Sony Will Cut 8,000 Jobs as Recession Curbs Demand

By: Lena Lee
Bloomberg




December 9, 2008

Sony Corp., the second-biggest consumer-electronics maker, plans to cut 8,000 full-time jobs as consumers curb spending on televisions, game machines and music players amid a global recession.

The reductions represent 5 percent of the electronics workforce at Sony, and the company will also cut another 8,000 seasonal and part-time jobs. Sony said it will curtail investments, farm out production and move away from unprofitable businesses by March 2010 to save more than 100 billion yen ($1.1 billion) a year.

The move highlights the severity of the decline in consumer spending at a time when companies typically focus on the peak holiday shopping season. Tokyo-based Sony, led by Chief Executive Officer Howard Stringer, said a “much” larger-than-anticipated deterioration in the economy spurred the measures and the company may revise its profit targets.

“The company might suffer from a bigger earnings decline in the second half, or even losses, if it doesn’t take any measures,” said Hiroshi Sato, chief investment officer of Tokyo- based GCSAM Co., who sold his Sony holdings.

It’s the second time Stringer, 66, is turning to job cuts to boost earnings. In 2005, when the company projected its first annual loss in more than a decade, the Welsh-born U.S. citizen announced plans to eliminate 10,000 jobs. Today’s reduction is the biggest by a Japanese company since the recession began.

Sony said it will give details about the financial effect of the measures in January when it reports fiscal third-quarter results.

Fewer Production Sites

Sony said it will invest 30 percent less in its electronics business than planned under its mid-term strategy, without giving figures. The company will also cut the number of manufacturing sites by 10 percent by the end of next fiscal year, from 57 now.

The company will delay investment plans at its Nitra plant in Slovakia that assembles liquid-crystal-display televisions for the European market. It also plans to end production at two overseas manufacturing sites, including one in France that produces tape and other recording media.

“These initiatives are in response to the sudden and rapid changes in the global economic environment,” the company said.

Sony said it will “adjust” pricing to cope with the stronger yen, two weeks after saying it didn’t have plans for “massive cuts” in prices in the U.S. The yen has surged 21 percent against the dollar and 38 percent versus the euro this year, hurting Sony’s overseas earnings.

Sony’s American depositary receipts rose 46 cents, or 2.3 percent, to $20.50 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading at 4:01 p.m. They have lost 62 percent this year.

Bravia TVs

The job cuts beyond full-time workers affect subcontractors, seasonal employees and people hired on a daily, weekly or monthly basis, said Mami Imada, a Sony spokeswoman. Temporary workers typically don’t get the same benefits Sony’s full-time employees receive, she said.

Sony said on Oct. 23 that net income will probably drop 59 percent in the year ending March 31, reducing the outlook by 38 percent as the stronger yen and slumping demand undermine sales of its electronics including Bravia televisions. The company also makes PlayStation game consoles, Walkman music players and Cyber- shot digital cameras.

The company will review the effect of the reorganization and revise its current-year and mid-term profit targets if needed, Senior Vice President Naofumi Hara said. Sony faces no problem with cash flow, he said.

Panasonic Corp., the world’s biggest consumer-electronics maker, cut its full-year profit outlook by 90 percent Nov. 27.

“We are working on reorganizing our global operations, reducing costs and speeding up structural changes to weather this crisis,” Akira Kadota, a spokesman at Panasonic in Tokyo, said today. He declined to comment on the possibility of job cuts.

All reductions will take place by March 31, 2010, Sony said. Hara declined to provide the number of people on contract.

Falling consumer spending led companies including AT&T Inc. and DuPont Co. to announce more than 15,000 job cuts this month. The number of people on jobless benefit rolls in the U.S., one of the biggest markets for Asian exporters including Sony and Panasonic, climbed to a 26-year high in the week ended Nov. 22.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601101&sid=aOFSQRJoiSs0&refer=japan

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