On a collision course

Published: 20 April 2001 y., Friday
After savaging American bellwethers Cisco, Hewlett-Packard and Intel, market forces are now taking aim at Europe, as the continent's high-tech sector cracks under the pressure of plunging profits and wilting demand. Europe now appears on a collision course with an unfolding global tech wreck. And the spreading gloom is sapping confidence in a regional economy that had until recently boasted immunity from the U.S. slowdown. Things unraveled this week, when Dutch electronics giant Philips posted a 90 percent drop in quarterly profits and said it would layoff up to 7,000 workers. Philips placed the blame squarely on the slower U.S. economy, saying it had to scale back production to cut inventory. That follows 2,000 job cuts by Germany's Siemens and reports that British telecom equipment maker Marconi PLC is gearing up for 3,000 layoffs of its own. Swedish mobile phone giant Ericsson saw its shares drop this week on reports that it was planning to slash its work force by as many as 30,000 people. Many analysts expect more fireworks when Ericsson and rival Nokia release earnings Friday. The snowballing trend builds on recent layoff announcements at Cisco and Hewlett-Packard and an 82 percent plunge in first-quarter profit at Intel, the world's leading microchip maker.In Europe, market growth for those products is expected to fall to 8.9 percent next year after peaking at 13.3 percent in 2000, according to the European Information Technology Observatory.
Šaltinis: bostonherald.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

China bought Volvo

In Gothenburg Sweden a deal is done for Volvo. A delegation from China’s Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, China’s largest private-run car maker, was given the red carpet treatment when it agreed to buy Ford Motor’s Volvo car unit for 1.8 billion dollars. more »

Zapatero hopes to reach employment figures of 70 percent for women in the EU by the year 2020

The President of the Spanish Government and current rotational President of the European Union, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, affirmed this Sunday that during his presidency of the EU, Spain will continue to support the inclusion of the "complete affirmation of equality between men and women" within the new economic strategy. more »

UniCredit Bank Lithuanian Branch resisted the economic recession

Despite the unfavorable macroeconomic situation, AS UniCredit Bank Lithuanian Branch achieved positive activity indicators in 2009: the bank branch operated profitably, the total loan portfolio and assets increased and the number of customers grew. more »

2011 budget: Parliaments spells out its priorities

Young people, economic recovery and research should be the EU's top budgetary priorities, said the European Parliament on Thursday, when it became the first EU institution to adopt an opinion on next year's budget. more »

Eurogroup countries give their support to the aid mechanism for Greece

The sixteen leaders of the euro area countries (the Eurogroup) have given their support to the financial aid mechanism for Greece; this involves the participation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and of the euro area countries through bilateral loans. more »

European social partners meet EU to debate exit from the crisis and Europe 2020 strategy

Today, President of the European Commission José Manuel Barroso, President of the European Council Herman Van Rompuy and Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero representing the Presidency of the Council met the European social partners to look at how Europe can exit the current economic and financial crisis. more »

Parliament backs aid to unemployed in Lithuania

Around 1,100 former furniture and textile workers in Lithuania will receive EU aid worth €1.2 million following a vote by Parliament on Thursday. more »

Developing countries facing the “abyss” says report

An estimated 100 million people in developing countries will fall into extreme poverty because of the economic and financial crisis, according to a report being presented Wednesday evening in the House. more »

EU to make its first formal decisions on the common economic strategy for the next ten years

The Heads of State or Government of the EU-27 will make their first formal decisions in the process to develop the “Europe 2020” strategy that aims to achieve sustainable economic growth, job creation as well as recognition for the European social model. more »

Telecoms: Lithuania withdraws proposed regulatory measures on network access market

On 16 March 2010 the Lithuanian Authority, Ryšių reguliavimo tarnyba (RRT), informed the European Commission that it was withdrawing its proposed measure on network infrastructure access markets. more »