iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Kodak Bankruptcy: Photo Pioneer Prepares For Chapter 11 Filing

Kodak Bankruptcy

First Posted: 01/ 4/2012 2:34 pm Updated: 01/ 6/2012 2:51 am


(Reuters) - Eastman Kodak is preparing a Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection filing in case it is unable to sell its digital patents to raise capital, The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.

The once-iconic photographic film pioneer is in talks with potential lenders to secure about $1 billion in debtor-in possession financing to sustain Kodak through bankruptcy proceedings, the Journal reported, citing unidentified sources.

The Chapter 11 filing could come as soon as this month or early February, the newspaper said.

Kodak shares fell about 28 percent to 47 cents on the New York Stock Exchange following the online report, which dampened investors' hopes that the company could arrange a quick sale of its patents or a financing lifeline to keep it afloat.

A spokesman for Kodak declined to comment, saying its policy is not to comment on market rumors or speculation.

Kodak warned in November that it might not survive 2012 if it was unable to secure $500 million in new debt or sell its patents. The company's cash had been shrinking as sales of its consumer products have failed to keep up with its heavy cost base, which includes employees and offices around the globe.

In a two-day meeting in mid-December of the company's board, management and advisers, executives were briefed on how to fund Kodak during bankruptcy proceedings if efforts to sell its patents fall short, a person familiar with the matter told the Wall Street Journal. Kodak needed to sell the patents or borrow more money to stave off bankruptcy, the company told directors.

As part of its efforts to raise cash, Kodak has been looking since last July for a buyer for its 1,100 digital patents, with the help of investment bank Lazard Ltd.

The Journal said Kodak is still trying to sell the patents, which could help it stave off a bankruptcy filing. If Kodak does seek Chapter 11 protection, it could try to sell its patents through a bankruptcy auction supervised by a court

Kodak invented the digital camera in 1975 when one of its engineers developed a prototype that was as big as a toaster and captured black and white images. But it failed to capitalize on that innovation, and it was only when Kodak's film business began to decline a decade ago that it tried to catch up with rivals by launching a mass-market line of digital cameras.

The company has been beset by bankruptcy speculation since it drew down a credit line last September. It also hired restructuring firm FTI and confirmed that a law firm known for dealing with bankruptcy was doing work for it.

Last week, Kodak announced the resignation of three directors, including two representatives of private equity firm KKR & Co and a professor from the University of California, leading some industry experts to speculate that a Chapter 11 filing was imminent.

On Tuesday, Kodak said its stock may be removed from the New York Stock Exchange if the company cannot boost its share price over the next six months.

Kodak, whose cash fell to $862 million at the end of September from $1.4 billion a year earlier, is scheduled to report fourth-quarter results on January 26.

The company would need to seek debtor-in-possession financing in any bankruptcy filing to continue operating while it ran an auction for the patents. Kodak is in discussions with large banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co, Citigroup Inc, and Wells Fargo & Co for those funds, people familiar with the matter told the Wall Street Journal.

Kodak has also held discussions with bondholders about a bankruptcy financing package, the people said. Cerberus Capital Management LP, a hedge fund that doesn't hold Kodak debt, has also held talks with Kodak on behalf of a group willing to provide the financing, the people said.

(Reporting By Liana B. Baker; editing by Mark Porter, Carol Bishopric; Editing by Richard Chang)

We recently ranked Kodak among the worst run companies in America. Here are the others:
FOLLOW HUFFPOST BUSINESS
Subscribe to the HuffPost Money newsletter!
Filed by Reuters  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 843
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (22 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LeftHandUTurn
How long have I been out?
10:56 PM on 01/31/2012
What a tragedy. Obliviousness to changing times and tides, I'll warrant. Last I heard they were living mainly off the proceeds of patent infringement suits they had brought against all and sundry---
12:17 AM on 01/08/2012
so much from the billions they masde out from the Agfa color patent .......
07:58 AM on 01/07/2012
Kodak is sinking, its culture thriving.

