| I'm hanging on to my shares with possible adds. I actually thought 8 cent for the quarter wasn't to bad. It is a top ten portfolio holding for me.  IMO still high as a Takeover target.  Competitors, big and small  in the group are also undergoing tough times. IMO In market and economic conditions were currently undergoing.  In general, I've noticed many weaker companies are being consolidated for economies of scale, margins, and efficiency. This company has a new CEO who has been there 25 years.  IBM & Levano are still important customers. IBM recently bought Truven Health Analytics for 2.6 Billion for it's Watson Health unit. Any more IBM acquisitions in this field IMO could have a positive impact.  It might take awhile for a turnaround so the company will be vulnerable to a reasonable hypothetical offer. I'm guessing you might have seen an IBM Watson commercial?  Xerox's spin-off of Conduent is also trying to compete in this field.  I saw Conduent was recently mentioned as a target itself. The company put it's corporate headquarter are up for sale at 3 times book value (over 3 mill). If completed should be a one time gain as an extraordinary item. Divided payout to earnings level level exceeds past historical levels due to poor earnings. I'm just guessing it will be maintained as the headquarters are for sale. RE- Conduit
 
 
 I've posted an article of the Buffalo News you might find interesting.
 
 New CEO of Computer Task Group confident he can reverse company’s plunge
 
 By  David Robinson 	 	 | News Business Columnist
 on July 31, 2016 - 12:01 AM
 
 
 
 Bud Crumlish has his work cut out for him.
 
 Crumlish, who has  spent the past 25 years at Computer Task Group, is taking over as the  Buffalo information technology company’s president and CEO at one of its  darkest times in the past decade.
 
 CTG’s profits are plunging. Its sales are on pace to decline for the fourth straight year. Its stock is at a six-year low.
 
 And  Crumlish’s predecessor as CEO, former Dell executive Cliff Bleustein,  lasted just 16 months on the job before he “resigned by mutual  agreement” with CTG’s board of directors.
 
 In other words, Bleustein was shown the door by CTG’s board, pocketing a $1 million severance package on his way out.
 
 Oh,  and Bleustein came to CTG only because James R. Boldt, the company’s  CEO for 13 years, died unexpectedly on Columbus Day in 2014.
 
 Amid that tidal wave of misfortune, Crumlish, is charged with trying to pull CTG out of its tailspin.
 
 Crumlish,  who has run CTG’s biggest business unit – its staffing segment – for  the previous 15 years, thinks the company has what it takes to turn  around. In an interview, Crumlish said he’s comfortable with CTG’s  general strategy under Bleustein, which put more focus on its staffing  business that provides information technology services and personnel to  companies.
 
 He still sees opportunity in the health care sector,  which fueled CTG’s rapid growth from 2009 to 2012 as hospitals scrambled  to install expensive electronic medical records systems under pressure  from the federal government.
 
 But as hospitals started feeling the  squeeze from lower federal insurance reimbursements, they lost interest  in expensive technology upgrades and CTG’s electronic medical records  work dried up, leaving a gaping hole in its revenue base. Boldt couldn’t  plug the gap before he died, and Bleustein didn’t have any luck,  either. In fact, CTG’s slide has accelerated this year, likely  contributing to his departure.
 
 “I’ve seen this company enjoy many  good times and also weather a few tougher periods, like that which we’re  experiencing today,” Crumlish told analysts during a conference call  last week. “It takes hard work and resourcefulness to get through the  difficult periods.”
 
 Crumlish, for now, isn’t promising any major  changes. He said he wants to take the next month or two to review CTG’s  strategy. But by and large, Crumlish thinks CTG’s problem isn’t that  it’s following the wrong strategy. The issue is how the company is doing  at carrying it out.
 
 “There’s not a whole lot of change in the strategy,” Crumlish said in the interview. “It’s more a matter of execution.”
 
 CTG  bolstered its sales staff under Bleustein. It’s pushing to win more  work from existing clients. Crumlish wants to build closer ties between  its staffing and IT solutions businesses, especially in the health care  market.
 
 Crumlish warned that those initiatives will take time to develop. “These things take time to build,” he said. “You start small.”
 
 But small improvements won’t stop CTG’s decline.
 
 •  CTG’s sales, which peaked in 2012 at $424 million, have dropped for  three straight years and are on a path to decline again this year.
 
 Over  the past three years, CTG’s sales have fallen by 13 percent and the  company warned last week that it expects sales to drop by another 10  percent this year. If that pans out, it would leave CTG’s sales at  roughly the same level they were back in 2010.
 
 • CTG’s profits,  which more than doubled to an all-time high by 2012 as the company’s  health care business grew rapidly, has suffered an equally precipitous  fall as the sector softened.
 
 The company’s profits have tumbled  by 60 percent over the past three years and are expected to drop by  another 50 percent this year, after excluding write-downs and other  one-time expenses. That would leave CTG with its weakest annual profits  in 10 years.
 
 • The company’s stock has taken a nasty beating. CTG  shares, which traded as high as $25.71 in 2013 as optimism over the  health care business peaked, now trades for around $5 a share – a plunge  that has wiped out 80 percent of the stock’s value.
 
 • The  company’s health care market has slumped badly as cash-strapped  hospitals have held off on making investments in expensive technology  upgrades, including the electronic medical records projects that were  such a bright spot for CTG just four years ago.
 
 The health care  market, which accounted for a third of CTG’s revenues in 2012, provided  less than a quarter of the company’s revenues last year. That decline  has cost CTG a lot of money – $53 million in annual revenue from 2012 to  2015.
 
 And it’s only gotten worse since then. During the second  quarter of this year, health care clients provided less than 19 percent  of CTG’s shrinking revenues.
 
 • CTG’s staffing business has always  been heavily dependent on a handful of big clients. IBM Corp. has long  been CTG’s biggest client, accounting for 30 percent of the company’s  revenues so far this year.
 
 That’s one of the few bright spots for  CTG this year: Its IBM business has actually grown by nearly $3 million  during the first half of this year.
 
 But it’s a different story for  CTG’s No. 2 client – computer maker Lenovo, which accounted for nearly  10 percent of the company’s revenues during the first half of this year.  Its business with CTG has been shrinking, dropping by more than $8  million during the first half, more than offsetting the good news from  IBM.
 
 Crumlish thinks the Lenovo work is stabilizing and will start growing again.
 
 He can only hope for the same from the rest of CTG’s business.
 
 buffalonews.com
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