T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2077.1 | | ASICS::LESLIE | DEChead (tm) | Thu Aug 27 1992 20:47 | 3 |
| Clearly we are technically insolvent, or about to become so, since our
cash reserves are spent and we're losing money. Therefore we'll be
borrowing. Simple as that, joe.
|
2077.2 | | EBBCLU::BROUILLETTE | MTSND | Thu Aug 27 1992 20:53 | 1 |
| This hit the wire this morning. See DIGITAL_INVESTING note 84.
|
2077.3 | technical insolvency | TOOK::TBOYLE | | Fri Aug 28 1992 02:27 | 5 |
| technically insolvent. Well, I would say our technical force is
bankrupt
quite yet,... but with some more help, it could be...
Tom
|
2077.4 | It was in the wind. | ESTASI::HARBIG | Riempendo di vuoto il nulla. | Fri Aug 28 1992 06:07 | 16 |
| It was on the cards....
The following is an extract from a message sent out by the
Corporate Controller re the FY92 results
"Long-term Debt: $42M vs $424M for HP and $12,891M for IBM
(last reported positions).
Conservative financial structure lowers
interest obligations and increases financial
flexibility. With $5B in net worth and virtually
no debt we have tremendous borrowing capacity."
The document in question is very interesting and since the covering
memo states that it may be distributed freely if anyone wants a
copy let me know.
Max
|
2077.5 | The business news on channel 2 said | JARETH::TREWORGY | | Fri Aug 28 1992 09:17 | 2 |
| What was said on the business news, "Digital said it was willing to
borrow up to one billion dollars for layoffs."
|
2077.6 | on hold? | GRANMA::FDEADY | that's as green as it gets.. | Fri Aug 28 1992 09:22 | 7 |
|
I doubt we'll see the "large" layoff until we have secured
cash from "Wall-Street". The negative press would probably add
1-3 percent additional risk.
fred deady
|
2077.7 | counter-rumor | SGOUTL::BELDIN_R | D-Day: 215 days and counting | Fri Aug 28 1992 09:53 | 6 |
| re .5
That's funny. I remember hearing Palmer quoted as saying "We are
UNwilling to borrow money to pay for layoffs".
Dick
|
2077.8 | WBUR | HARDY::PARMENTER | No mail to Craig Shergold | Fri Aug 28 1992 09:58 | 1 |
| "for restructuring and completion of a plant in Hudson, Mass."
|
2077.9 | Wall St. expects us to lay-off. | ESTASI::HARBIG | Riempendo di vuoto il nulla. | Fri Aug 28 1992 10:01 | 45 |
| Re -1
I don't think so.
Wall St. has always reacted favourably to DEC manpower
reductions and analysts have been saying it should be
done for years.
If you look at the Corporate Business Model and consider
that we are moving into the PC and low-end business in
general where the gross margins are pretty low you can
see that the only way to get into a profit situation is
to reduce the Sales, General and Admin expenses.
I'm not sure how much of these are manpower related but
from years ago I remember 50 to 60% as a basis.
Therefor to take the Business Model to a profit situation
without sacrificing too much on R&D, which in this business
really would be suicide, requires large lay-offs and the
financial world knows it.
Therefor I think, on the contrary to the previous note, that
a demonstration that big lay-offs were in the pipeline would
tranquilise the financial community rather than upset them.
Digital Business Model
% NOR
FY 87 FY 92
Gross Margin 52% 42%
Sales, General & Admin 24% 33%*
R&D 11% 13%
--------- ---------
Operating Profit (Loss) 17% (4%)
========== ==========
*Excluding the restructuring charge
I'd really like to be proved wrong but.................
Max
|
2077.10 | As long as we don't overdo it | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Fri Aug 28 1992 11:09 | 7 |
| My understanding is that the long-term debt that we have was
acquired many years ago at such low rates that even though we could
have paid it off years ago, it was foolish to do so. Interest
rates are low again. We have an excellent bond rating. Not
a bad time to borrow...
Tom_K
|
2077.11 | pay the 4's off to leave? | XCUSME::HATCH | On the cutting edge of obsolescence | Fri Aug 28 1992 12:26 | 6 |
| Why is it we have to pay people to leave? From where I sit, I see poor
performers being targeted to be cut, and here we are contemplating
borrowing millions of dollars to show them the door? What's wrong with
that picture?