As rumors of Kodak planning for bankruptcy are spreading, this story gathers the emotions the news created on the internet. It also tries to understand the reasons of this failure and the paradox that the 'snapshot culture' it initiated in the early 19th century is thriving in our digital era.

http://storify.com/taymans/kodak
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mjc
Avoid printing any..
01:30 PM on 01/06/2012
If Eastman Kodak collapses, there will be a mini-depression in the Rochester, NY area for sure...Monroe County in particular. Find it difficult to believe that Kodak was one of the 10 worst run companies. Their pioneering in the image field allowed companies like Fuji and Polaroid to come on strong and surpass them. In some instances it was a very cut-throat competition and Kodak simply didn't have that kind of gutter-fighting in their ammunition.
01:31 PM on 01/20/2012
Kodak no longer employes enough people to produce any ripple in the Rochester economy if it completely piles up. If you had worked at Kodak you would find it hard-not to believe-it was one of the ten worst managed companies, in fact I'm surprised it isn't number one, if in the event it truly is not. There were actual accusations that Kodak was a test bed to see how badly a company could be mis-managed and still turn a profit/remain solvent. Kodak is far sleazier than anyone would care to believe. Check their history of patent infringement suites, they're incorrigible. Polaroid didn't surpass Kodak. Kodak stole their technology, and lost the suite launched by Polaroid. Lastly, Kodak could have had the proper talent in the proper places if they would have practiced qualified hiring practices instead of the spoil system, and promoting buddies.
01:59 AM on 01/06/2012
20+ years ago, Kodak was under pressure from Fuji for Xray film in the manufacturing world. My company used to purchase huge amounts of film to xray parts that went on aircraft. Fuji came out of nowhere and was very competitive in pricing. I'm sure the same was true in the medical field. So it's not just film for consumer cameras that resulted in their demise.
11:54 PM on 01/05/2012
I interviewed for a job at Kodak nearly 20 years ago and they were working on software for digital photography way back then. I suspect that it was a classic case of not believing the cash cow was going.
11:28 PM on 01/05/2012
Huff Post, you get a 'Razzie' for this article!

As I started reading this, I saw photos of Home Depot and Apple plus others mixed in with KODAK and some of the other ten worst! What is this? As I went through the slideshow, it changed to "Ten Best", without changing the banner, thus leaving the banner:
"We recently ranked Kodak among the worst run companies in America. Here are the others: "
over all of the ten best.
If I had a ten-year-old, I think even they would see the error in that. Way to go, again.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DenverPainters
Painting a better picture
11:50 AM on 02/02/2012
Sorry to see them go, but survival of the fetishist, not being innovative, and staying up with latest technologies ONLINE.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
judithgrayson
10:27 PM on 01/05/2012
we are going to wake up one morning and find that it has all gone. we're pretty close to that now.
photo
ohslimgoody
Nothing new under the sun.
07:12 PM on 01/05/2012
It's offical that's it the Dak has filled for the bankrupcty the world has gone to pot. Not the icon boy o boy nothing is sacred.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kritikos
Intelligence is not a science
06:58 PM on 01/05/2012
Resting on laurels will come back and bite ya.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LibertarianCentrist
Gary Johnson 2016!
04:13 PM on 01/05/2012
Should be great for upstate NY!
11:17 PM on 01/09/2012
they can shift to the prison industry.privatised and owned mostly by G.E.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Simon Byrd
01:54 PM on 01/05/2012
Kodak paper and developing chemicals were my drugs as a HS newspaper photographer in the 70s. Seriously, I love the smell of a darkroom.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tincup2005
12:15 PM on 01/05/2012
What destroyed Kodak was management. Good people in marketing at Kodak warned of its demise if it failed to embrace and lead the digital revolution, and these people were sent packing while management that terminated them stayed in place. This same culture is still present at Kodak. The current CEO brought his friends over withhim and none of them had any experience in photography, thus contributing to the decline. Kodak is the poster child of how flawed marketing can kill a company. It's also the poster child of how retaining an archaic management team makes bad problems worse. They want to enter Chapter 11? Okay, but first clean house. Rid this company of the people responsible for destroying it and bring in marketing types who understand the mind set of the photographer. Until that happens, etch the tombstone. This company is dead and its a tragedy. Management - from top to middle - must all go. Their crime is total ineptness and they should be punished by becoming unemployed.
01:29 PM on 01/05/2012
Destined to be examined in college marketing classes for years to come.
11:20 PM on 01/09/2012
had they gone digital, the junk would still be made in china and the same # of folks would lose their jobs.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patrick Fogarty
12:02 PM on 01/05/2012
With a name like Kodak I would have thought that with the new digital technology that someone in that very big corporation would have seen the flood coming and warned others . Maybe it is , that some companies are too big to change . Though some how I am thinking that a corporation with all those brains in it should be able to assemble enough information to head off that which they are now experiencing . Perhaps this bankruptcy is part of a master plan hatched 15 years ago and has been part of a necessary process all along .
11:35 AM on 01/05/2012
Chapter 11 give them a chance to reorganize or sell the Company to the highest bidder. If they fell completely it will be us the taxpaying citizenst that will eat the loss.