T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2868.1 | This is an official notice. | BONNET::WLODEK | Network pathologist. | Mon Jan 24 1994 09:36 | 2 |
|
Bob and me need a raise.
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2868.2 | | AKOCOA::BBARRY | DON'T pop the bubbles! | Mon Jan 24 1994 11:00 | 6 |
| re: .0
Probably to replenish the cash reserves after funding TFSO.
/Bob
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2868.3 | Running out of cash AGAIN | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT, Unix a future page from history | Mon Jan 24 1994 11:26 | 16 |
| Re .0
Probably going to issue PREFERRED STOCK. The company must be running
out of CASH again. Contrary to the horsefuey spouted in the commentary
on the Q2 results emphasising the uninteresting fact that q2 operations
genererated cash.
My guess as to why securities are being offered (preferred stock) as
against another dose of debt is that Wall Street has a pretty poor
opinion of our debt right now.
Expect the preferred stock issue to drive the common stock price even
lower. Well I voted against allowing the company to issue preferred
stock...
Dave
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2868.4 | Dive..... | DIODE::CROWELL | Jon Crowell | Mon Jan 24 1994 11:54 | 6 |
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My math says that $1B of dilution will yeild about a $22/share
price..
Jon
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2868.5 | Don't we have cash? | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Mon Jan 24 1994 15:11 | 4 |
| I was told that the numbers released last week showed about $1.1B in
cash reserve. Did the financials list a cash reserve? If so, what
was it? If it did, and it was around a billion, then why do we need
cash?
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2868.6 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Mon Jan 24 1994 16:33 | 2 |
| The Hudson money furnace must be growing dim...
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2868.7 | When fast isn't fast... | USHS01::HARDMAN | Massive Action = Massive Results | Mon Jan 24 1994 19:35 | 13 |
| >The Hudson money furnace must be growing dim...
I don't know how we're doing in the workstation market, but the
articles that I've read in the PC magazines have not been very
flattering to our AlphaAXP PC 150. The current issue of PC Computing
compares a new Power PC system against the AlphaAXP PC 150, an NEC Risc
based PC and one or two others. We came in dead last in most of the
speed tests. :-(
If we keep this up, then .6 could be right...
Harry
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2868.8 | Alpha/NT... that's the ticket! | CTOAVX::SMITHB | | Mon Jan 24 1994 20:52 | 2 |
| And Datamation just did a lousy review of Windows NT...
|
2868.9 | Just the Facts maam... | OASS::HIBBERT_P | Just Say kNOw | Tue Jan 25 1994 10:02 | 19 |
| **rathole warning** Continue in DECWET::NTXAP
re: .7 Those test are based on the Alpha being in 286 emulation mode
which is considerable slower than native mode. I agree the
press info wasn't good but the comparison was biased because
Intel binaries were used. One very serious problem *is* the
lack of 386 emulation. MicroSoft's decision not to include 386
emulation on RISC implementations is killing Windows NT sales on
our Alpha AXP.
re: .8 The Datamation article was itself flawed. It was not an
article on NT as much as it was a rhetorical explanation of why
NTAS was not *vastly* superior in all aspects as compared with
NetWare. It took on the premise that NTAS was a Novell killer
and then disputed it. If the premise were simply NTAS vs. Novell,
then, as the article demonstrated, there are pros and cons for
each with the upward/future edge to NTAS. I agree with you - the
article *itself* was lousy.
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2868.10 | | SPECXN::BLEY | | Tue Jan 25 1994 10:42 | 8 |
| RE: .4
Why would stock go down? If somebody has enough faith in Digital to
loan us $1 BILLION dollars, why wouldn't that renew our customers
faith and wall streets, and the stock go up.
Well it sounds good anyway.
|
2868.11 | When does a takeover become inevitable? | OKFINE::KENAH | The Man with the Child in his Eyes | Tue Jan 25 1994 11:30 | 11 |
| >Why would stock go down? If somebody has enough faith in Digital to
>loan us $1 BILLION dollars, why wouldn't that renew our customers
>faith and wall streets, and the stock go up.
Nobody has lent us $1 billion. We may try to raise the
money by attempting to sell something (perhaps preferred
stock) but no one is loaning it to us.
