>From: "Fernando Terrazzino" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List <[email protected]>
>To: "Pentax-Discuss Mail List" <[email protected]>
>Subject: Re: Pentax Update
>Date: Mon, 16 Apr 2007 17:48:28 -0400
>
>On 4/16/07, Tom C <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Fernando,
> >
> > I said markeD disconnection, not markeT.  I agree with what you state 
>though
> > and that's my point.
>I C, sorry
>
> >
> > This wasn't Sparx selling the company as I see it.  It was Pentax 
>agreeing
> > to a merger with a more profitable and sucessful company than itself, 
>then
> > sitting on their thumbs right up to the last minute, making themselves 
>look
> > foolish, in a move that can be regarded as quite risky.
> >
> > If there was a Hoya-Pentax merger they were in some degree of jeopardy 
>of
> > having the camera division sold off or jettisoned jetsooned.  If they 
>are
> > taken over by Hoya they are danger of the same thing.
> >
>
>I read the same thing, Pentax needs money for R&D to keep this
>positive trend, and my guess is that Urano said, "Hoya can inject
>money, I'll deal with how to convince them about the imaging division
>later or there might be no imaging division" but your are quoting
>Sparx as if they where a trustworthy source for an analysis of Pentax
>in the long term, and they are not that, if they where a Bank that is
>about to lend money, or even another Camera/Optics Co. willing to take
>over Pentax that would be different. I'm not demonizing Sparx, as I
>said, they play by the rules, Pentax is the only one to blame for
>being in a situation where companies like Spark can make money out of
>them, but Sparx is that, an investement fund, and as that, whatever
>they said about the long term business of Pentax means just nothing.
>
>--

Sorry for being so lengthy...

Well I'm quoting Sparx because I assume they have far more information about 
the internal workings of Pentax than you or I, and I asume they are more 
savvy in the areas of corporate governance than myself, as it's not my field 
of expertise. :-)

Not trying to argue, but what knowledgable source *would* one go to as a 
"trustworthy source for an analysis of Pentax in the long term"?  I can 
assume not Pentax itself as they also have appear to have a healthy 
self-interest.  Isn't everyone else just guessing?

I think I'm right in an overall sense that a board of directors 
must/should/eventually respond to the wishes of it's shareholders.  As a 
major shareholder, Sparx likely wields a fair amount of influence.  So when 
a corporation out of neccesity acts in a manner consistent with the majority 
of it's shareholders, then even though the "company" and the "shareholders" 
are two separate entities, the "company" in many ways *acts* with the mind 
of it's shareholders.  Urano in one release stated, that in this case 
Pentax's board, by rejecting the merger, did not act in the interests of 
it's shareholders.

As you say, one can read between the line and deduce that Pentax themselves 
must have been worried about their long term future, otherwise there likely 
would have been no consideration of a merger.

Tom C.



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