T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1037.1 | Color me doubtful... | LABC::MCCLUSKY | | Tue Feb 27 1990 18:35 | 53 |
| You caught me by suprise, but I'd like to comment. Possibly the best
is to comment on some of your items. First, I don't understand the
point regarding our U.S. Military Security being based on chips and
the win-win situation with Japan. My understanding of military
security is quite different. I'd like some more explanation.
You suggest that we would get the best of both management practices. I
suggest that we might get the worst of both. Again, I don't understand
the benefit of 6mo. to 1 yr. field assignments. When I was with
Bechtel, those assignments were two years and they brought about as
many problems as they solved. They did give us insight and
understanding, but I believe that can be gained in other ways.
You seem excited that it would"...benefit every employee...", which I
do not believe is necessarily correct. I anticipate that many jobs
would be duplicated and that one of the great advantages would be to
eliminate that duplication. Giving us the economies of scale, which
probably won't benefit those who must find new jobs.
Probably the thing that set me off is your assumption of the Japanese
..."proven superiority ... in employee involvement. I had direct
contact with TRW-Fujitsu and their effort to build ATMs. I cannot
believe there could be a poorer example in the world. As you know,
that effort was a dismal failure and only recently has Fijitsu sold
any of their ATMs in the U.S. Several years after that, in a U.S. Bank
I encountered the same employee involvement efforts and had to put down
an insurrection - the culprit was the ex-TRW-Fijitsu Applications
Development Manager trying to implement their policies. Final
experience in this regard is my very close friend and now a VP-Mgr. of
R & D for a U.S. Mfg. Co. that used to work for Cannon. Before that we
worked together for 10years and I know him - the problem was Cannon.
One possible advantage is the mix of our products, if we really
complement each other. Obviously, Fijitsu is way ahead of us in
on-line banking. This could go well with some of our new efforts and
strengthen us both. I don't know how well this works out across the
board, but it could be the greatest benefit.
All six of your disadvantages are right on target. I think that you
may have stated them too simply. Backlash will occur, incompatability
of management styles is guaranteed. I suggest that the Japanese might
have some problems with this merger or buy-out. The rejection of the
Eastern Philosophy is assured. Mysticism and Christianity do not mix
well, and I would guess that most of DEC's employees are Christian or
raised in that ethic. Great care and thought would be needed to clear
this hurdle.
My guess is that if the Fijitsu management prevailed the organization
would not meet expectations. I am still learning about the strength
of our management and would not hazard a guess if we have the
experience, resolve and fortitude to bring it to a success.
You certainly gave us something to think about.
|
1037.2 | Merger, gag me with a shovel. | CTOAVX::BRAVERMAN | | Tue Feb 27 1990 21:41 | 16 |
| I remember someone telling me a long time ago; "When you buy another
company, you buy their problems." The way I see mergers, with anybody,
they have to complement eachother. The present business climate
of either company is the two distictly different, everythings........
What makes anybody think that DIGITAL needs merger help from the
outside? We have a very good balance sheet, great ratings and a
good start on the next decade. We made the investments, they will
pay off.
Doom and gloom press reports are kindling for the evening fire.
The sky is not falling, it's just the low clouds covering the bright
sky.
hy
|
1037.3 | Digital has it now... 3090's!! | STLACT::MOSER | | Tue Feb 27 1990 22:35 | 11 |
| Speaking of gagging...
Doesn't Fujitsu own, or at least influence, Amdahl, who makes, can you say, I
thought you could, IBM mainframe clones!?!?
I love it...
(forgive give me if I am mixing up my Japanese companies)
(one more thing, from whence is this idea coming from... I sincerely hope this
is not being seriously entertained...)
|
1037.4 | An employees perspective | JURAN::WILSON | | Wed Feb 28 1990 01:15 | 5 |
| It seems to me that Digital would become the marketing/sales/service
arm of Fujitsu in this country, and little more. This is hardly the
way to sustain the long term viability of the company. No thanks.
