HP to shed over 6,000 staff

Company plans to lay off about 6,000 worldwide

Computer industry bellwether Hewlett-Packard reported a 3 percent drop in revenue as its major lines of business continued to be hammered by the global recession.

The company also became the latest technology vendor to resort to layoffs in order to cut costs. Over the next 12 months, HP will lay off about 2 percent of its work force, or about 6,000 employees, HP Chief Financial Officer Cathie Lesjak said during a conference call with financial analysts Tuesday. HP employs 321,000 worldwide.

The company remained profitable, however, posting results that were in line with analyst expectations. HP recorded a profit of US$1.7 billion on sales of $27.4 billion. Earnings per share were $0.70 for its second fiscal quarter, ended April 30.

In a hopeful sign, the company reaffirmed its earlier guidance for fiscal 2009, saying it expected to earn between $3.76 and $3.88 per share for the year. That's better than analysts had been expecting. In a Thomson Financial survey of 26 financial analysts, the consensus estimate was $3.71 for the year. However, the company was pessimistic on revenue for the year, saying it would be down by 4 percent to 5 percent. Last quarter, HP had said it expected revenue to be down between 2 percent and 5 percent.

HP Chairman and CEO Mark Hurd said it was unlikely that corporate IT purchasing patterns would change in fiscal 2009. "We have customers that tell me, 'We're just delaying as long as we can until we have to buy,'" he said during a conference call with financial analysts Tuesday. "CIOs have been given marching orders that say, 'Take that infrastructure, keep the infrastructure running... be very particular about new projects you start, and if you can avoid starting that project, avoid starting it.'"

The quarter's revenue drop would have been much worse had HP not seen its services sales nearly double, year-over-year, thanks to the company's Aug. 26 acquisition of Electronic Data Services (EDS). Services revenue was up 99 percent, totaling $8.5 billion for the quarter.

HP is in the process of cutting 24,600 EDS jobs as it absorbs the computer services giant. The company's EDS integration is ahead of schedule, Hurd said, with "roughly half" of those positions now eliminated.

Everywhere else, however, the financial numbers reflected the global slowdown: storage revenue was down 22 percent; midrange server revenue dropped 21 percent; and sales of the company's industry standard servers and business critical systems were both down 29 percent.

Sales of desktop PCs dropped 24 percent, notebooks were down 13 percent and revenue in the company's printer division was down 23 percent.

The company did see improvements in some areas. "We saw improvement in China, and it was material. We saw improvement in U.S. consumer that I wouldn't say was as material," Hurd said. "I just think we're going to need another quarter of data in order to make a meaningful statement about any upturn or anything like that."

HP posted disappointing earnings last quarter as well, as revenue dropped in all of its business units. Hurd responded by imposing wage cuts across the board at HP. He cut his own salary by 20 percent and those of HP's top executives by 15 percent. The company's remaining executives saw a 10 percent wage cut while all other salaries were slashed by 5 percent.

HP had been hoping that these wage cuts would help it avoid layoffs. In a Feb. 18 memo to employees, Hurd said, "I don't believe a major workforce reduction is the best thing for HP at this time."

More about: EDS, Hewlett-Packard, HP, Thomson Financial
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Comments

1

slappy

Fri 22/05/2009 - 03:28

Ballmer said...

Hold on. Recent reports said that Ballmers new ad campaign is working. So sales for HP should be taking of with their new "PC IS CHEAP" campaign. Wait a minute, I just looked up the word cheap to make sure that the message is clear from these ads.

Yeah here it is:

Cheap
• inexpensive because of inferior quality : cheap, shoddy goods.

2

Damian Saunders

Mon 25/05/2009 - 15:17

Don't believe the spin

So, that’s six thousand living, breathing, educated, tax and mortgage paying, children raising, men and woman, cast out into a world racked with recession and rapidly rising unemployment, because HP only made $1.7bn nett profit in the last twelve weeks is it?

HP is not struggling, quite the contrary, HP is a highly profitable company sitting on cash reserves of $13.0bn having made $3.7bn net profit in the past two quarters, which is supposedly justification for cutting the salaries of the entire workforce, and putting off 6000 people.

The founding fathers of HP would be turning in their graves if they could see what their company has become under Mark Hurd. Sure, I agree that there was a strong need for fiscal reform when Mark Hurd came along but I don’t see why HP had to be turned into a black hearted, ugly beast who’s own mother wouldn’t recognize it.

The strong fiscal discipline has come at the cost of HP’s heart, it’s inventiveness, creativity, and energy, and it’s soul , the HP shared values, the HP way.

Mediocrity + mediocrity = mediocrity
Unprofitable + unprofitable = unprofitable

The figures are a short term illusion created by the acquisition of EDS and the systemic exploitation of HP's people.

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