TAG | Layoffs
Another round of employees at Cisco Systems reportedly got pink slips Thursday, as the company laid off several hundred employees as part of its plan to cut costs and realign its business.
The Wall Street Journal reported Friday that between 600 and 700 Cisco employees were laid off at the company’s headquarters in San Jose, Calif. The company also cut jobs at branch offices in other parts of the U.S. The Wall Street Journal cited sources close to the company.
A spokesman for the company told the Wall Street Journal that Cisco was “doing everything possible to minimize the impact on employees affected by the limited restructuring.”
Like all companies, Cisco, which makes networking equipment that runs the Internet and provides communications for large companies, has seen sales slump as a result of the global recession. The company said earlier this year that it would likely cut between 1,500 and 2,000 jobs as it realigned its business to focus on newer more profitable business segments. The cuts were expected to be completed at the end of the company’s fiscal year, which ends this month.
In February, Cisco said it cut about 250 jobs at its San Jose headquarters. Cisco had 66,558 employees at the end of April. Despite the cuts, Cisco’s CEO John Chambers has said publicly that he believes the worst of the recession is over. But he noted that it could take some time before spending returns to high levels. Wall Street will be watching the company’s next earnings call very carefully to see signs that the bottom has been reached. Cisco will report fiscal fourth quarter and end of year earnings on August 5 after the market closes.
Source : news.cnet.com
The Wall Street Journal reported Friday that between 600 and 700 Cisco employees were laid off at the company’s headquarters in San Jose, Calif. The company also cut jobs at branch offices in other parts of the U.S. The Wall Street Journal cited sources close to the company.
A spokesman for the company told the Wall Street Journal that Cisco was “doing everything possible to minimize the impact on employees affected by the limited restructuring.”
Like all companies, Cisco, which makes networking equipment that runs the Internet and provides communications for large companies, has seen sales slump as a result of the global recession. The company said earlier this year that it would likely cut between 1,500 and 2,000 jobs as it realigned its business to focus on newer more profitable business segments. The cuts were expected to be completed at the end of the company’s fiscal year, which ends this month.
In February, Cisco said it cut about 250 jobs at its San Jose headquarters. Cisco had 66,558 employees at the end of April. Despite the cuts, Cisco’s CEO John Chambers has said publicly that he believes the worst of the recession is over. But he noted that it could take some time before spending returns to high levels. Wall Street will be watching the company’s next earnings call very carefully to see signs that the bottom has been reached. Cisco will report fiscal fourth quarter and end of year earnings on August 5 after the market closes.
Popularity: 3% [?]
13
Layoffs on a slowdown but Tech jobs still scarce.
0 Comments | Posted by Utkarsh in Layoffs, News, Work
April proved to be a dismal month for technology sector jobs and overall employment, but there may be a light at the end of the tunnel. Granted, this morning brought sobering news of the U.S. unemployment rate hitting its highest mark since 1983: 8.9%. In the past month, 700,000 jobs were lost in the U.S., bringing the total number of U.S. jobs lost since December, 2007 to 5.7 million in April, 2009. However, while the economy continued to suffer from recessionary conditions over the past month, the pace of layoffs, at least in the tech sector may be decelerating.
According to the TechCrunch Layoff Tracker, tech layoffs reached 330,000 in April, due to layoffs announced by Yahoo (675), Sony Ericsson (2,000), Toshiba (3,900), and Nokia (450) over the past month. Media companies were also hit with layoffs this month with NPR, The Tribune Company, and Conde Nast Digital all forced to implement job cuts. However, according to the numbers, job losses may be slowing down. It only took three weeks for tech layoffs to go from 200,000 to 300,000 in February and five weeks for layoffs to hit the 200,000 mark before that in January. Yet it has taken 11 weeks for layoffs to rise by 30,000, with the layoff tracker hitting 330,515 layoffs today.