John
|
1037.5 | No merger, but compete Globally! | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | The limitation is you! | Wed Feb 28 1990 08:11 | 15 |
|
While I strongly disapprove of mergers, I like aquisitions better,
this topic does open up the thought process for internationalization.
I believe Digital is well on its way to being a Global player in the
computer market. What we should be doing is investing into other
countrys companys. Much like Japan has done to the U.S. auto industry
how many toyotas are built in the U.S ehh?
We have offices in other countrys already, I *hope* their management
follows their culture and plays on their society. How could a merger
with another company benefit DEC when we already have our foot in the
door.
A billion $$$ in the bank should aquire some nice ripe pickings!
Merge NO Aquire YES
Mike Z.
|
1037.6 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Wed Feb 28 1990 09:01 | 10 |
|
Second the question posed in .3: where is this coming from? Is it
based on a reasonably strong merger rumor, or is it the idle musing
of an underutilized mind?
("What a terrible thing, to lose a mind..." D. Quayle, attempting
to paraphrase "A mind is a terrible thing to waste.")
|
1037.7 | just an idea for discussion, folks | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Wed Feb 28 1990 09:17 | 23 |
| REF: Prev 5 replies
This is an idea I tossed out for consideration -- pros and cons, and it
has not official sanction whatsoever.
Why? A perception that
Japan has a BIG lead on chip technology
Digital gets a lot of stuff now from Japan
Japan's management practices (some) are proven to be better per
Digital's Japan Study Mission Team results via our people spending two
weeks there.
Most U.S. military hardware is imbedded with chip technology and now is
HIGHLY dependent on computer and chip technology to operate, and to
stay current for the future.
U.S. Memories effort fell apart.
Thus, an idea for discussion -- nothing more than that.
|
1037.8 | I can't see it working - joint venture? Perhaps | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Wed Feb 28 1990 09:50 | 15 |
| Two weeks? Doesn't seem to be a long time to study management.
Did the team speak Japanese? If not I'd discount the study off hand.
In the past many Japanese-American joint ventures have had a rough
time. The differences in management style and priorities are often
huge. In a merger one side has to take over control. Who would it
be here? I can't see the Japanese government or banks letting Digital
take over. I can't see Digital management letting anyone else take
over. The conflicts would rip things apart in days. At least that's
how it looks from here. What we really need is some comments from
Japanese DECcies. They have a much better understanding of what it's
like to be Japanese working for an American company and also what
working for a Japanese company is really like.
Alfred
|
1037.9 | | ESCROW::KILGORE | Wild Bill | Wed Feb 28 1990 11:39 | 7 |
|
What would a Fujitsu/Digital merger be called?
Futal
|
1037.10 | large stockholder | MPO::GILBERT | The Wild Rover - MAXCIM Program Office | Wed Feb 28 1990 15:12 | 4 |
| While we're on the subject of mergers/aquisitions, the brokerage
house Sanford & Bernstein have filed with the SEC the fact that
they now own more than 5% of Digital. That ought to spur a few
rumors on Wall Street.
|
1037.11 | | VMSZOO::ECKERT | Night faded into blossoming dawn | Wed Feb 28 1990 16:51 | 4 |
| re: .10
If the brokerage house purchased the stock for a client are they
required to divulge the client's identity in the SEC filing?
|
1037.12 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Wed Feb 28 1990 17:01 | 14 |
| RE: .7
> Japan's management practices (some) are proven to be better per
> Digital's Japan Study Mission Team results via our people spending two
> weeks there.
I think the most you can claim about the Japanese management practice in
high tech industry is that it is better for the Japanese companies.
I once saw a picture of NEC's (or Fugitsu's) office where I saw roll
after roll after roll of densely packed desks with big terminals on top
of them and engineers stuffed into what little space there was writing
software. In that kind of environment, what do you think would happen
to our software development projects?
