Word: ricoh
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...chief executive has high hopes for the new 10 series of copier-duplicators, introduced last month and designed for customers needing copies in medium to low volumes. The lower-volume machines are directed squarely at Japanese-made products sold abroad by such competitors as Canon and Ricoh. While boosting sales, Kearns is also struggling to get costs down. From his tastefully furnished office in the company's headquarters building in Stamford, Conn., Kearns has this year slashed the company's worldwide work force of 120,000 by up to 4,000, almost as many people as the company...
That comment should not have surprised anyone. Both Savin and Nashua have carefully warned their shareholders for more than a year that Ricoh might eventually sever the relationship, and Conway said nothing to indicate that a break might be imminent. Nonetheless, when an article about Conway's talk appeared in the Wall Street Journal, a heavy sell-off started in both Savin and Nashua stocks (Nashua, a more diversified company, at worst fell from...
Savin President Robert K. Low told a reporter for the Wall Street Journal that 85% of the drop was due to the W.S.J. article about Conway's remarks. Low acknowledged that Savin was having a dispute with Ricoh about royalties on the copiers, but added that Ricoh was continuing to deliver machines under a contract that runs until 1989. The Dow Jones ticker, operated by the company that publishes the W.S.J., ran an item, but initially omitted the point about the contract, since both Low and the reporter agreed that it was old news. Later the ticker...
That stemmed the tide-but only briefly. Then, after Nashua and Ricoh officials held a meeting, Nashua announced that it did not expect an interruption in the shipments of the Japanese machines. Some traders interpreted this as a sign that there were uncertainties about deliveries-else why would there have been a meeting?-and still more selling hit Nashua and Savin...
...Tokyo, Ricoh remained officially silent. But industry insiders say it is only a matter of time until the Japanese company sets up its own sales outlets in the U.S. By then, however, Savin and Nashua may well be making their own machines-in competition with Ricoh...