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WSWS : News
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Ericsson plan 17,000 more job losses
By Steve James
30 April 2002
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Swedish based telecom manufacturer Ericsson AB intends to slash
a further 17,000 jobs over the next two years. Job losses will
take effect both in Sweden and internationally, although as yet
there are no further details of exactly where they will occur.
The announcement came after Ericsson posted larger first quarter
2002 losses than expected, following 2001 figures which saw the
127-year-old company lose money for the first time in its history.
In the first months of this year Ericsson lost $527 million, worse
than their expected $469 million loss. Total sales fell from $4.86
billion, in last years opening months to $3.68 billion this year.
New orders fell from $6.77 billion to $4.09 billion over the same
period. News of the losses, along with falling sales predictions
from rival Nokia, triggered a selling spree across the worlds
technology markets. Ericsson stock fell 24 percent on the Stockholm
stock exchange. Commentators suggested that Ericssons fall
alone would have a significant effect on the Swedish economy,
as the company accounts for 15 percent of Swedish exports.
Ericssons response is to slash its workforce. It intends
to save more than $1.9 billion over the next two years, while
pushing aggressively into the Chinese market. The company recently
appointed Michael Treschow as board chairman from Swedish consumer
appliance manufacturer Electrolux, where he acquired the nickname
Mike the Knife on account of brutal cost cutting.
Treschow and Ericsson are hoping to attract corporate investors
with a new share issue intended to raise $2.93 billion in new
capital by reducing its labour costs. The new shares will be so-called
Class B shares rather than Class A shares,
which have 1,000 times more voting rightsto ensure that
Ericsson remains dominated by Investor, the investment wing of
the Swedish Wallenberg family. Under conditions of a global slump
in sales of telecom networks, mobile phones and infrastructure,
Ericsson aims to acquire sufficient resources to be able to fight
in their corner without risking loss of control of the company.
Underlying Ericssons moves is the continuing instability
in all areas of the worlds telecom industries. CEO Kurt
Hellstroem explained to the worlds press, I do not
dare to say that the bottom is reached. We are in a stretched
out downturn and almost no operators are signaling that things
are turning upwards.
In the decade up the year 2000, growth rates in the mobile
phone and infrastructure markets were as high as 40 percent annually.
Rapid technological development, combined with consumer enthusiasm
for mobile telephones, provided a profit bonanza for all the mobile
phone producers and network providers. Both long established and
new companies flooded into the market, which rapidly became saturated.
All the major players are facing simultaneous drops in demand
and loss of profitability. Market leader Nokia recently downgraded
its predictions for this years total industry sales from
420 million to 400 million units, a figure only slightly up from
last yearthe first time that mobile phone sales fell in
20 years of production. Nokias own sales were down 12 percent
on the first quarter, and annual growth was also expected to be
less than initially predicted.
For a while, the manufacturers have been able to offset this
by utilising ever more advanced phones and network systems to
encourage consumers to continually upgrade their handsets. This
tendency too is slowing down, however. Analysts at the JP Morgan
investment bank told the Guardian newspaper, We believe
that Nokias handset business is showing extreme signs...
of consumer apathy for next generation devices accompanied by
a... change in the subscriber mix (from affluent early adopters
to a larger proportion of lower end, pre-paid users). This lowers
underlying replacement demand.
Translated this means that fewer people are buying new mobile
phones and those that do are poorer and keep hold of them longer.
They are less interested in the newest, most expensive, glamorous,
and most profitable devices, preferring a working phone at low
cost.
Days after Ericssons announcement, German based Siemens
declared its intention to cut 6,500 jobs globally, mostly outside
Germany. The company has already drastically reduced the number
of production sites. CEO Heinrich von Pierer told the Guardian,
We have experienced... a deeper slump in our carrier
business than expected a year ago.... The entire industry is in
a dramatic state marked by collapsing demand and eroding prices.
See Also:
Swedens Ericsson posts
historic losses
[6 February 2002]
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