Eugene
|
1037.13 | Right idea, wrong company? | DECWET::CAPPELLOF | Better living through Chemistry! | Wed Feb 28 1990 18:23 | 10 |
| Late-breaking news suggests that it was Mitsubishi that bought the
stock. From a picture I have of their organization, they don't
have a computer company under their wing like all the other big
Japanese conglomerates ("keiretsu") do. Maybe they're looking
to fill out their portfolio?
By the way, at DEC Japan, the rows of metal desks are separated by
low partitions, they're not all jammed together. The group manager's
office cube is only slightly bigger than the engineers' cubes.
They DO tend to work 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m., though.
|
1037.14 | RE: .13 | JAWJA::JCOLE | So let it be NOTEd, so let it be done! | Wed Feb 28 1990 19:21 | 1 |
| I wonder if that is the spark for our stock jump today?
|
1037.15 | more news from dow jones | DECWET::APPELLOF | | Wed Feb 28 1990 19:33 | 7 |
| My stockbroker read me the news directly off the Dow Jones. Digital
spokesman Mark Steinkrauss states that he knows of no reason for the
sharp late-session jump. He claims that the standard takeover rumors
are floating around, but that no one is taking them seriously.
However, the DJ Professional Investor reported a rumor of the
"13-D" filing by Mitsubishi Electric Corp. of Japan being
circulated among traders.
|
1037.16 | Not very late breaking news | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Feb 28 1990 20:03 | 6 |
| The Mitsubishi purchase was announced in LDP::WORLD_FORUM last week.
The person who posted it asked on Monday why noone had commented on his
posting. Noone picked up the bait.
/john
|
1037.17 | What's "13-D" filing? | TKOV58::SHIMONO | Do the left thing | Wed Feb 28 1990 23:15 | 7 |
| Re: .15
Excuse me for the ignorance. What's "13-D" filing?
BTW, I'm sure no one is in our office at 7:30 a.m.
Dolby SHIMONO
DEC-Japan
|
1037.18 | | VMSZOO::ECKERT | Night faded into blossoming dawn | Wed Feb 28 1990 23:43 | 6 |
| "13-D" refers to a form which must be filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) in the U.S. when a party acquires more than a
certain percentage ownership in a U.S. Corporation. (I think the form
number is actually "13-G", not that it really matters...)
You may be able to find more information in SUBWAY::INVESTING.
|
1037.19 | conference pointer | HGSW34::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in Hong Kong | Thu Mar 01 1990 06:58 | 9 |
| As John Covert pointed out this was discussed as a rumor in
LDP::WORLD_FORUM, note 5.229.
I've transcribed the quote from the Wall Street Journal in note 1726.0
in SUBWAY::INVESTING. Details regarding takeover strategies, defenses,
required SEC disclosures, Digital's stock price and so forth are all
discussed in that conference.
Patrick Sweeney
|
1037.20 | new topic title | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Thu Mar 01 1990 10:25 | 5 |
|
Due to late breaking news regarding Mitsubishi, I have changed the
topic title from the previous Digital+Fujitsu to a now more relevant,
and certainly less conceptual topic of Digital+Mitsubishi. ;-)
|
1037.21 | something for the entire family! | XANADU::FLEISCHER | I have NO management hat (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Thu Mar 01 1990 12:02 | 4 |
| A combination with Mitsubishi would open up the possibility
of a greatly expanded Employee Purchase Program. :-)
Bob
|
1037.22 | WSJ & NBR | NUTMEG::SILVERBERG | Mark Silverberg DTN 264-2269 TTB1-5/B3 | Thu Mar 01 1990 12:03 | 5 |
| The Mitsubishi rumor was noted in the 3/1 Wall Street Journal and
on last night's Nightly Business Report.
