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Saturday, November 8, 2008

Xerox Laying Off - Ceases Toner Production

At the plant in Oklahoma...

About 100 of the 170 employees at the Oklahoma City plant will be laid off and toner manufacturing will cease.

Officials say consumers are using newer equipment that uses different toners and the need for black toner product has decreased.

The Xerox facility broke ground in Oklahoma City 34 years ago.

Couple this with X's announcement last month of 3,000 layoffs globally, and the new plant in Webster and there really isn't any surprise here.

Xerox Reports Third-Quarter 2008 Earnings

(Norwalk, Conn.) -- Xerox Corporation announced third-quarter earnings of 29 cents per share.

Xerox said the profit edged up 2 percent, topping Wall Street's forecast, as sales to smaller businesses helped offset weakness in large U.S. corporations.

-Bigger companies bought less new equipment from the printer and copier maker-

crimping the Norwalk, Conn.-based company's sales growth and causing it to miss the consensus revenue prediction.

Xerox's sales grew just 2 percent, to $4.37 billion, short of the $4.47 billion that analysts polled by Jhomson Reuters were expecting. Sales would have been flat were it not for a weak U.S.
dollar.

Net income was $258 million, or 29 cents per share, a penny per share higher than the average analyst estimate. In the year-ago period, net income was $254 million, or 27 cents per share.


Check these out:

The Death of Xerography

Opinions, Everybody's Got One


Friday, November 7, 2008

Imaging Industry Wall Street Insider - New Blog

"Sub Prime"

In our industry, 95% of our transactions are leased and have been since the beginning.

Most customers and most selling professionals really do not know the intricacies involved with leasing and lease agreements and how the overall economic environment effect these basic pillars of our trade.

Well, I scrounged up a pretty good post over at Imaging Industry Wall Street Insider regarding this subject.

Enjoy.

And check out the Team at Woodford Group


Thursday, November 6, 2008

Starbucks and HP?


"Put that Coffee Down...Coffee's for Closers

LOS ANGELES, Nov 6 (Reuters) - Starbucks Corp (SBUX.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) said on Thursday that Chief Financial Officer Pete Bocian will leave the coffee chain at the end of the month to join computer maker Hewlett-Packard Co (HPQ.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) as chief administrative officer.

Bocian, 54, had a short tenure at Seattle-based Starbucks, which has been closing U.S. stores as it grapples to revive its flagging domestic business amid the weak economy.

Bocian joined Starbucks in April 2007 from NCR Corp (NCR.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), a maker of automated teller machines (ATMs), and became CFO in October 2007, a company spokeswoman said.

Troy Alstead, 45, Starbucks' senior vice president of global finance, will succeed Bocian.

RBC Capital Markets analyst Larry Miller said he held Bocian in very high regard.

"I'm a little surprised. He hasn't been there very long," Miller said, noting that it seemed like Bocian was moving on to a good position.

Still, Miller said, "Nobody likes change on the investor side ... Anytime there is a change in management it brings questions."

Contact Me

Greg Walters, Incorporated
greg@grwalters.com
262.370.4193