We are not completely out of the water yet. Last month, we reported the effects of the recession as measured by tech jobs site Dice.com, and it appears that available tech job listings have dropped even further in April. Dice.com is reporting a 47% year-over-year drop in available technology jobs for April, increasing slightly from a 45% year-over-year drop in March. April’s drop, as reported by Thomas Weisel Partners, is the highest annual drop Dice has seen so far this year, with February’s listings down 40.4% and January’s jobs down 39.3% (all year-over-year). Once again, Dice said that of the ten reported metropolitan areas, Silicon Valley was hit worst, with available tech jobs in the Valley down 54.2% year over year. Chicago (down 54.2%) and Boston (down 52.6%) also posted large declines.
Smaller jobs site like CrunchBoard, has also seen a sharp decline in available tech jobs in the past month. A little over year ago 100 – 120 job listings were added to CrunchBoard each month. The number of new listings gradually declined with the onset of the recession and then fell significantly in November 2008, dropping from 68 to 37 listings from the month before. The listings rose slightly over the next few months, with February’s listings hovering around 60. In April, the listings dropped to a low of 35 job postings.
But the Conference Board’s Online Help-wanted Index may show signs of hope in the economy, reporting that monthly job demand dropped 131,000 in April, down 28% year over year, compared to the 31% year over year decline in March. And Challenger, Gray & Christmas released a report yesterday that planned layoff announcements eased in April to 133,000, from 150,000 in March.
Strangely enough, it looks like the fishing, farming and hunting industry has been able to weather the storm better than any other area. According to analyst Christa Quarles from Thomas Weisel, the agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting industry was the only industry that showed an increase in job vacancies in April. Maybe we are in the wrong industry.
We’ve consistently believed in the resilience of the tech industry, especially given the industry’s past experience with economic downturns. Hopefully, the ease in layoffs is a sign that the tech industry is slowly but surely rebounding in the wake of the economic crisis.
Popularity: 1% [?]
27
First Quarter Layoffs: Selection of Job Cuts by Major Companies
0 Comments | Posted by Utkarsh in Layoffs
Layoff announcements were a common occurrence in the fourth quarter as the financial crisis weighed on companies in every sector of the economy. The layoffs have continued into the first quarter. The following chart is a selection of some announcements of job cuts since the beginning of the year.
Descriptive chart
| Company name | Date of announcement | Number of jobs cut | Percent of work force |
|---|---|---|---|
| National Semiconductor | 03/11/2009 | 1,725 | 26% |
| United Technologies | 03/10/2009 | 18,000 | 8% |
| McClatchy | 03/05/2009 | 1,600 | 15% |
| Marvell Technology | 03/09/2009 | 850 | 15% |
| General Dynamics | 03/05/2009 | 1,200 | 1.3% |
| IMI | 03/04/2009 | 2,250 | 15% |
| Monaco Coach | 03/02/2009 | 2,000 | 93% |
| HSBC | 03/02/2009 | 6,100 | 1.9% |
| RSA Insurance | 02/26/2009 | 1,200 | 6% |
| Nortel Networks | 02/25/2009 | 3,200 | 10% |
| Advantest Corp. | 02/25/2009 | 1,200 | 25% |