Mark
|
1037.23 | The Globe report, from MISG, from NEWVAX NEWS | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Thu Mar 01 1990 12:50 | 34 |
| ************** NEWS System Article -- DIGITAL INTERNAL USE ONLY **************
Subj: Rumors of Takeover Boost Digital's Stock
From: MISG News Thursday 3/1/90
Sect: CORPORATE News
Posted: MAR 1, 1990
[Editor's Note: Please note that this is a RUMOR only! It is reported
here because it has affected our stock price rather
dramatically. -- RCP]
--------
RUMORS OF DIGITAL TAKEOVER
"Rumors of Takeover Boost Digital's Stock" (The Boston Globe, 3/1/90,
PP:31)
Digital Equipment Corp.'s stock price soared more than 8 percent in late
trading yesterday as unsubstantiated rumors swirled that a Japanese company had
bought stake in Digital and might be eyeing a takeover attempt. Digital,
periodically the target of takeover speculation, said it was unaware of anyone
accumulating its stock, which jumped 6 to 78 in consolidated trading on the New
York Stock Exchange. The sharp run up apparently was triggered by speculation
among Wall Street traders that Mitsubishi Electric Corp. of Japan had notified
the Securities and Exchange Commission that it had acquired 5 percent or more
of Digital's stock. Mark Steinkrauss, Digital's director of investor
relations, said that the company had not received notice of such a filing by
anyone. However, Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., a New York investment firm, did
inform the SEC last week that its Digital holdings for clients had reached 6.2
million shares outstanding. The firm's filing said that the clients had
acquired Digital stock for investment purposes only. This is not the first
time Digital had been named as a takeover candidate. In past years AT&T Co.,
NCR Corp. and Unisys Corp. have all been rumored to be studying the company.
|
1037.24 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Mar 01 1990 16:04 | 7 |
| "It's all baloney," said Michael Geran, who follows the computer industry
for Nikko Securities Co. International, a unit of Japan's giant Nikko
securities group. "Mitsubishi isn't in this business," he said.
-from today's Boston Globe
I guess he thinks that Mitsubishi's current businesses are closely
related -- like tuna fish and cars.
|
1037.25 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Thu Mar 01 1990 16:42 | 34 |
| RE: .12, .13.
Just read something from a book titled _What Every Engineer Should
Know About Artificial Intelligence_. The author William Taylor grew up
in Japan. The following is extracted from page 286 of the book.
I can't help but admire the dedication of those workers, but I doubt any of
my friends of software type can adjust to this kind of environment.
Eugene
------------------------------------------------------------------------
... When I developed software for Nippon Electric (NEC), I traveled to
Japan to install our products at the end of each project. NEC's programmers
work at rows of desks jammed tightly together. Each desk is about two
feet wide and eighteen inches deep. Behind each row of desks is an aisle
about eighteen inches wide, and behind the aisle is a bookcase as high as
the desk. The arrangement is repeated, row after row after row, filling
a building the size of an aircraft hangar. People stay at their desks
because it causes so much trouble for other workers when they use the aisle.
I arrived at 7:30 every morning just like everybody else because my
hotel was nearby and I had little else to do anyway. I was awed to find that
most of the desks were still occupied at eight, nine, even ten o'clock at
night.
One evening about 7 P.M., there were only a few hundred scattered
bodies still toiling away. Why were there so few people working? Was
there a plague? No. Management feels it is unhealthy for people to work
twelve hours per day all six days of the week, so they have a rule that
everybody has to go home by 6:30 on Thursday evenings. What about all
those guys still toiling away? Well, if their project is urgent, they can
get permission to stay, but that can be granted only twice a month. Sure
enough, there was a guard checking passes to make sure all those workaholics
had permission to stay.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
1037.26 | Digital Study Mission To Japan Highlights | ODIXIE::CARNELL | DTN 385-2901 David Carnell @ALF | Thu Mar 01 1990 17:13 | 271 |
|
Posted with permission of the author, enclosed below is the highlighted
summary of the Digital Study Mission To Japan.
