Friday, May 22, 2020

IBM is latest tech giant to lay off staff amid pandemic

IBM is latest tech giant to lay off staff amid pandemic, Companies & Markets News & Top Stories - The Straits Times
23-May-2020

NEW YORK • International Business Machines (IBM) cut an unspecified number of jobs across the United States, eliminating employees in at least five states. The company declined to comment on the total number, but the workforce reductions appear far-reaching.

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) reported declining sales and announced it would cut jobs and reduce executive pay

Job cuts in major firms, Companies & Markets News & Top Stories - The Straits Times
23-May-2020

NEW YORK • Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) in a statement on Thursday reported declining sales and announced it would cut jobs and reduce executive pay, saying the coronavirus pandemic has disrupted supply chains for data centre hardware.

Job cuts in major firms

Companies hit by coronavirus pandemic plan cost-cutting measures that include reducing headcounts

Hewlett Packard Enterprise, which has its regional headquarters in Singapore, said it was putting in place a plan to cut costs, with a goal of US$1 billion (S$1.4 billion) in savings by the end of fiscal 2022. It has about 1,300 staff here. ST FILE P
Hewlett Packard Enterprise, which has its regional headquarters in Singapore, said it was putting in place a plan to cut costs, with a goal of US$1 billion (S$1.4 billion) in savings by the end of fiscal 2022. It has about 1,300 staff here. ST FILE PHOTO

NEW YORK • Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) in a statement on Thursday reported declining sales and announced it would cut jobs and reduce executive pay, saying the coronavirus pandemic has disrupted supply chains for data centre hardware.

The company, which has its regional headquarters in Singapore, said it was putting in place a plan to cut costs, with a goal of US$1 billion (S$1.4 billion) in savings by the end of fiscal 2022. Measures will including simplifying its product portfolio and supply chain as well as changing customer support, marketing efforts and real estate strategies, HPE said in the statement.

"It definitely was a tough quarter by every measure and I'm disappointed in the performance, but I don't see this as an indication of our capabilities," chief executive Antonio Neri said in an interview.

"This was clearly driven by supply chain disruptions because of coronavirus", including a shortage of chip components from China, disrupted logistics and social distancing guidelines in some regions, he added.

When contacted by The Straits Times, HPE said it has about 1,300 staff in Singapore. The company said there have not been any country-specific announcements regarding its cost-cutting plan. It did not comment on whether there will be any job cuts in Singapore.

Mr Neri said he expected HPE's sales to "recover sequentially", with the third quarter posting better results than the second and the fourth improving further. Still, he said, it is unknown just how bad the economic downturn will be.

Revenue fell 16 per cent to US$6 billion in the period ended April 30, HPE said. Analysts, on average, expected US$6.19 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Profit, excluding some items, was 22 cents a share, compared with an average estimate of 28 cents.

The company withdrew its annual profit forecast last month, citing uncertainty from the Covid-19 pandemic. HPE shares dropped about 5 per cent in extended trading after closing at US$10.36 in New York. The stock has dropped 35 per cent this year.

Mr Neri has struggled to spark sales growth at the computing and networking company, which has seen year-on-year revenue declines in all but one quarter since the company split from HP Inc in 2015. Competing with larger hardware rival Dell Technologies and dominant cloud computing companies such as Amazon.com and Microsoft, HPE has hitched its future to edge computing, which distributes data-processing capacity closer to customers rather than at centralised data centres. More immediately, the company has sought to support sales by offering US$2 billion of financing for clients trying to preserve cash in the pandemic.

Under the company's three-year plan to reduce expenses, senior executives including Mr Neri will take 20 to 25 per cent cuts to their base salaries, and the board reduced each director's cash retainer by 25 per cent from July to the end of the fiscal year.

The hardware maker will consolidate offices where possible, Mr Neri said. He expects more than half of HPE's employees will not return to the office full time, dropping in for meetings and collaboration when necessary.

The number of employees who may lose their jobs under the cost-cutting plan has not been determined, Mr Neri said. The company will spend the next few months working out the details and evaluating how much it can save in other areas. HPE has instituted some temporary pay cuts and frozen employee pay rises and promotions, executives said on a conference call after the results were announced.

Revenue fell 16 per cent to US$6 billion in the period ended April 30, HPE said. Analysts, on average, expected US$6.19 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

In the fiscal second quarter, revenue declined in all of HPE's business segments. Server sales dropped 20 per cent to US$2.64 billion and storage hardware fell 18 per cent. HPE's integration of supercomputer maker Cray is on track and should yield synergies by next year, executives said.

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HC Gan from iPhone X

Nissan plans to axe over 20,000 workers worldwide, Companies & Markets News & Top Stories - The Straits Times

Nissan plans to axe over 20,000 workers worldwide, Companies & Markets News & Top Stories - The Straits Times

Nissan plans to axe over 20,000 workers worldwide

TOKYO • Nissan Motor is planning to cut more than 20,000 jobs across the world, as it grapples with closed factories and showrooms amid the coronavirus pandemic, Kyodo News reported.


Nissan plans to axe over 20,000 workers worldwide

TOKYO • Nissan Motor is planning to cut more than 20,000 jobs across the world, as it grapples with closed factories and showrooms amid the coronavirus pandemic, Kyodo News reported.

The outbreak is forcing the Japanese carmaker to cut back on production, and it is also considering restructuring measures in the country, the news agency reported.

The job reductions are part of a mid-term reorganisation plan that Nissan is due to unveil next Thursday, Kyodo said.

The reduction is much larger than the 12,500 staff cuts Nissan announced in the middle of last year. Nissan has been in turmoil since the November 2018 arrest of former chairman Carlos Ghosn, with an ageing car line-up and management paralysis denting its outlook.

The automaker warned last month that it expects to post a loss for the latest fiscal year through March, as the pandemic shuttered dealerships in major markets and the economic fallout hurt consumer demand for new cars.

A representative for Nissan declined to comment on the report.

Nissan plans to cut about 300 billion yen (S$4 billion) in annual fixed costs and book restructuring charges as the pandemic further depresses its sales, a person with knowledge of the measures said last week.

The automaker will phase out the Datsun brand, shut down one production line in addition to the recently closed operation in Indonesia, and reach the reduced spending target this year by cutting marketing, research and other costs, the person said.

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W.rgds,
HC Gan from iPhone X