The position is a newly
created post.
Prunier, 43, joined TFS
in September 2003 as senior director for the company's medical products
business. He is a former general manager at Plexus, and director of manufacturing for SCI Systems.
Cash from operations exceeded $9 million for the quarter. TTM ended the year with cash and short-term investments of $58.5 million and no outstanding debt.
Sequentially, net sales fell 5% ($3 million), the result of lower orders
due to capacity constraints at the circuit board maker's Chippewa Falls facility.
For the quarter, quickturn business made up 26% of net sales, down 1 point from last year. Gross margin decreased to 24.6%, compared to 26.1% last year and 28.4% sequentially. Gross margin was affected by a raw materials price increase, pricing pressure, lower operating efficiency and mix changes, the company said.
For the year, net revenues rose 33% to $240.6 million and net income
was up nearly 400%, to $28.3 million. The 2004 results included a
restructuring charge of $855,000 and a $1.2 million reversal of a tax
valuation allowance.
For its first quarter 2005, TTM guided for revenues of $59 million
to $62 million.
In a statement, Kent Alder, president and CEO, said, "While we
expect business conditions to remain relatively stable, the benefits of our
capacity expansion at Chippewa Falls should offset the seasonal slowdown in
quickturn typically experienced in the first quarter of the year."
The U.K. operations carried heavy debt even before their acquisition
by DDi in 2000, McMaster said. The company, which is operating on slim
cash reserves, "could not justify" the large amounts of cash needed to
restructure.
DDi Europe will be placed into administration, a move that permits DDi Corp. to remove $38 million of the
UK-based indebtedness from its books.
In recent quarters, DDi Europe has contributed approximately one-third of
DDi Corp.'s consolidated net sales, which totaled about $285 million for the 12 months ended last September.
SAN FRANCISCO -- Fabrinet, an engineering and electromechanical
manufacturing services company, last week opened a 115,000 sq. ft. building in Pathumthani,
Thailand,
the first of what is a new campus for the company.
The site, known as Pinehurst, will provide electronics assembly
support for products built at Fabrinet's Chokchai campus 7 miles away.
The company has broken ground on a second building at the Pinehurst
campus. When completed, Fabrinet will have doubled its footprint in Thailand.
The second building is scheduled for completion in December.
Upon completion of the Pinehurst campus, Fabrinet have nearly 450,000
sq. ft. of capacity in Thailand.