Eastman Kodak, which invented the hand-held camera and helped bring the world the first pictures from the moon has filed for bankruptcy protection, capping a prolonged plunge for one of America's best-known firms. Sonia Legg reports.
TRANSCRIPT
They were film pioneers and invented the hand-held camera, but Kodak's future is looking grim. Eastman Kodak has filed for bankruptcy protection, following a long and slow plunge in fortunes. The 130 year-old firm said it had obtained a 950 million dollar credit facility from Citgroup to keep it going for 18 months. The action will buy Kodak time to reshape its business and possibly find buyers for some of its 1,100 digital patents. They are the key to its remaining value. At the end of September the group had assets worth around five billion dollars with liabilities of almost seven billion. Kodak once dominated its industry - 80 Oscar-wining movies were shot on its film. And Neil Armstrong even took a Kodak camera to the moon in 1969. The firm invented the digital camera six years later but ironically failed to embrace modern technologies quickly enough. Kodak's demise hit its home town of Rochester in New York. 60,000 people were once employed there - around seven thousand remain with a further 10,000 workers elsewhere. The company's market value is now below 150 million dollars - 15 years ago it was worth 31 billion dollars. In recent years Kodak has focussed on consumer and commerical printers It said the bankruptcy filing was a "necessary step". Sonia Legg, Reuters.
ALSO SEE
• The last Kodak moment? (The Economist)
• Gone in a flash (The Economist)
• Eastman Kodak: 130 years of history – in pictures (The Guardian)
• Kodak's worst moment: Iconic 132-year-old photo firm pays price for failing to dent digital market as it files for bankruptcy (Mail Online)
