|  |     There is an article in a magazine called INFORMATIONWEEK dated 8 Aug.
    
    DIGITAL DOLDRUMS
    
    Digital Equipment Corp last month slammed the doorr ona dreadful fiscal
    year and crept cautiously into a period of change.  The computer vendor
    disclosed that it lost $2.15 billion for its fiscal 1994 ending July 2,
    its second largest annual loss ever.  That compares with a net loss of
    $251 million in fiscal 1993 and a whopping $2.8 billion loss in fiscal
    1992.
    
    Digital CEO Robert Palmer says his goal remains to return the company
    to profitability by the end of calendar year 1994.  But the taks is
    daunting, especially considering that 4th quarter revenue remained
    virtually flat at $3.92 billion, compared with $3.19 billion for the
    same quarter last year.  Even worse, year end revenue fell 6% to $13.45
    billion from $14.37 billion in fiscal 1993.
    
    Even if Digital wasn't dealing with the multitude of business problems
    it faces, it's still undergoing enormous changes, culturally and
    otherwise, says Franc Romano, an analyst with the Aberdeen Group, a
    Boston consultancy.
    
    Still, some observers say Digital may have a shot at recovering as long
    as it gets expenses under control and revenue picks up, particularly in
    sluggish operations such as services.  In fact, Wall Street reacted
    favorably the day of the announcement, boosting Digital's stock by 5%. 
    In light of the upcoming layoffs and positive ALPHA growth, it just
    might sqeak by with an operating profit by the second quarter of fiscal
    1995 as Palmer hopes says Chris Christiansen, research director at
    International Data Corp in Framingham Mass.
    
    The elimination of 20,000 workers-9,000 last quarter and 11,000 this
    fiscal year-will bring the head count to 65,000 next year, allowing
    Digital to trim about $500 million in expenses, says Digital chief
    financial officer Vin Mullarkey.  While revenue was lackluster, the
    company sees hope in its ALPHA systems sales, which rose 164% over last
    year, totalling about a third of all systems revenue in fiscal 1994 and
    outselling VAX systems for the firsst time.
    
    While service revenue slumped in fiscal 1994 to $6.3 billion, down from
    $6.8 billion in fiscal 1993, Palmer says it's important for Digital to
    keep its multivendor systems intergration business going-despite rumors
    that a for-sale sign is posted on that operation.
    
    [Reprinted without permission]
        Author  Marianne Kolbasuk McGee
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