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Caldera's cash woes continue, but Love says company is close to turning the corner

By on May 09, 2002 (8:00:00 AM)

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- By Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols -
After Caldera's four-to-one stock buy back, it looked like the company was out of its financial woods. That hasn't proven to be the case, but CEO Ransom Love remains optimistic about sales of the company's Linux and Unix systems, even though Utah company now reports that its revenue will only be in the range of $15.1 million to $15.5 million for the second quarter instead of $16 million to $18 million it originally expected.
Because of this, Caldera has announced more layoffs. Caldera will lose about 73 employees across the board and around the world. The company will be left with about 400 employees and a cost savings of approximately $7 million a year. While all locations will be hit, Caldera will be closing its Chelmsford, Massachusetts, and Erlangen, Germany, offices. Its other two German offices will remain open.

The company doesn't plan to cut back on any services or product lines; instead, it'll make do with fewer people.

Additionally, CTO Drew Spencer and chief legal counsel Harrison Colter are leaving the company. Both men will continue to consult for Caldera on a part-time basis. Opinder Bawa, Caldera's IT v.p., will take over the bulk of Spencer's duties, while Colter will continue to manage Caldera's legal work as an outside counsel.

While unhappy to be losing people, Love remains upbeat. "It hurts, but the worldwide IT market, especially in Europe, made this a necessary step to protect shareholder value in Caldera." That said, Love continues, "People are continuing to deploy business systems with both Unix and Linux."

But Alan Gillen, IDC's research manager for systems software, counters: "The Unix-on-Intel market, which makes up 90% of Caldera's business, has been a shrinking market. It's a tough place to be, we don't expect a robust recovery in the Unix market anytime soon."

On the other hand, Gillen believes that Unix on Intel has reached "a new waterline in the industry, so that, while there will be market share consolidation -- what we got now is what we will have for the next year." For Caldera, the real danger he sees is that the company is strongest with small- to medium-sized businesses and those kinds of companies are "very susceptible to Linux."

Love disagrees, saying that "Linux companies are also showing declining sells. Everyone's customers are having to cut back."

As for Linux, Love points to Caldera's Volution Exchange replacement program and cross-platform network management program, its bringing together of Linux and Unix, and training and support services for most commercial varieties of Linux to show that Caldera is adding strength in both network and Linux services.

Financially, Love says as painful as the layoffs are, they will bring the company to within $2 million to $3 million of profitability, and Caldera has more than enough cash to continue operations. Unlike its former sibling company, Lineo, Love is certain that Caldera won't need any kind of emergency management or financial help from primary backer Canopy.

While Gillen believes that Caldera must do more to turn the corner into profitability than reducing costs, he also notes that Caldera's Unix installed base creates business for the company. "It's not that people are going to rip out old Unix, when something works they hang on to it forever. Even if Caldera doesn't sell another box, there will be maintenance and support work for Caldera Unix for the next 15 years."

Looking ahead, though, "like Novell, they need to move new operating system licenses to get independent software vendors interested," he adds. Otherwise, "they're in a Catch-22, with no license growth, there will be no new software products, and it will be very hard to turn the downward cycle around."

Can price-cutting, self-made applications like the Volution line, customer and channel loyalty, and its combination of Unix and Linux offerings bring Caldera out of the woods? The stock market, which slammed Caldera with a 25% price drop today, doesn't see it. But it will be the small-business market that determines whether Caldera shrinks to a service and support company for its installed base or rises up to become a profitable service and operating system company for Unix and Linux business users.

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on Caldera's cash woes continue, but Love says company is close to turning the corner

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Caldera Leaves Chelmsford and RedHat pops up...

Posted by: nanoproph on May 11, 2002 01:55 AM
Caldera will be closing its Chelmsford, Massachusetts office..


and Red Hat is openning a new Facility not 10 minutes away in Westford, MA... I wonder how many of the new RH employees will be ex-Caldera...

from
http://www.redhat.com/about/presscenter/2002/press _boston.html
RALEIGH, NC—May 9, 2002—Red Hat, Inc. (Nasdaq:RHAT), the world's premier open source and Linux provider, today announced that it has opened an engineering and research & development office in Westford, Massachusetts. The new office is located at 3 LAN Drive in Westford.

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A bit of an trollish post here...

Posted by: remaja on May 11, 2002 11:11 PM
Red Hat eating Caldera. Next thing you know, they would be buying off Open UNIX (SCO) and GPLing it! Mayhem!

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Re:A bit of an trollish post here...

Posted by: nanoproph on May 12, 2002 01:16 PM
I was not meaning to imply that RedHat had a hand in the Caldera closing. I was suggesting though that many of the (ex-)Caldera folks located in the area would probably be applying for the positions @ RedHat (as they would, most likely, be among those most qualified for the jobs)...

/nnp

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Re:Caldera Leaves Chelmsford and RedHat pops up...

Posted by: Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols on May 14, 2002 12:23 AM
My understanding is that Chelmsford is mostly Unix people, but I'm sure some will try to make the jump. Heck, wouldn't any of us?

Steven

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