| Lonmin PLC | 02/24/2009 | 5,500 | 18% |
| Spansion Inc. | 02/23/2009 | 3,000 | 35% |
| Micron Technology Inc. | 02/23/2009 | 2,000 | 8.8% |
| Anglo American | 02/20/2009 | 19,000 | 11% |
| Embraer | 02/19/2009 | 4,300 | 20% |
| Avon Products | 02/19/2009 | 2,500 | 6% |
| Rockwood Holdings | 02/18/2009 | 900 | 9% |
| Goodyear Tire | 02/18/2009 | 5,000 | 7% |
| Smithfield Foods | 02/17/2009 | 1,800 | 3.4% |
| Pioneer | 02/12/2009 | 10,000******* | 16%******* |
| ArcelorMittal | 02/11/2009 | 9,000 | 3% |
| GM | 02/10/2009 | 10,000 | 14%****** |
| UBS | 02/10/2009 | 2,000 | 2.6% |
| Qwest Communications International | 02/10/2009 | 1,700 | 11% |
| Nissan Motor | 02/09/2009 | 20,000 | 8% |
| Estee Lauder | 02/05/2009 | 2,000 | 6% |
| Time Warner Cable | 02/04/2009 | 1,250 | 3% |
| Panasonic | 02/04/2009 | 15,000 | 5% |
| Electronic Arts | 02/03/2009 | 1,100 | 11% |
| PNC Financial Services Group | 02/03/2009 | 5,800 | 10% |
| King Pharmaceuticals | 02/03/2009 | 760 | 22% |
| Liz Claiborne | 02/03/2009 | 725 | 8% |
| SAS AB | 02/03/2009 | 9,000 | 40% |
| Macy’s | 02/02/2009 | 7,000 | 4% |
| NEC | 01/30/2009 | 20,000 | 7% |
| Hitachi | 01/30/2009 | 7,000 | 2% |
| Eastman Kodak | 01/29/2009 | 4,500 | 18% |
| Bon-Ton Stores | 01/29/2009 | 1,150 | 3% |
| Black & Decker | 01/29/2009 | 1,200 | 5% |
| AstraZeneca | 01/29/2009 | 7,400 | 11% |
| Ford Motor Credit | 01/28/2009 | 1,200 | 20% |
| Starbucks | 01/28/2009 | 6,700 | 4% |
| Boeing | 01/28/2009 | 10,000**** | 6% |
| Jabil Circuit | 01/28/2009 | 3,000 | 4% |
| SAP | 01/28/2009 | 3,000 | 6% |
| STMicroelectronics | 01/28/2009 | 4,500 | 9% |
| Corning | 01/27/2009 | 3,500 | 13% |
| Cooper Industries | 01/27/2009 | 2,200 | 7% |
| Clariant | 01/27/2009 | 1,000 | 5% |
| Texas Instruments | 01/26/2009 | 3,400 | 12% |
| Molex | 01/26/2009 | 9,300 | 29% |
| Caterpillar | 01/26/2009 | 20,000 | 18% |
| Home Depot | 01/26/2009 | 7,000 | 2% |
| Sprint Nextel | 01/26/2009 | 8,000 | 13% |
| Pfizer | 01/26/2009 | 8,300 | 10% |
| ING | 01/26/2009 | 7,000 | 5% |
| Philips Electronics | 01/26/2009 | 6,000 | 5% |
| Corus | 01/26/2009 | 3,500 | 10% |
| Harley-Davidson | 01/23/2009 | 1,100 | 11% |
| Microsoft | 01/22/2009 | 5,000 | 5% |
| Huntsman | 01/22/2009 | 1,175 | 9% |
| Intel | 01/21/2009 | 6,000*** | 7% |
| UAL | 01/21/2009 | 1,000 | 2% |
| Eaton | 01/20/2009 | 5,200 | 6% |
| Bose | 01/20/2009 | 1,000 | 10% |
| Rohm & Haas | 01/20/2009 | 900 | 5.7% |
| Clear Channel | 01/20/2009 | 1,850 | 9% |
| ConocoPhillips | 01/16/2009 | 1,300 | 4% |
| Circuit City | 01/16/2009 | 34,000 | 100%* |
| Pfizer | 01/16/2009 | 3,200** | 3% |
| AMD | 01/16/2009 | 1,100 | 9% |
| Hertz Global Holdings | 01/16/2009 | 4,000 | 13% |
| Wellpoint | 01/16/2009 | 1,500 | 3.6% |
| Saks | 01/15/2009 | 1,100 | 9% |
| MeadWestvaco | 01/15/2009 | 2,000 | 10% |
| Autodesk | 01/15/2009 | 750 | 10% |
| Motorola | 01/14/2009 | 4,000 | 6% |
| Barclays | 01/14/2009 | 2,100 | 1.3% |
| Neiman Marcus | 01/13/2009 | 375 | 3% |
| Cummins | 01/13/2009 | 800 | 2% |
| Seagate Technology | 01/12/2009 | 800 | 10% |
| Cessna | 01/12/2009 | 2,000 | N/A |
| Walgreen | 01/08/2009 | 1,000 | 0.6%***** |
| Lenovo Group | 01/08/2009 | 2,500 | 11% |
| EMC | 01/07/2009 | 2,400 | 7% |
| Logitech International | 01/06/2009 | 500 | 5% |
| Alcoa | 01/06/2009 | 15,000 | 14.5% |
| Cigna | 01/05/2009 | 1,100 | 4% |
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