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  • Isn't this an "infrastructure" company?

    Not an auspicious start to that part of "the next bubble"...:p
    Siemens to cut 16,750 jobs

    Tue Jul 8, 2008 1:15pm EDT
    FRANKFURT (Reuters) - German industrial conglomerate Siemens AG plans to slash almost 17,000 jobs worldwide to speed up cost savings and boost margins as it prepares for a global economic downturn.

    Chief Executive Peter Loescher, who has extensively restructured Europe's biggest engineering group since taking charge a year ago, said Siemens needed to be faster, more efficient and have a leaner administration if it hoped to keep up with rivals.

    "This takes on special urgency when one considers the economic downturn," he said...

    ...Engineering trade union IG Metall condemned the plans and did not rule out taking measures in protest.

    "Siemens is looking good economically, the order books are full ... That makes the planned job cuts neither comprehensible nor acceptable, and they are excessive in extent," said Werner Neugebauer, head of IG Metall in Siemens home state of Bavaria...

    ...Siemens shares have fallen almost 35 percent so far this year. By comparison, U.S. rival General Electric has lost 27.4 percent and Dutch competitor Philips has lost 28.8 percent, according to Reuters data...

    ...Loescher has promised to slim down the lumbering giant, which makes a wide range of products from light bulbs and high-speed trains to medical equipment and turbines, so it can catch up with more profitable rivals and improve its technology.

    So far, he has regrouped the company's units into three main divisions aligned with global growth trends: infrastructure and industry, energy, and medical technology...
    More...

    Last edited by GRG55; July 09, 2008, 07:19 AM. Reason: Correct spelling

  • #2
    Re: Isn't this an "infrastructure" company?

    Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
    Not an aspicious start to that part of "the next bubble"...:p
    Siemens to cut 16,750 jobs

    Tue Jul 8, 2008 1:15pm EDT
    FRANKFURT (Reuters) - German industrial conglomerate Siemens AG plans to slash almost 17,000 jobs worldwide to speed up cost savings and boost margins as it prepares for a global economic downturn.

    Chief Executive Peter Loescher, who has extensively restructured Europe's biggest engineering group since taking charge a year ago, said Siemens needed to be faster, more efficient and have a leaner administration if it hoped to keep up with rivals.

    "This takes on special urgency when one considers the economic downturn," he said...

    ...Engineering trade union IG Metall condemned the plans and did not rule out taking measures in protest.

    "Siemens is looking good economically, the order books are full ... That makes the planned job cuts neither comprehensible nor acceptable, and they are excessive in extent," said Werner Neugebauer, head of IG Metall in Siemens home state of Bavaria...

    ...Siemens shares have fallen almost 35 percent so far this year. By comparison, U.S. rival General Electric has lost 27.4 percent and Dutch competitor Philips has lost 28.8 percent, according to Reuters data...

    ...Loescher has promised to slim down the lumbering giant, which makes a wide range of products from light bulbs and high-speed trains to medical equipment and turbines, so it can catch up with more profitable rivals and improve its technology.

    So far, he has regrouped the company's units into three main divisions aligned with global growth trends: infrastructure and industry, energy, and medical technology...
    More...

    siemens. what a ******* dinosaur. germany, too.

    next bubble... first everything goes to shit and we try all the wrong politically expedient solutions... THEN the alt energy bubble

    if we live that long. :eek:

    if the new new deal solutions book comes out before 2010 it'll get buried like soros' already has.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Isn't this an "infrastructure" company?

      I guess the difference is that Soros' book deals with abstractions and economic philosophy which I suspect EJ will offer a great deal more detail and a lot more data.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Isn't this an "infrastructure" company?

        Originally posted by Chris View Post
        I guess the difference is that Soros' book deals with abstractions and economic philosophy which I suspect EJ will offer a great deal more detail and a lot more data.
        These days with the economy spinning down almost everywhere, maybe the publisher strategy for every author is to time the 2nd edition; make all the money on the paperback...:rolleyes:

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Isn't this an "infrastructure" company?

          Siemens is a little too dear for Niger/DRC/ROC/Tanzania etc.

          The chinese epc's, while shitty, do have the advantage of often being good enough.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Isn't this an "infrastructure" company?

            Originally posted by phirang View Post
            Siemens is a little too dear for Niger/DRC/ROC/Tanzania etc.

            The chinese epc's, while shitty, do have the advantage of often being good enough.
            Siemens has had great success installing power generation in the Arab Gulf. Their only real competition is France's Alstom and General Electric.

            Comment

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