D I G I T A L E Q U I P M E N T C O R P O R A T I O N
Total Quality Management
Study Mission
to Japan
2 - 19 November 1988
Summary Notes Prepared by:
Ron Bourque
U.S. Manufacturing
Quality Assurance
Japanese Companies visited:
Fujitsu Nagano Factory
Ricoh Atsugi Factory
Ricoh Gotemba Factory
Fujitsu Numazu Factory
Mitsubishi Electric Corp. [Kita-itami Works]
Matsushita Electric Industrial Company, Ltd. [Kadoma &
Osaka Works]
Omron Tateishi Electronics Company [Kusatsu Works]
Hitachi Ltd. [Kanagawa Works & Odawara Plant]
Nihon Digital Equipment Corporation [Ichikawa Plant]
Oki Electric Industry Company, Ltd. [Honjyo Works]
Sumitomo Corporation [Tokyo Office]
The Study Mission also included a Lecture on Japanese culture
and customs by Ms. Jean Pearce of The Japan Times,
an all-day Lecture on Total Quality by Dr. Ichiro Miyauchi of
JUSE
a weekend visit to a Shinto shrine: Tsubaki Grand Shrine
and a little sightseeing [e.g. Nijo Castle & Ninomaru Palace,
Handicraft Center, Kiyomizu Temple in Kyoto, etc.]
Cultural Aspects
o We strive to achieve economic security; they know it just
doesn't exist and are always trying to optimize the
opportunity of the moment
o Group activity is part of their culture; they do it
naturally
o The Japanese try so hard to make us feel comfortable;
making suggestions in their culture must be a low risk
proposition
- Cannot debate in Japanese
- Sato / Nixon misunderstanding
- No one is ever all right or all wrong
o Concept of WA ---> Harmony in everything
o "The nail that sticks up gets hammered down..."
o Self-Discipline is valued [Shintoism]
o Value the process, not just the results
Management Aspects
o Japanese managers think in terms of customer desires and
conveniences instead of their own or their company's
- The customer is KAMI (God).
- Corroborate data with customers
o Management by and with factual data
- Relevant and necessary, not just obtainable
- Process control, not just results data
- Properly analyzed
o Detailed knowledge of manufacturing operations seems to
increase with the level of management
o Management and control organizations view problems as
opportunities to help, rather than as evidence of poor
performance
o The goal is "to avoid the slightest possibility of a
defect occurring"
Management Aspects
o Exponential improvement results are achievable
- Routinely seek 3X improvement goals in quality and
reliability
- Yearly goals and slogans
- Constantly visible [e.g. badges, etc.]
- January newspaper publishes yearly plan
- Sent home to family!
o Their philosophy on people especially their employees is
best summed up by Omron Tateishi's motto:
"To the machine, the work of the machine; to man, the
thrill of further creation."
Technology is for people, not the other way around
Socio-Tech: Technology for Society [e.g. conference room
toys, etc.]
o Automation is done to reduce variability and improve
quality as the primary goal
- Attack toughest problems first
- Eliminate mundane, difficult or hazardous jobs
- Autonomation is the norm
Management Aspects
o They manage the process not just the results
- When testing yields no failures, they increase the
severity of the test
- The goal is always to reduce Baratsuki [dispersion]
- Continuous, never-ending, improvement
- Inspection is done to obtain the information required
to improve the process [e.g. P-D-C-A], not to sort out
the bad
o Visibility Management: scoreboards, competitive bonuses,
etc.
o Strategic Planning / Total Execution
- Dynamic [e.g. Flight Plan, etc.]
- Everyone is involved [even send plans home in company
newspaper
o Continuous Education
Paradigms (of U.S. and Digital)
o Stockholders' return is most important vs "the customer is
KAMI."
o "The Boss" is the most important customer instead of the
next person in the process
o Management by Exception vs Continuous Improvement
o Meeting specifications and standards vs trying to excel
o "Not invented here" syndrome vs trying to learn from
everyone
o The Lone Ranger vs Teamwork
o Privileged Information vs Visibility Management
o Quality costs more
o Quality Control is the job of specialists & professionals
in the field vs quality consciousness in everyone
Paradigms
o Total Quality includes quality, reliability, cost,
delivery, safety, morale, etc.