Incidentally, in the last 12 days, our stock value has
dropped 18%.
|
2868.12 | | WWDST1::MGILBERT | Education Reform starts at home.... | Tue Jan 25 1994 13:42 | 5 |
| If you look at the balance sheet you'll find that we
have $1.1B in "cash and cash equivilants" and $1.0B
in "long term debt". Seems we do owe $1.0B to some
number of folks.
|
2868.13 | Check out the Feb 94 issue of PC Computing | USHS01::HARDMAN | Massive Action = Massive Results | Tue Jan 25 1994 13:52 | 15 |
| .9 > Those test are based on the Alpha being in 286 emulation mode
> which is considerable slower than native mode. I agree the
> press info wasn't good but the comparison was biased because
> Intel binaries were used. One very serious problem *is* the
> lack of 386 emulation. MicroSoft's decision not to include 386
> emulation on RISC implementations is killing Windows NT sales on
> our Alpha AXP.
Sorry, but ALL the machines tested for this article were RISC based and
running the same software. Not many folks want a machine that needs
custom code written for it when off-the-shelf products are available
for cheap money that runs just fine on a competitors system. :-(
Harry
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2868.14 | What's another 1.0B any way?! | POKIE::HORN | | Tue Jan 25 1994 19:28 | 27 |
| RE: .12
Yep, and that 1.0B debt was generated real fast... DEC made a request
to the SEC to allow DEC to barrow up to 1.0B. The very day DEC was
given the go ahead DEC barrowed .250B and then again at the first of
the next three quarters for a grand total of 1.0B. DEC used it as fast
as we could get it. I'm very concerned that we'll do the same
again...I saw it coming when they asked us to vote in the preferred
stock. I didn't like it then and I don't like it now. IMHO, we need
to draw the line in the sand and say "learn to run a business with what
you have. Because, every time your given an inch you take the mile and
don't have a return to show for it.
By the way, remember that some of that 1.1B in cash is in non-USA
accounts. Many countries have laws that only allow you to take out a
small percentage of your profits. They want you to reinvest in their
country (wise on their part and only the right thing to do really. I
hate this raping of third world countries). Thus, we can't get our
grubby little hands on some of that cash.
I just wonder what is going to happen when DEC runs out of little
tricks to get additional 1.0B's???!!! But then why would we need to
barrow more money, when we can generate a positive cash flow and a loss
at the same time...have your cake and eat it too.
just my 1.0B's worth, (---)
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2868.15 | barrowloads of it... | ANNECY::HUMAN | I came, I saw, I conked out | Wed Jan 26 1994 07:43 | 4 |
| hmmm the verb is _borrow_, tho' in these days of devaluing worth
perhaps barrow _is_ more appropriate....%^)
martin
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2868.16 | Capital Ideas | BRAT::CARLTON | | Wed Jan 26 1994 14:01 | 18 |
| My prediction - Preferred stock (and maybe bonds) will be issued with
convertability to common if the form of the warrants (mentioned in the
shelf registration notice) in lieu of cash dividends or to enable a
below market cash dividend/bond interest. Upshot - Digital gets more
cheap capital to bolster short-term finances and subsequent cash drain
will be minimal at most. Problem - dillution of common shares will
effectively put a cap on the stock price unless the fortunes of the
company (ie: revenue -> profits) turn dramatically. Partial offset -
convertablility feature will be at significantly higher price (ie: $50
per share or more) and sufficiently far into the future (3 - 5 years or
more) to have some present value without undue dillution of common
shares.
IMHO - not a bad strategy, except I'm not confident they'll use this
capital effectively to bolster the long-term revenue
stream/competitiveness and reduce the ranks of the Party apparatchik
(ie: intrenched middle - upper middle management) that is suffocating
this Company. If they don't, we'll continue to Wangify...
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2868.17 | | CTOAVX::SMITHB | | Fri Jan 28 1994 07:01 | 10 |
| re: .9
You miss the point, open up any trade mag and you see Digital
pushing Alpha/NT. Alpha now has many competitors, and NT is not
perceived as the end-all solution. We are basing our success on
a razor-thin margin, highly commodisized (sp) market with an as
yet unproven operating system. We will *NOT* make money in this
space.
Brad.
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2868.18 | try DECWET::NTAXP 224.0 instead | OASS::HIBBERT_P | Just Say kNOw | Fri Jan 28 1994 11:03 | 21 |
| re: .17
<<< Note 2868.17 by CTOAVX::SMITHB >>>
> You miss the point, open up any trade mag and you see Digital
> pushing Alpha/NT. Alpha now has many competitors, and NT is not
> perceived as the end-all solution. We are basing our success on
> a razor-thin margin, highly commodisized (sp) market with an as
> yet unproven operating system. We will *NOT* make money in this
> space.
I have not missed the point. A reference was made to the Datamation
article and I responded to that reference.
I am not in Windows NT marketing and am not interested in a rathole
regarding our marketing/strategic decision.
Since you have strong opinions about this subject and the title of this
note is "1 Billion dollars" and not "the Datamation article" I suggest
you read DECWET::NTAXP 224.0 and reply there.
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