Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Lexmark working hard to right itself

Lexmark working hard to right itself

Stock recovers, but challenges remain
By Scott Sloan
HERALD-LEADER BUSINESS WRITER

A year ago, Lexmark International began a protracted slump when executives cut their third-quarter earnings forecast, sending shares of the company into a tailspin that saw the stock lose almost 30 percent of its value in a single day.

Now, as the company prepares to announce its third-quarter earnings on Tuesday, industry observers say the Lexington-based printer maker continues to face a series of challenges in its quest to turn the business around.

The company has acted quickly in the past year, cutting or transferring hundreds of jobs, closing an inkjet cartridge production plant and focusing its printer introductions on high-growth product segments.

The company also significantly reduced the number of inkjet printers it sells in bundles, printers that executives have said were not producing enough profit.

Investors have rewarded the company's strategy. Before last year's slashed forecast, the company's stock traded in the $60 range, but dropped almost $20 on Oct. 4, 2005. It's recovered throughout the year and is now trading higher than it was before the fall.

But the share price has approached or exceeded the target set by some analysts who, along with industry observers, caution that the company still has a gradual recovery ahead.

"It's hard to turn the battleship around quickly," said Larry Jamieson, director of the Hard Copy Industry Advisory Service at Lyra Research.

Inkjet issues

Among Lexmark's biggest changes in the past year was its decision to withdraw from about 20 percent of its inkjet sales, a group that includes a number of bundling agreements, where purchasers of a computer would receive a free or heavily discounted printer.

The company called some of those agreements bad deals, as consumers fail to buy enough ink cartridges and supplies over the products' lifetimes to offset low profit margins on the initial piece of hardware.

The move has helped Lexmark's gross margin in recent quarters because the inkjets in that group typically had lower margins on hardware sales than inkjet all-in-ones or laser printers.

The tradeoff, said analyst Shannon Cross, is a smaller installed base of customers.

That installed base is relied upon in the long term for sales of supplies like ink and toner. With fewer owners of its inkjet printers Ð albeit owners who didn't print an overwhelming amount Ð the company could face earnings pressures at a time when it needs to be "more aggressive in terms of their investment in the business," said Cross, managing director at Cross Research.

Lexmark is in a quiet period before the announcement and declined to comment for this story.

Part of the company's ongoing strategy is to develop more printers for high-growth product segments.

On the inkjet side, those segments are 3-in-1 and 4-in-1 products, typically referred to as all-in-one printers that include copying, scanning and sometimes faxing functions.

For lasers, the company has focused on color lasers, laser all-in-ones and low-end monochrome laser printers.

In the past year, the company introduced a spate of products in the categories, and continued to invest more money into research and development.

But the research and development budgets pale in comparison to industry behemoth Hewlett-Packard.

"The giant in the industry does about as nice a job as anybody in touching all the bases," Jamieson said. "It's almost like how can the other guys do about the same thing on a more limited budget."

Advertising

Building up brand awareness has been another goal for the company in the past year. It recently launched an advertising campaign that touted how its printers go to work for some of the world's largest businesses.

Jamieson said the company should also consider using its marketing to point out more of the features of Lexmark printers.

"They have some really good feature-rich products," he said, noting the company's progress in reducing the time it takes for a printer to start printing and its inclusion of duplexing features on more models. Duplexing allows printing on both sides of a page.

"You don't have to carry as many papers in your briefcase or you have fewer filing cabinets. The benefit is you're using less space in your office," he said.

Going forward

The company has said it expects third-quarter earnings per share to be 65 cents to 75 cents.

Analysts surveyed by Thomson Financial expect 79 cents a share.

Lexmark's forecast amount excludes a charge of 16 cents a share related to a restructuring announced in January that included the closing of an inkjet cartridge manufacturing plant in Scotland.

As part of the plan, the company is eliminating or transferring 1,350 jobs, including up to 200 in Lexington, to countries where wages are lower.

Looking forward, Jamieson said he expects the next year may "still be a tough one to get rolling" for Lexington's largest private employer. "It's a tough battle."



Reach Scott Sloan at (859) 231-1447 or 1-800-950-6397, Ext. 1447, or ssloan@herald-leader.com.

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Cartridge Shop the Advice, Information and
Supply Centre for Genuine, Compatible or
Recycled Inkjet and Laser Toner Cartridges.

