Siemens AG had a âtoughâ fiscal year as orders for its factory equipment and lighting products declined, forcing Europeâs biggest engineer to deepen job cuts and book charges, Chief Financial Officer Joe Kaeser said.
Order bookings in the fiscal fourth quarter that ends tomorrow will fall about 20 percent from a year earlier, and the Munich-based company is adjusting capacity to adapt, Kaeser told analysts and investors at a meeting in London today.
âThe night is always darkest before dawn,â Kaeser said in a Web-cast presentation. The company held a âtightâ grip on costs in 2009 and will continue to do so next year, he said.
Siemens, which makes light bulbs, medical scanners and drives that automate factory production, has cut its global workforce to 408,000 this year from more than 420,000 employees as clients in the energy, healthcare and manufacturing industries cut spending. Siemens cut 5,000 jobs alone at its Osram lighting unit, Kaeser said today, and the company will book some charges for all reductions in its latest quarter.
Siemens fell as much as 2.02 euros, or 3 percent, to 63.94 euros in Frankfurt trading after Kaeserâs comments. The stock is almost unchanged in the last year, valuing Siemens at about 58.7 billion euros ($85.6 billion.)
What a coincedence that this piece of news was released one day after the election ! Ha, ha, ha !
Order bookings in the fiscal fourth quarter that ends tomorrow will fall about 20 percent from a year earlier, and the Munich-based company is adjusting capacity to adapt, Kaeser told analysts and investors at a meeting in London today.
âThe night is always darkest before dawn,â Kaeser said in a Web-cast presentation. The company held a âtightâ grip on costs in 2009 and will continue to do so next year, he said.
Siemens, which makes light bulbs, medical scanners and drives that automate factory production, has cut its global workforce to 408,000 this year from more than 420,000 employees as clients in the energy, healthcare and manufacturing industries cut spending. Siemens cut 5,000 jobs alone at its Osram lighting unit, Kaeser said today, and the company will book some charges for all reductions in its latest quarter.
Siemens fell as much as 2.02 euros, or 3 percent, to 63.94 euros in Frankfurt trading after Kaeserâs comments. The stock is almost unchanged in the last year, valuing Siemens at about 58.7 billion euros ($85.6 billion.)
What a coincedence that this piece of news was released one day after the election ! Ha, ha, ha !