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All posts tagged ‘bankruptcy’

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Damn You, SkyMall!

Well, the champagne bottles must be popping over at SkyMall today. The gadget vendor’s rival, The Sharper Image (SHRP), filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection late yesterday and announced plans to shutter 90 of its 184 stores as soon as it’s able to sell off their inventories.

Seems increased competition and diminishing margins–not to mention that infamous air purifier class-action suit–have taken their toll on the company. Its sales fell 26% during its last fiscal year, which ended Jan. 31. And it’s amassed $199 million in debt. With just $251.5 million in assets, the company (which just last week replaced its CEO with a crisis-management expert) is in dire straits. Said CFO Rebecca Roedell, “Sharper Image is in a severe liquidity crisis.”

Sharper Image Agonistes

Monday, September 17, 2007

TechCrunch40: Day 1

Chapter 11, in Which SCO Finally Gets What It Deserves

sco.jpg

Wired News: So how’s business been since this ruling?
Darl McBride: This has zero to do with our open-server business. That has nothing to do with these fights. That’s 70% of our revenue. And finally, it has nothing to do with our new mobility products we are working on. All of our product business is really unaffected by this ruling, other than the noises in our marketplaces.
Wired News interview with Darl McBride, CEO and president of SCO Group, Sept. 10

ComputerWorld: Can SCO survive even if it ultimately loses the legal fights?
Darl McBride: I think it’s one of the more exciting times for this company. There’s a story my general counsel shared with me. By coming out right now and saying this is an exciting time, it’s like the boxer who has come out of the ring after getting all beaten up, and he comes over to his trainer and says, ‘The guy didn’t touch me.’ And the trainer says, ‘Then you better keep your eye on the ref, because somebody’s beating the living hell out of you.’ ”
ComputerWorld interview with Darl McBride, CEO and president of SCO Group, Sept. 6

When a company begins characterizing its assets as merely “those remaining,” as the SCO Group did earlier this year, bankruptcy is an inevitability. So it comes as little surprise to learn that the company’s hard-fought, but ultimately ludicrous, four-year legal campaign against Linux has ended in a Chapter 11 filing. Seems using litigation as a profit center to compensate for market losses isn’t such a grand idea after all.

sco_hack.jpg

“The Board of Directors of the SCO Group have unanimously determined that Chapter 11 reorganization is in the best long-term interest of SCO and its subsidiaries, as well as its customers, shareholders and employees,” the company said in a statement, adding that it has filed a petition for reorganization in addition to the Chapter 11 filing. SCO said the filings will help ensure that it “will not have any interruption in maintaining and honoring all of its commitments to its customers” and will allow it to pay its vendors.

The reorganization, it claims, “ensures business as usual.”

It’s worth noting, however, that the preceding is a “forward-looking statement.” And as we all know, those often involve risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated …

(Darl McBride image courtesy Bill Stearns)

About John

John Paczkowski has been poking fun at the tech industry and the personalities that drive it since 1997. From 1999 to 2007, he wrote the award-winning tech news Web log Good Morning Silicon Valley for the San Jose Mercury News, Silicon Valley's daily newspaper.

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