Tom C wrote:
> I said alot more because the article said "Sales at the company, which also 
> makes medical
> equipment rose 15 percent".
>
> I suspect alot of those sub-$700 K10D's are in the writedown.
>
>   

No, I don't think it works quite that way. You don't include equipment 
that's sold a short time after it's produced in an inventory writedown, 
I believe. If you have a large supply of parts whose price have dropped 
that may be included, I suppose, but the final selling price of the 
product has little to do with this. Generally, a "loss" caused by a 
writedown is a sort of manipulation of numbers. It represents value 
that's gone, of course, but when exactly it's included in the results is 
somewhat arbitrary.

Also, remember that the sub $700 price is included in the 15 percent 
increase in sales, so as to speak.
> What is says to me is that while sales are up (good) and profit is up 
> (good), due to the writedown, net income is down (bad).
>   
If net income is down only due to a writedown, that's probably close to 
"good", too.

- T


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