- Quality of the company, management, product/service,
employee behavior, human resources, etc.
- KAIZEN & P-D-C-A Cycle [the secret!]
o Improvement when we have time vs as the top priority
o Valuing labor for their hands instead of for their minds
o Education as an expense vs as an investment
Results
o Very few people controlling many machines
o Try to find someone not doing something
o Highly competent workforce like world class musicians
learning to play a symphony
+ Just about every Japanese Company that has won the Deming
Prize was looking at Chapter 11 when they started -- As
they recovered, they recognized the power of TQC and kept
going. They didn't stop at solvency!
Supplier Strategies
o When we can no longer compete, we turn our former
competitors into suppliers [e.g. Fujitsu, Ricoh, Hitachi,
etc.]
o The Japanese never allow an external supplier to manufac-
ture a key component
o Suppliers are usually affiliated in some way
o They maximize their value added wherever possible
Remember our television industry?
What percentage of your components and sub-assemblies are
made in Japan?
To become more competitive as managers, we should:
o Invest at least 20% of our time in our own training and
self-development
o Obtain a better understanding of quality management tools
and begin using them with our people
o Change the environment to one where both good and bad news
are valued
o Become more familiar with our operations -- obtain
detailed knowledge beyond budget and schedule data
o Become more familiar with our customers
o Increase our knowledge of the competition [what they are
doing, not just their financial reports]
o Become involved with and participate in SGIA's
o Make improvement our highest priority
o Re-visit our sourcing strategies
It isn't so much the difference between their workers and
ours as it is the differences in management styles which
create the differences we see on the factory floor.
We are in a race that has no finish line!!!
Thank you,
|
1037.27 | Sounds like a resident wrote that | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | The limitation is you! | Thu Mar 01 1990 20:06 | 9 |
|
re -.1
Gee, most of that stuff sounds like it comes out of a DEC residents
mind, heart and mouth. You all get the picture. I leave by saying the
customer IS god, so try telling others that who aren't with the
customer everyday, night, weekend....holiday....vacation.
-Mike Z.
|
1037.28 | | TKOV58::SHIMONO | The customer is Godzilla | Thu Mar 01 1990 22:09 | 15 |
| Re: "The customer is KAMI (God)"
I guess "The customer is God" is an intense expression to the American.
Even to us, the Japanese, it sounds a bit strong (or I'd rather say,
"funny").
"O-kyaku-sama wa Kami-sama desu" (The customer is God) is a pretty popular
phrase in Japan. It's originated by a popular ENKA (a genre of Japanese
pop music) singer's motto, which contains some pretense, I think.
Anyway, our "Kami" is not identical to "God" in the West. You'd better
not overrate the phrase. For me, it's the same meaning as "Customer
Satisfaction."
dolby
|
1037.29 | so what is the news in Japan? | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Thu Mar 01 1990 22:54 | 5 |
| Can someone in Japan tell us a) if this rumor is being reported in
Japan and b) what is likely to happen if Digital is actually bought
by a Japanese company? Please.
Alfred
|
1037.30 | The news in Japan | TKOV58::SHIMONO | in selected theatres | Fri Mar 02 1990 00:04 | 18 |
| Re: < Note 1037.29 by CVG::THOMPSON "My friends call me Alfred" >
>a) if this rumor is being reported in Japan
Nikkei Sangyou Shibun (Nikkei Industrial News) this morning (March 2)
has a small article by the New York correspondent on the front page.
The contents are just about .23 and .24. And more; The firms on the
rumor includes
Mitsubishi Electric
Mitsubishi Trading [??? In Japanese name, Mitsubishi SHOUJI ]
Matsushita Electric Industrial (Panasonic)
An analyst's comment: "It's difficult for a Japananese company to buy
DEC, which costs over 1 trillion Yen."
