Kodak to sell imaging businesses for $650 million
ROCHESTER, N.Y. Eastman Kodak has agreed to sell its personalized and document imaging businesses to its U.K. pension plan as part of an agreement that settles $2.8 billion of claims that the retirement fund had sought from the photography pioneer.
Eastman Kodak said Monday that it is selling the businesses to the U.K. Kodak Pension Plan for $650 million. Kodak is working to emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. It says it plans to use some of the proceeds to emerge from bankruptcy and to grow its commercial imaging business.
- Kodak to borrow $830 million
- Kodak to receive $525 million from patent sale
- Kodak selling document imaging assets for $210 million
Founded in 1880, Kodak filed for bankruptcy protection at the beginning of 2012. Since then Kodak has sold off several businesses, such as its online photo service, and said it would shut others, including manufacturing digital cameras.
The company intends to focus on commercial and packaging printing. It sees home photo printers, high-speed commercial inkjet presses, software and packaging as the core of its business as it emerges from bankruptcy.
Kodak said it plans to file a draft of its Chapter 11 plan with the bankruptcy court on Tuesday.