Gail
|
2077.12 | who says only poor performers are being cut? | CUPTAY::BAILEY | Season of the Winch | Fri Aug 28 1992 12:42 | 13 |
| Perhaps it's not the picture that's wrong, but the perspective.
Several people that I know were TFSO'd this week ... NONE of them were
what could be considered poor performers. In some cases, the people
being "shown the door" are excellent performers who happened to be on the
wrong project at the wrong time.
The criteria for this lay-off varies from site to site. Poor
performance is the supposed criteria, but in real life things are not
working out that way.
... Bob
|
2077.13 | | COGITO::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Fri Aug 28 1992 12:48 | 9 |
| RE: .11
>Why is it we have to pay people to leave? From where I sit, I see poor
>performers being targeted to be cut, and here we are contemplating
>borrowing millions of dollars to show them the door? What's wrong with
>that picture?
Maybe you're on the wrong side of the door.
|
2077.14 | | TUXEDO::YANKES | | Fri Aug 28 1992 13:12 | 34 |
|
A recent Harvard Business Review (sorry, don't remember which
issue) had an article in it about how companies should view their
ability to borrow money as being a financial resource. And, as for any
financial resource, it should be managed and used to be betterment of
the company. Hence, the bottom line of the article was that companies
that philosophically refuse to take on long-term debt are doing a
dis-service to the stockholders. (Of course, the article also cited the
dangers of mismanaging the debt-capability resource in the opposite
direction -- namely taking on too much debt and watching the company
collapse.) It had a nice example of a company whose stock value was
low who wanted to expand during a period of low interest rates (can you
say "Digital"?) and ran the company through two scenarios:
1) The company issues X number of low-priced shares to raise the
money and perform the expansion, versus,
2) The company takes on callable debt, performs the expansion and,
after the stock price goes up, issues less-than-X number of shares to
raise the same amount of money to pay off the debt plus accumulated
interest.
The idea was that as long as the interest rate on the debt isn't
bad and the planned expansion has the hoped-for positive results to the
company's picture, scenario #2 is better since the earlier stockholder's
equity has been diluted less due to fewer new shares being issued once
this whole thing has been played out. (ie. the stock will have a
higher book value after #2 compared to #1.)
Today's WSJ had an article about the Digital announcement and while
I forget the exact wording, basically said that Palmer is more
aggressive about using debt than was KO.
-craig
|
2077.15 | 1990 = 123 K 192 113 K "All fours?" | WMOIS::MACK_J | | Fri Aug 28 1992 13:29 | 36 |
| RE: 11.....
Some two years after the Separation programs started,
I don't think you're going to find thousands of 'Four'
Performers. Nor do I think that in the past 24 plus
months the 15K People who have been TFSO'd, SERPed
or Laid Off were all 'poor performers'.
Whenever the subject of Layoffs comes up, many people
figure it's to rid the company of performance problems.
Factually some extremely talented people have been let
go in these programs, some volunteered for it when that
was an option, others did not. What we're looking at is
NOT performance related solely, rather, it's reducing
the overall employee population. In the past two months
alone, I'd be willing to wager that you're going to find
people who received high marks for performance were let
go. This is due to lack of funding for programs or
projects among other things. Having a high performance
rating may not be of any value at all IF you are in the
WRONG PLACE AT THE WRONG TIME. It'd be nice to think
that this is all handled extremely well, however, there's
ample evidence to hand that indicates in some area's its
been handled very badly. So the thought process that only
poor performers are being let go is not correct. PEOPLE
are being let go for a wide range of reasons, performance
may or may not be a factor. We closed the two plants in
Puerto Rico and most, if not all, of those folks were
let go, laid off, transitioned or whatever. I don't think
you'd find them all poor performers. It's a false sense of
security to think that these Layoffs are all performance
related solely.
- J -
|
2077.16 | What I think I heard | ELWOOD::MACADAM | | Fri Aug 28 1992 13:57 | 13 |
|
I heard a report on WBUR last night that was about what
I think folks are discussing here.