I couldn't find any article on the matter in major papers such as Nihon
Keizai Shinbun and Asahi Shinbun.
dolby
|
1037.31 | | TKTV20::NEMOTO | Nothing ever stays the same.. | Fri Mar 02 1990 04:24 | 3 |
| ..it was also reported that all the companies listed in .-1
denied the rumor and were preplexed with it.
|
1037.32 | | LESLIE::LESLIE | Unicorn | Fri Mar 02 1990 06:24 | 3 |
| Personally I'd prefer Matsushita to Mitsubishi, but as they both deny
the rumour, I'll just have to carry on forking out large wads of dosh
for my hifi...
|
1037.33 | Digital's internal announcement via LIVEWIRE | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Fri Mar 02 1990 09:39 | 17 |
| Worldwide News LIVE WIRE
Stock Purchase Rumor
(This is a message from Ken Olsen)
It has been rumored lately that a number of companies, both
domestic and overseas, have expressed an interest in Digital
stock. We feel very confident that if they are buying stock,
they are doing it as an investment because they see the inherent
quality of Digital.
Successful Japanese and European business people, for instance,
are like Digital. They take a long-term view, and they believe
in long-term investments in people and technology. Like us, they
are willing to make short-term sacrifices for the long-term good
of the customer, the company and employees.
|
1037.34 | A view from the Lighter Side...! | KYOA::SACHS | Black, with extra Caffeine, please! | Wed Mar 07 1990 18:05 | 29 |
| This look on the brighter/lighter side of this "merger" rumor comes
from Digital Review, March 5, 1990, page 3:
" LIGHTER SIDE
First it was AT&T, then it was Ford, and now it's Mitsubishi that's
rumored to be the latest conglomerate interested in acquiring DEC.
Last week, DEC's stock jumped six points, 8 percent of its value, on
speculation that Mitsubishi had acquired a 5 percent stake in the
company. Last Thursday, DEC's stock closed at 74�, down 2�.
No one puts much faith in these takeover rumors because it is well
known that DEC has enough cash to fend off almost any hostile bid. But
one has to consider what might happen to DEC's slogan, 'Digital Has It
Now,' if the company were acquired by one of these three players.
Imagine if DEC President Kenneth Olsen had to adapt the Mitsubishi
slogan for DEC: 'Digital, Suddenly the Obvious Choice.' Worse yet
would be Olsen spouting, 'At Digital, Quality is Job 1' or 'Reach Out
and Touch Someone.'
It may be closer to the truth, however, to say that the only new
slogan Olsen may adopt is more akin to 'Repel All Boarders!.'
-Michael Vizard "
Personally, I like the last one!
Mark
|
1037.35 | Damn the arbitragers, full speed ahead! | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Thu Mar 08 1990 09:00 | 6 |
| RE: .34 "Repel All Boarders!"
Better yet, with the hope of opening new markets in Eastern Europe,
let's make it "Repeal All Borders".
|
1037.36 | Don't Spend all the CASH! | DNEAST::STARIE_DICK | I'd rather be skiing | Mon Mar 12 1990 15:36 | 4 |
| What if we spend the cash on "golden handshakes" and the stock drops ten points?
How vulnarable would that make us until the long term savings put the cash back?
|
1037.37 | you could "what if" this whole thing to death | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Mon Mar 12 1990 16:23 | 7 |
| I don't know how they'll budget the money but I doubt it will be
a large depletion from cash on hand. The highest estimate of cost
I've seen in the press is about $280M which probably still leaves
over a Billion in the bank even if we did take it from there. It's
seems a little early to panic.
Alfred
|
1037.38 | No need to fiddle with the balance sheet | SERENA::DONM | | Tue Mar 13 1990 21:21 | 7 |
| Knowing that Q3 looks like a pretty poor quarter, and that Q4 may not be any
better, makes me think that the logical thing to do would be to take a
charge against profit for whatever the buyouts cost. It would not be
smart to directly reduce assets by opening the piggy bank -- especially
in light of the expected lean income statement.
