You are here: silicon.com > Management > Skills & Careers

Skills & Careers

Ericsson to slash 5,000 jobs

After Q4 profits drop

Tags: jobs, losses, ericsson

By David Meyer

Published: 22 January 2009 09:11 GMT

The telecoms infrastructure firm Ericsson is to lay off 5,000 workers, after its results for the fourth quarter of 2008 showed a 31 per cent year-on-year drop in profits.

The results came out on Wednesday, with profits in the fourth quarter of 2008 totalling 3.9bn Swedish kronor (£341m) - down from 5.6bn Swedish kronor (SEK) in the corresponding quarter of 2007. Ericsson blamed the drop on restructuring charges and a "dramatic drop in the contribution" from Sony Ericsson, which is Ericsson's handset-manufacturing joint venture with Sony. Sony Ericsson's fourth-quarter results, which came out last week, showed losses of €187m, prompting analysts to predict that 2009 will be a "deciding year" for the company.

The best of silicon.com photos

1. Photos: Second Life gets down to business

2. Photos: Taking the wraps off Windows 7

3. Photos: Honda kick starts motorcycle safety tech

4. Minority Report: 10 Apple patents to watch

5. Photos: Cops use tech to point the finger of suspicion

According to Wednesday's results statement, the 5,000 laid-off workers will include around 1,000 in Sweden, primarily in Stockholm. Many of those made redundant will be consultants and other temporary staff, although Ericsson has also said it will consolidate its research and development sites.

In the statement, Ericsson president and chief executive Carl-Henric Svanberg claimed his company had demonstrated "solid performance" in 2008.

Svanberg said: "Sales grew by 11 per cent with good demand for our entire portfolio and across the world. Changes in currency rates had a very small effect on full-year growth. Professional services have continued to show strong growth.

"Operating margins, excluding Sony Ericsson, have steadily improved, and our financial position is strong with net cash of SEK35bn. Sony Ericsson is affected by the economic downturn and the declining demand in the consumer market and has taken necessary actions."

Svanberg said the recession's effects on the global mobile-network operator market - Ericsson's primary customer base - "should not be that significant" as operators are still doing well and traffic continues to grow.

"It remains, however, difficult to more precisely predict to what extent consumer telecom spending will be affected and how operators will act," Svanberg warned. "To date, our infrastructure business is hardly impacted at all but it would be unreasonable to think that this would be the case also throughout 2009."

Ericsson also said it would reduce its number of software platforms and "increase the reuse of hardware", and would also move some of its operations to "low-cost" countries.

Original article: Ericsson to lay off 5,000 workers from ZDNet UK

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure

Naked CIO Naked CIO: Social networks are useless for finding a job 'Quantity over quality' approach poisoning professional networks

Peter Cochrane Peter Cochrane's Blog: Uneconomics We must move away from short-termism to prevent next economic crisis


  • Jobs
Senior Mechanical Design Engineer - Consumer products, household name company; Cambridgeshire, to 60k + Benefits

Our client is global household name in consumer electronics and healthcare products. You will also liaise with counterparts on the factory site to ...

Mechanical Project Manager - Consumer Products, Outstanding Leader sought; Cambridge, to 65k

Our client is a global household name in consumer electronics and high-tech home & personal goods. Keywords: Project Management, New Product ...

Consumer Insight / Marketing Analyst - London

Skills: Web, Analytics, Forrester Wave, UAT, Testing, Tester, Usability, Analytics, Analysis, Statistical, Insight, Consumer This exciting and ...

Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.





Quick Sitemap Links: