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Donnelley (r.r.) & Sons




Donnelley (r.r.) & Sons is a publicly traded company having a good stock performance result. Donnelley (r.r.) & Sons is a fortune 500 stock listed company trading under RRD.
 
 R.R. Donnelley prints advertising inserts, telephone directories, financial reports, business forms, and labels, magazines such as TV Guide and Sports Illustrated, and about a third of the textbooks used in the US. It also offers related photography, graphics, prepress, premedia, and translation services. In addition, R.R. Donnelley develops software that clients use to manage printing, advertising, and mailing needs. In 2004 the company bought printer Moore Wallace, a leader in forms and labels, making it the largest commercial printer in the US.
 
The Company reported net earnings from continuing operations of 95.6 million dollars or 0.44 dollars per diluted share on net sales of 8.4 billion dollars for the full year of 2005 compared to net earnings from continuing operations of 264.9 million dollars or 1.30 dollars per diluted share on net sales of 7.2 billion dollars for the full year of 2004.
 
Excluding restructuring, integration and impairment charges, non-GAAP operating margin increased to 10.4 percent for the full year of 2005 from 9.0 percent for the full year of 2004, primarily as a result of increased volume and the benefit of cost reduction efforts. The effective tax rate was 71.5 percent in 2005 primarily due to the non-deductibility of the non-cash impairment charge.
 
The Non-GAAP net earnings from continuing operations totaled 496.4 million dollars or 2.29 dollars per diluted share in the full year of 2005 compared to 337.0 million dollars or 1.65 dollars per diluted share in the full year of 2004. Full-year non-GAAP net earnings from continuing operations excluded restructuring, impairment and integration charges in both 2005 and 2004. Also excluded are a non-cash write-down of the company's investment in affordable housing, net gains on the disposition of investments and the cumulative effect of a change in an accounting principle in 2004. For non-GAAP comparison purposes, the effective tax rate was 34.8 percent in 2005 and 38.3 percent in 2004, reflecting a larger proportion of taxable income being generated in lower tax jurisdictions and the reversal of non-US tax valuation allowances.
 
 
 

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