DM
|
1037.39 | | RINGER::WARFIELD | Gone Golfing | Wed Mar 14 1990 06:08 | 10 |
| RE: -.1
> Knowing that Q3 looks like a pretty poor quarter, and that Q4 may not be any
> better, makes me think that the logical thing to do would be to take a
> charge against profit for whatever the buyouts cost. It would not be
> smart to directly reduce assets by opening the piggy bank -- especially
> in light of the expected lean income statement.
If the write-off consumes the profits, the excess money has to come from
the balance sheet.
|
1037.40 | | SERENA::DONM | | Sat Mar 17 1990 11:40 | 9 |
| re .39:
:
: If the write-off consumes the profits, the excess money has to come from
: the balance sheet.
yep, but not necessarily from _cash_.
-DM-
|
1037.41 | | ENGINE::WARFIELD | Gone Golfing | Tue Mar 20 1990 06:14 | 11 |
| :
: If the write-off consumes the profits, the excess money has to come from
: the balance sheet.
> yep, but not necessarily from _cash_.
Well it's the most liquid asset, you could increase your liabilities
but the interest increases your expenses. Or are you suggesting we
have another stock offering?
Larry
|
1037.42 | Just from ACCT 101 memory... | MDVAX1::MCGUIRE | Mike `Hiram' McGuire, St. Louis | Wed Mar 21 1990 12:19 | 3 |
| I believe that losses are deducted from Retained Earnings. This may or
may not reduce Cash, depending on the non-cash expenses such as
depreciation reported on the income statement.
|
1037.43 | Accounting 101 | CALL::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Wed Mar 21 1990 21:55 | 26 |
| OK, if you want to talk about accounting...
CASH is an asset on the balance sheet
DEPRECIATION is an expense
ACCUMULATED DEPRECIATION is an amount deducted from the value of PLANT
AND EQUIPMENT on the balance sheet
Two core principles of accounting:
(1) Changes in the balance sheet are reflected in the income statement
(2) Retained earnings is not a account from a ledger but a residual.
Arithmetically, total assets - liabilities - stock at par - additional
paid in capital.
The accounting treatment of this ("voluntrary separation") in the
income statement will be either an increase in the ordinary "cost of
product sales" expense or an "extraordinary expense releated to
restructuring"
Patrick Sweeney
(I'm in the field: in the Financial/Digital Customer Center and this
reflects my opinion)
|
1037.44 | Accountants must take 501 | GUIDUK::B_WOOD | The Duke's new image, Michael Isuzu | Thu May 10 1990 18:53 | 39 |
|
> (1) Changes in the balance sheet are reflected in the income statement
Only if they affect income. Disposition of an asset at book value,
retirement of debt from cash or the sell of stock, etc. will not
show on the income statement. The most glaring example of a
transaction that cannot appear on the income statement is a companies
buying and selling of it's own stock(Treasury stock). Gains and losses
are either directly charged to retained earnings or additional paid
in capital.
In about 1976, the SEC and the FASB began requiring public companies
to issue a FUNDS Statement to correct these deficiencies.
> DEPRECIATION is an expense
DEPRECIATION is the periodic charge against income to amortize
the cost of a ASSET with an effective useful life in excess of
1 year. Useful life is defined in conformance with guidelines
of the FASB and the IRS. The expense occurs whenever the asset
is paid for.
> The accounting treatment of this ("voluntrary separation") in the
> income statement will be either an increase in the ordinary "cost of
> product sales" expense or an "extraordinary expense releated to
> restructuring"
Unless we expect to have continued termination's ad infintim..
It had better be an "EXTRAORDINARY EXPENSE". Failure to do so
would violate the GAPP of fairly representing the current operating
results in context with past and future events.
> (I'm in the field: in the Financial/Digital Customer Center and this
> reflects my opinion)
You are obviously a business major, an accountant would know the
difference. ;-)
|
1037.45 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | SOAPBOX: more thought, more talk | Fri Sep 27 1991 22:59 | 1 |
| This note discussed the earlier Mitsubishi rumor.
|