Monday, October 09, 2006

How to achieve the best refilling results using ink jet cartridge refills

By: Marek Petynka

Recently I come across enquiry regarding the inkjet cartridge not working after refilling.

The person enquiring had a problem because couldn’t utilise his ink cartridges. Didn’t have much luck with refilling his Epson ink cartridge so he decided to purchase another printer and this time choose the Lexmark printer.

Due to very sporadic use of his printer the Lexmark ink jet cartridge dried out before he had a chance to use all the ink in his cartridge. After refilling his ink cartridges the colour Lexmark ink jet cartridge worked well but the black was dead.

This is the common problem with inkjet catridges that have built in print head such as some of the Canon printer ink cartridge eg. PG-40 / 50, CL-41 / 51, most of the HP cartridges, Lexmark and Dell. All these recent inkjet catridges are using pigment based black ink and dye based colour ink with tendency towards pigment based colour inks as well. Pigment based ink is water soluble as long as is wet, similar to the water based paint. As long as the paint is wet the brushes can be washed with water.

Pigment based inks are better compare to dye based inks when it comes to print quality. Printouts are smudge proof and colourfast. These are good qualities as long as one doesn’t intend to refill these cartridges and has a chance to use all the ink before they dry out.

What should we do if we want to refill them?

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Cartridge Shop the Advice, Information and
Supply Centre for Inexpensive Genuine,
Compatible or Recycled Inkjet and Laser
Toner Cartridges.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

New Epson 210 & 250 Photo Printers

Epson PictureMate 250 & 210 Photo Printers


Epson’s new PictureMate 250 and PictureMate 210 4x6 portable home photo lab printers with a host of new features make printing high quality and long lasting photos beautifully simple and affordable for just over 28 cents per print.

The PictureMate 250 and PictureMate 210 use Epson’s photo optimised Claria (tm) Photographic ink with Epson’s PictureMate Glossy Photo Paper to print vibrant photos that have a print life longer than photos printed at a lab.

Epson’s PhotoEnhance software in the PictureMate 250 and PictureMate 210 takes the time and worry out of photo printing by automatically resolving image problems to ensure the finished photo shows the full advantages of the wide colour gamut and superior brilliance of Claria Photographic ink.

PhotoEnhance is a powerful tool that analyses images and corrects common problems encountered by amateur photographers like shadowed faces, backlit images and dull colouring, allowing anyone to create images to admire and share with family and friends.

The large colour LCD screen on the PictureMate 250 allows full PC-free editing of images such as red-eye removal and image cropping, and the creative framing and clip art software allows personalised printing of a single image, a selection of images, or a range of stored images with ease and speed.

With card slots for most digital storage cards, support for PictBridge and a print time of just 42 seconds for a 4x6 BorderFree (tm) photo on the PictureMate 250, the PC-free PictureMates are beautifully simple to operate.

And with the optional Bluetooth module for connections to phones or other portable devices, and an optional rechargeable battery [PictureMate 250 only], the PictureMate is the perfect print-anywhere anytime home photo lab.

Claria photographic ink is the result of decades of research by Epson on ink and paper to produce long print life and brilliant colour that exceeds that available from silver halide and lab photo prints.

Colour photos used to fade because light and gases in the air break the bonds in the dye colour molecules on the print. Now with Claria Photographic ink the dye molecules contain more atoms with tighter bonding, and Epson has aggregated these stronger molecules into clusters and equipped them with atomic shields to reduce the likelihood of breakdown due to light or oxidation, thus giving longer print life of up to 200 years when stored in an album.

Epson has also released a new PicturePack for the PictureMate 210 and PictureMate 250 with a Claria Photographic ink cartridge and 150 sheets of Epson’s PictureMate Glossy Photo Paper that retails for around $42.49 RRP inc GST, making home printing extremely affordable at just over 28 cents per print.

The Epson PictureMate 210 is AUD$249 RRP including GST and is available for purchase at consumer electronics retailers, computer superstores, mass merchandisers, office superstores and selected photo specialty stores.

The Epson PictureMate 250 is AUD$329 RRP including GST and is available through selected retail outlets only.

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Cartridge Shop the Advice, Information and
Supply Centre for Inexpensive Genuine,
Compatible or Recycled Inkjet and Laser
Toner Cartridges.