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To: Sully- who wrote (97585)4/17/2001 4:52:08 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 152472
 
TI beats Street but outlook grim
Layoffs of 2,500, or 6 percent, of work force ahead
By Lisa Sanders, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 4:27 PM ET Apr 17, 2001



DALLAS (CBS.MW) - Texas Instruments, one of the world's leading
semiconductor manufacturers, beat Wall Street's first-quarter profit
estimates late Tuesday, but the company said revenue had declined
as expected and that it would eliminate 2,500 employees, or 6
percent, of its work force because of economic uncertainty.

Shares of Texas Instruments, which closed at $34,
up 99 cents, ahead of the announcement, declined
to $33.10 a share in after-hours trade.

Late Tuesday, TI (TXN: news, msgs, alerts) , the
market leader in digital signal processors (DSP)
and analog chips, said it earned $317 million, or 18
cents a share, compared to $494 million, or 28
cents a share, in the first quarter of 2000. Analysts
polled by First Call/Thomson Financial expected the
chipmaker to earn 16 cents a share, on average.

TI, which warned in late February that sales would
decline 20 percent from the fourth quarter, reported
revenue of $2.5 billion vs. $2.8 billion in the year-ago
quarter. In the fourth quarter of 2000, TI posted
revenue of $3.03 billion, an improvement over the prior year period but a
decline from the third quarter. The trend continued in the first quarter, and TI
said it expects another 20 percent sequential decline in the second quarter
on weakness in semiconductors.

Much as it said in February, TI, which makes the DSPs in more than half of
the wireless phones in the world, said an excess of customer inventories and
weak demand for end-equipment resulted in a slowdown in orders for its
products.

On Tuesday, TI said it would cut 2,500 jobs, or 6 percent of its
42,400-employee base, to cut costs. TI expects to save $400 million a year
when the move is completed. In February, TI said it would cut 2,600
employees through a voluntary retirement program designed to help the
semiconductor giant cut costs. In March, the chipmaker slashed 600 jobs
from its payroll when it closed a factory in Santa Cruz, Calif.

On a positive note in the first quarter, sequential broadband revenue rose by
15 percent on strength in demand for high speed Internet access through
digital subscriber lines.

Looking ahead, TI, which warned twice before reporting the March quarter,
said it would cut research and development in 2001 to $1.6 billion from $1.7
billion. The company also reduced capital expenditures to $1.8 billion from
$2 billion.

Lisa Sanders is a Dallas-based reporter for CBS.MarketWatch.com.