What I got from it was that DEC has asked the SEC for authorization
to issue up to $1 Billion in debt to finance plant construction
and restructuring including layoffs. The DEC spokesman said that
this does NOT necessarily mean that DEC will exercize this option
or have more layoffs; just that the company will have the flexibility
to borrow to finance these moves if management decides to do it. The
spokesman also said something about DEC still having 1.3 Billion in
the bank.
|
2077.17 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Fri Aug 28 1992 13:58 | 10 |
| This isn't rocket science people, the company needs to replace the cash
it is losing or stop operating.
Cash (from other than operations) can be raised by:
(1) asset sales
(2) new stock
(3) new debt securities
We're opening Door Number 3.
|
2077.18 | .12: How true! | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Some fries with that, sir? | Fri Aug 28 1992 15:50 | 6 |
| > The criteria for this lay-off varies from site to site. Poor
> performance is the supposed criteria, but in real life things are not
> working out that way.
The criteria at our site is pretty straightforward. You work
at our site, you're history. Any questions?
|
2077.19 | Don't P*ss them off | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Fri Aug 28 1992 16:27 | 29 |
| Re: .11
One other reason that Digital is giving nice severence packages might
be:
1) This isn't a layoff. It is termination w/o cause. These
people have little chance of being hired back as Digital
permanent employees.
2) I think we are beyond hacking on poor performers. In SWS
we were pretty much told the last round and the next round
were going to be based on business need. The baddies got
axed two or three rounds ago.
3) A lot of these people being let go will become:
o customers
o CMPs
o consultants to Digital
o etc.
I.E. someone who Digital will have to work closely with in
the future for generating revenue.
How likely are people, who were excellent performers and
axed with no severance, to recommend Digital as a vendor?
Digital needs to keep the people who performed well on their good
side.
|
2077.20 | Forget option (2) | RIPPLE::NORDLAND_GE | Waiting for Perot :^) | Fri Aug 28 1992 17:15 | 7 |
|
RE: .17
>(2) new stock - if current price is any indication, this is NOT an
option today. More stock in the same company drives
the price down due to dilution.
|
2077.21 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Fri Aug 28 1992 23:33 | 6 |
| In issuing new stock, the stock must first be offered to current
shareholders on a pro-rata basis, so that current ownership rights are
not diluted. This is called a "premptive right".
If current shareholders decline to pay in more capital (as most usually
do), then the stock is offered to the public.
|
2077.22 | This is good news | SOLKIM::RAJEEV | | Mon Aug 31 1992 11:22 | 12 |
| Taking on LT debt shows the confidence that the management has in our
future. I do not believe any blue chip company ( except Digital ) is
without manageable debt. With a better than "A" rating, we should be
able to borrow at a lower than 8% rate, which after corporate taxes,
will be an effective cost of capital of 5 to 6 percent. As long as we
can make that much on invested capital, it will be a smart move. Even
if this money is used for retrenchments, where the payback to the
company is much higher, it will be a smart move.
Now if only we could show a nice profit in Q1, start paying a 2 to 4
percent dividend, get our name to become more familiar to the public,
streamline our support systmems and prosesses, and sell sell sell we
would be in great shape.
|
2077.23 | On the shelf, ready to use ... | SWAM2::MCCARTHY_LA | They gave me the Digital salute! | Tue Sep 01 1992 17:35 | 22 |
|
Worldwide News LIVE WIRE 01-Sep-1992
Digital's shelf registration gets preliminary 'A' plus rating
Digital received a preliminary 'A' plus rating from Standard and Poor, after
filing a shelf registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The
registration statement covers up to $1 billion in debt securities, which
could be issued from time to time to cover restructuring costs and other
corporate expenditures.
According to Brad Allen, director, Investor Relations, The S & P rating
reflects Digital's strong financial position, its solid base of service
revenues, its strong reputation for hardware technology and its ranking as the
world's third largest vendor of information technology products and services.
While Digital has maintained a strong, positive cash flow position, Brad
notes, cash outflows will occur over the next two years as a result of
funding operations, share repurchases and restructuring. The restructuring
charges, which totaled $3 billion over the last three years, are expected to
enable management to realign the cost structure to better reflect the lower
growth, lower margin environment in which Digital has to compete.
|