Intel to cut up to 12,000 jobs as PC industry swoons

A worker arranges an Intel logo at the CeBIT trade fair, the world's biggest computer and software fair, in Hannover in this March 13, 2016, file photo. REUTERS/Nigel Treblin/Files
(Reuters)
- Intel Corp said on Tuesday it would cut up to 12,000 jobs globally,
or 11 percent of its workforce, as it refocuses its business towards
making microchips that power data centers and Internet connected devices
and away from the declining personal computer industry it helped found.
Tech
companies including the former Hewlett Packard Co and Microsoft Corp
have reorganized in the face of the PC industry decline. Many new tech
users around the world turn to mobile phones for their computing needs,
and corporations increasingly rely on big machines rather than desktop
models to run their businesses. Global personal computer shipments fell
11.5 percent in the first quarter, tech research company IDC said on
Monday.
Intel,
the world's largest chipmaker, lowered its revenue forecast for the
year. It now expects revenue to rise in mid-single digits, down from its
previous forecast of mid- to high-single digits.
Intel's shares were down 2.2 percent at $30.90 in extended trading.
Most
of Intel's factories are in the United States, although it did not
identify where cuts would be focused geographically. It said it would
record a pretax restructuring charge of $1.2 billion in the second
quarter and expected annual savings of $1.4 billion per year starting
mid-2017. (http://bit.ly/1WDPfBm)
The
company also said Chief Financial Officer Stacy Smith will move to a
new role leading sales, manufacturing and operations. Intel said it
would begin a formal search process for a new CFO.
Smith
said that Intel now expects the PC market to decline by a percentage in
the high single digits in 2016 versus a prior forecast of a mid
single-digit decline. Declines in China and other emerging markets are
also leading to greater than anticipated reductions in worldwide PC
supply chain inventory, Intel Chief Executive Brian Krzanich said on a
conference call.
"PC
demand, at least in the eyes of Intel, is expected to be weaker than
the industry originally anticipated," said Angelo Zino, an equity
analyst at S&P Capital Global Market Intelligence.
He
added that although the industry has already seen some of the weakness
experienced by Intel, the company's comments dashed any hope of
recovery.
The
Santa Clara, California-based company has been focusing on its
higher-margin data center business as it looks to reduce its dependence
on the slowing PC market. Intel has also made inroads into the mobile
devices market, although competitors Qualcomm Inc and Samsung
Electronics Co<005930.KS> dominate there.
Intel
said in a statement the job cuts would be carried out by mid-2017 and
the restructuring would "accelerate its evolution from a PC company to
one that powers the cloud and billions of smart, connected computing
devices."
Sales
of products for the data center and the Internet of things accounted
for 40 percent of revenue and the majority of operating profit, it
added.
Raymond
James analyst Hans Mosesmann, who rates Intel "under perform" said the
problems leading to the job cuts were likely more about Intel than the
broader tech industry.
"The
bigger issue is the restructuring and will it be enough for the company
to properly adapt to a changing environment where cloud and IoT
competitive dynamics are quite different," Mosesmann added.
On a per share basis, the company earned 42 cents per share, in the first quarter, up from 41 cents a year earlier.
Net revenue rose to $13.70 billion from $12.78 billion.
Non-GAAP
net revenue came in at $13.80 billion, compared with analysts' average
estimate of $13.83 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Adjusted earnings of 54 cents per share topped Wall Street forecasts of
48 cents.
Up
to Tuesday's close, Intel's shares had fallen 8.4 percent this year,
compared with a slight gain in the broader semiconductor index
<.SOX>.
(Reporting by Narottam Medhora in Bengaluru and Peter Henderson in San Francisco; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila and Diane Craft)
Intel to cut up to 12,000 jobs as PC industry swoons
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