Yoav [Chalfon] Wechsler

Yoav
[Chalfon] Wechsler
is the VP R&D at
Corrigent.
Yoav has more than 22 years of experience in the telecommunications industry.
Formerly, he served as research and development director at One Path Networks,
Prior to his experience with One Path Networks, Yoav served as department
manager at ADC Teledata, where he managed the Next Generation DLC project (IAN).
Prior to ADC Teledata, he was department manager at Scitex Corporation from 1983
– 1997, where he managed the TelePress product line and all the other LAN & MAN
activities in Scitex.
The products of the Israeli based Corrigent

Creo awash in Q3 2004 red ink on charges

TORONTO, Aug 4 (Reuters By Jeffrey Hodgson) – Creo Inc. , a maker of printing software and
technology, found itself awash in red ink in the third quarter, hurt by foreign
exchange and restructuring charges, even as sales rose 9 percent.

The Vancouver, British Columbia-based firm warned it would face further
charges and lower margins in the coming quarter, a forecast analysts said would
disappoint investors.

We’re not surprised that these numbers are coming in the way they are.
I think the street is going to be negatively surprised here,” said Todd Coupland,
an analyst with CIBC World Markets in Toronto.

“The biggest surprise I think for people is that the gross margin is coming
down and the operating expenses are rising, so the company is looking a lot less
profitable over the next several quarters.”

Creo reported a loss of $1.6 million, or 3 cents a share, in the quarter
ended June 30, compared with year-earlier net income of $2.8 million, or 5 cents
a share.

The company said revenues rose to $156.2 million from $143.5 million.

Analysts had expected a loss of 1 cent a share, including the charges, on
revenues of $155.5 million, according to Reuters Estimates.

Creo warned last month it would miss its previous earnings forecast due to
unusual charges. It said third-quarter profit would be cut by 5 cents a share,
resulting in a net loss of 1 cent to 3 cents a share on revenue of $156 million.

It said on Wednesday the loss included about 6 cents a share of after-tax
expenses. This included a $1.8 million charge caused largely by foreign exchange
losses, the result of the revaluation of Canadian dollar assets as the currency
weakened during the quarter.

Other charges included a restructuring expense of $600,000 as it scrapped
leases while closing some U.S. operations, and a non-cash intangible asset
amortization charge of $700,000.

“The results for the quarter were in line with what they’d already sort of
guided to in their pre-announcement, but guidance will certainly be taken as
disappointing, not so much on the revenue side but more on the cost side,” said
one Toronto-based analyst who follows the firm.

“It was surprising to hear that gross margins are declining to the extent
that they are, and that operating costs are not coming down like we had
expected.”

Creo said it expects fourth-quarter revenue of $163 million to $168 million
and earnings per share between nil and 4 cents.

“While we are confident about our topline growth prospects for 2005, we do
see some margin reductions over the next couple of quarters, due to pricing
pressure and product mix,” chief financial officer Mark Dance told analysts.

“We could see overall gross margins in the low 40s, lets say 41 to 43
percent, before moving back up to their recent historic ranges of 43 to 44
percent later next year.”

The earnings per share forecast includes about 1 cent of intangible asset
amortization and 5 cents of restructuring, retention and accelerated
amortization costs as Creo moves its U.S. distribution arm to Vancouver.

Analysts had expected a fourth-quarter profit of 8 cents a share on revenues
of $167.2 million REUTERS

? 2004 Reuters

Scitex four-stars dinning room

For those ExScite’s who feel nostalgic about eating at the employees dinning room in Herzlia, here is the menu (in Hebrew), as photographed last winter on location.

Scitex gets export industry prize award

This picture was taken in 1982.
Scitex, the crown jewel of the Israeli industry, was invited by the Israeli President Chaim Herzog for export industry prize award ceremony at the president’s residence in Jerusalem.
Representing Scitex at the ceremony were in front row (click for the big picture view) were: Scitex CEO Efi Arazi (on the right), Elsy Menko (between Arthur and Efi), EVP Arthur Low (third from the right, wearing glasses) invited to the 1982  Also  Kobi Stern (second from the left), and  sitting on the left Tanya Shneider.
The picture was sent to us by Elsy Menko from Holland.

AVT_bunch

What a nice bunch- Sure enough, the Israeli company AVT sports 4 ExScite
executives:

Shlomo Amir
is President and CEO (top picture). Shlomo joined AVT in 1997. Before joining
AVT, he served for two years as vice president of marketing and sales at Nice
Systems Ltd., an Israel-based international high-tech company in the area of
digital voice logging. Previously, Slomo worked for 12 years at Scitex
Corporation, and in his last nine years with Scitex he was based in its European
subsidiary in Brussels, serving in various marketing, sales and management
positions.
Koby Shtaierman,
is Executive V.P. Corporate Sales & Marketing (second picture). Prior to joining
AVT in 1999, he was vice president of marketing at Technomatix, a multinational
company headquartered in Israel that develops computer-aided production
engineering software tools for the automotive and aerospace industries as well
as heavy industries worldwide. Previously Koby served at Scitex for 10
years in various positions, including as R&D project manager and later as
director of marketing for Scitex?s input systems division.
Kobi Olin is V.P. Business Development (third picture). Prior to joining
AVT in 2004, he was an Investment Manager with Orbotech Technology Ventures,
Orbotech’s Corporate Venture Fund. Alongside his work at the corporate VC, Kobi
was an active member of Orbotech’s Corporate Business Development Team. In his
previous position, he was a Founding Partner and a Managing Director at Sphere
Capital Markets. He also served as a Futures & Options Floor Trader for Harel
Securities at the Tel-Aviv Stock Exchange, and prior to that as a research
assistant at the Tel Aviv University and held R&D positions at Scitex
Corporation.
Gal Shamri
is VP Marketing (bottom picture). He joined AVT in 99 and prior to his current
position he served as Marketing & Business Development Manager and later as
Corporate Marketing Manager. Prior to AVT he worked at Scitex Corporation
for 6 years in the Input division and served in various positions including
Application Specialist and Product line Manager.
Advanced Vision Technology Ltd. (AVT, Prime
Standard of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange, ISIN: IL0010837248), is a provider of
automatic optical inspection and quality assurance solutions for the printing,
packaging. The company is located in Hod Hasharon, Israel.

Nostalgia

In 1978 Samuel (Sami) Tof from Stork Screens, Boxmeer, the Netherlands sold the first Scitex Response 220 system to the Soviet Union.

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