Posts for Ticker ‘SCOX’

SCO’s Last Annual Report Ever? (SCOX, SCOXQ)

SCO Group, Inc. (Pink Sheet-SCOXQ), formerly "SCOX," has filed its annual report.  After you have seen the history of this company through the years, it is almost impossible not to wonder if this is likely the end of the road for the company.  Very few companies this small are involved in this much litigation.  The stock was booted from trading on the NASDAQ at the end of December and it is now traded on the Pink Sheets.  It is under bankruptcy protection.  Its revenues appear to be racing faster and faster to zero.  Its balance sheet is in the same boat.

It turned out that having a business model of suing everyone under the sun wasn’t a good one.  Go figure.  All of these are excepts from the 10-K, and we have focused on the more pressing issues with comments from the company:

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The 52-Week Low Club

Thornburg Mortgage Asset (TMA) Mortgage company and real estate investment trust gets downgraded by S&P. Falls to $13.81 from 52-week high of $28.40.

Pope & Talbot (POP) Forest products company has big Q2 loss and freezes hiring. Down to $.45 from 52-week high of $8.44.

Tribune Company (TRB) Tough time to do a newspaper LBO. Share price shows it. Down ot $25.57 from 52-week high of $33.99.

SCO Group (SCOX) Lost copyright battle over key Unix operating system to Novell (NOVL). Drops to $.35 from 52-week high of $3.11.

Movie Gallery (MOVI) No. 2 movie rental chain has too much debt. May not make it. Shares off to $.26 from 52-week high of $5.29.

Beacon Roofing Supply  (BECN) Company hurt by residential building. Down to $11.98 from 52-week high of $23.58.

Douglas A. McIntyre

The Future Of Linux Still Dark (NOVL)(IBM))(MSFT)(RHT)

A federal judge ruled yesterday that Novell (NOVL) is the owner of the critical copyrights for the Unix operating system. Another company SCO Group (SCOX) had claimed these rights. As The New York Times writes: "The ruling could remove the cloud over open-source software like Linux, an operating system loosely modeled on the proprietary Unix." SCO had sued IBM (IBM) over intellectual property rights for Unix, and that suit will now have to be dropped.

Two things will probably happen immediately. SCO shares, which traded at $4.25 in June 2006, and are at $1.50 now, may sell off to under $1. It is fair to ask if the company has any future now. The firm only has about $6 million in revenue each quarter and losses over $1 million on that.

Novell’s shares should strengthen. The big IP issues around Linux seem to be resolved, and the theory is that companies were concerned about using it instead of Microsoft software because of the potential liabilities around the SCO litigation. Microsoft (MSFT) and Novell announced a deal in November 2006 for the companies to jointly market Windows and Linux. Novell’s shares jumped from about $6 to $9. But, as the Linux community has voiced its concern about Microsoft being in bed with Novell, its  stock has moved back to just above $6. The ruling should help drive it back up.  It should also help Redhat (RHT) the largest marketer of enterprise Linux.

The Wall Street Journal offers the opinion that "the ruling is a boon to the "open source" software movement and to Linux, the freely available computer operating system that has become an alternative to Microsoft’s Windows operating system." That may be premature.

In May of this year, Microsoft said that Linux violated 235 Microsoft patents. Redmond has not done anything about those alleged infringements, but, it may have hoped that the SCO/IBM litigation would take care of some of that.

Linux may be a little better off today, but it still lives in Microsoft’s shadow, and 235 is a lot of patents.

Douglas A. McIntyre