose business plan relies on jingoism is doomed to fail.
10:48 PM on 11/01/2011
They have to start somewhere, and Branding is everything! Also, kidphaco's excellent idea has not the slightest relationship to "jingoism", but is a rejection of the idiotic Internationalist business plan of the major outsourcers (Multinationals, of course) which have failed the Nation and Working People over and over again. "3.6%" is a meaningless stat when discussing Markets, as the key stats would be more concerned with Quality not Quantity, and this is still a wealthy Nation compared to many others, with "hungry buyers" about to descend on the Marketplace (as more and more Americans get back to work).
03:13 AM on 11/01/2011
Please, whatever you do Kodak, do not get rid of Tmax 100 and Tmax 400.

And it wouldn't hurt to bring back Tech Pan, HIE, Microdol-X, kodachrome, and fiber-based printing paper.
08:47 AM on 11/01/2011
And this is what I've been telling folks for the last few years.

There's a small movement that's been growing to revert back to film.
Digital makes this a lot easier for sure.
But many who have been using digital are gaining interest in film, and actually buying film cameras to supplement their digital arsenal. The appeal of the hands-on experience of film and darkroom processing is growing.

But it appears like KODAK is so desperate, that they are allowing this burgeoning re-interest in film to pass them buy.
01:05 PM on 11/01/2011
The "burgeoning re-interest" is nothing more than a hobby. The company that used to get a cut on every photo taken and developed probably needs a bigger market than that.
01:35 PM on 11/01/2011
Fuji Film is still alive, I think...
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tumbler snapper
Lawyer, engineer, author, adventurer
01:48 PM on 11/01/2011
Yes. And Ilford is exclusively B&W.
02:22 AM on 11/01/2011
I grew up in Rochester, NY, Kodak's hometown and headquarters. When I was a kid in the 70's, they were the area's largest employer, with a workforce of over 60,000 locally. Everyone had friends and relatives who worked at Kodak, and it was considered the most stable, secure company in the city, with very good pay & benefits. Now their worldwide workforce is less than 10,000.

Having made film their bread & butter, and not keeping up with digital technology, Kodak started to founder in the late 80's/early 90's. Reports of layoffs became a regular part of news reports. They went through several "restructuring" and "streamlining" efforts, but to little avail. In speaking to the employees remaining, they said the atmosphere was (and sometimes still is) tense and depressing, as no one knew who would be next to go. Entire departments would suddenly be closed. Now everyone has friends and relatives who were laid off from Kodak. And several of their factories and office buildings have been razed to the ground in recent years. When I visit Rochester, it’s strange to drive down certain streets and see empty spaces where buildings once stood for years and years.

Too bad they saw the handwriting on the wall after it was too late. Selling patents will infuse them with a temporary cash flow, but it will not sustain the company in the long run.
01:11 PM on 11/01/2011
In other words, the executives failed in their mission to keep the company strong. Now that they've laid off all the workers who actually created the products that made them so much money, they're moving on to capitalizing on the inventions of all the workers who invented new technology while on their payroll, inventions they failed to act on to create recurring income.

One last peck at the bones before they all ride their golden parachutes back to earth, all the while convinced that the reason they are rich is because they are smarter and more hardworking than the plebes.
10:53 PM on 11/01/2011
Happy-Happy-Joy-Joy! :-)
01:53 AM on 11/01/2011
I WILL NEVER BUY KODAK CAMERAS OR ANYTHING WITH THAT NAME EVER AGAIN. I PURCHASED A DIGITAL HD 12MP CAMERA FOR $249 IT BROKE / FROZE I CALL THEM AND THEY WANTED $89 TO FIX OR $65 TO BE CHECKED. THE CAMERA IS STILL IN THE BOX LIKE NEW. THEY LOST THIS CUSTOMER FOR EVER. I HOPE THEY SHUT DOWN FOR GOOD.
03:03 AM on 11/01/2011
It's not just Kodak. I've had the same experience with Nikon and their D-series digital SLR cameras with bad image sensors, programming/mechanical lock-up issues, and autofocus issues with a couple larger Nikkor zoom lenses.

I have several older film and various brands of newer digital cameras including a couple Kodak digital point-n-shoot types and they are both working great for their intended purpose. So you may have just unfortunately gotten a bad camera, and if beyond the warranty date (no matter how much or how little you used) it they will charge for repair service. You may find a better repair price at a local camera repair shop, if you have one in your area, but they often do not take warranty jobs & bill the manufacturer for the work done.
12:07 PM on 11/01/2011
Remove the battery(ies) from the camera; remove the memory card; turn the on/off switch to ON and then depress the shutter button for 10 seconds. This resets the camera and it might bring it back to life. Good luck.
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Fran Pipkin
what ever turns your turkey.
01:36 AM on 11/01/2011
Such gross mismanagement to get to the point where they have to sell their best patents to stay afloat for a short time. Too sad.
12:16 AM on 11/01/2011
bought a Kodak digital camera a few years ago...It is excellent quality for the money...sorry to hear this about another U.S. company...good luck
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11:48 PM on 10/31/2011
It has been said that company cannot keep cost cutting into prosperity. The same can be said about selling off its patented intellectual assets. Kodak's business model was broken due to disruptive digital film/movie technology and the company could not offer a better alternative. Kodak needs to differentiate itself from the rest of digital imaging industry because it cannot compete with its peers in both manufacturing and development costs. Even point and shoot digital camera business is going under threat from the new/improved cell phone digital camera. Kodak must "think different".
09:45 PM on 10/31/2011
A word to the wise: Four years ago, a friend went to an auction on Sunday afternoon. There were some glass plate negatives being auctioned off for $1.00 a box, each box containing 10 negatives wrapped in glassine paper with the subject's name written on the paper. He opened the box when he got home and found two plates of family members: one of his three great grandfather, and, the grandfather's daughter and two of her children. The grandfather died in 1875. Not only are the odds against this tremendous, but both the plates looked like they were taken yesterday. Sharp as a tack and perfectly exposed and developed. What do you think the chances are of your digital or magnetic pictures surviving for 125+ years? Digital is OK for instant pictures, but if you want lasting memories, SHOOT FILM. Start doing it now before it is too late. Your great-great-great-grandchildren will thank you. If interested, write. wunkman@aol.com
09:35 PM on 10/31/2011
Especially with really popular companies like nikon and canon, who's to blame themselves not going with the competition?
11:27 PM on 10/31/2011
You got that right!!! It all falls in the laps of the present and past CEO's....Bad decisions...but...like all other failing corps. they will walk away with their millions......
09:23 PM on 10/31/2011
I had fun learning to develope black and white pictures back in the 1960's. Wow a lot of changes over the years between Kodak and Polaroid. I remember when Mr. Brant from Marblehead invented the first strobe flash for Polaroid cameras.