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To: TigerPaw who wrote (165073)5/3/2001 10:31:48 AM
From: John Koligman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176388
 
Yeah, it's really smart PR when a senior executive says 'Absolutely'! to the layoff question. I'm sure it makes the employees feel important... Sounds like these guys still need lots of PR assistance. Remember Mikey mouthing off about Taiwan not affecting Dell, Y2K not affecting Dell, growing at 50%, etc. etc???

Regards,
John



To: TigerPaw who wrote (165073)5/3/2001 10:47:11 AM
From: OLDTRADER  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176388
 
All manufacturing companies have recalls and layoffs-back to the time of Jesus.Big deal.Just take it in stride and relax-Big brokerage firms consistently trying to get you to exit your/or not interfere with their purchases on the dips- .



To: TigerPaw who wrote (165073)5/3/2001 12:05:07 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 176388
 
IMHO, a number of companies are acting emotionally and are using large scale lay-offs as a way to TRY to become more efficient...Yet, this can backfire...What will the morale be like for the remaining troops? Layoffs must be handled VERY CAREFULLY -- Mort's old firm (Motorola) has already announced another 22,000 layoffs in the last year --> most of the top talent is gone and this truly seems like an act of desperation by a company that has lost touch with its markets. Virtually all of the large tech firms (except MSFT) have decided to use layoffs as a cost-cutting tool...Some of them may regret their decisons...JMHO.

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Corporate Layoffs Highest Since '93

Thursday May 3, 11:26 am Eastern Time

<<NEW YORK (Reuters) - Job cuts announced by U.S. companies hit a record high in April -- the highest since the survey began in 1993 -- and were four times higher than in the same month a year earlier, a research group said on Thursday.

In a sign that companies are coping with a U.S. economic slowdown by slashing payrolls, 165,564 new job cuts were announced in April compared with 162,867 in March, according to international outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

It was the fifth consecutive month in which more than 100,000 job cuts, a survey record, were announced.

During the first four months this year companies have announced 572,370 planned job cuts compared with just 179,144 during the same period last year, Challenger said.

Earlier, the Labor Department said a four-week moving average of first-time claims for unemployment insurance rose to their highest level since late 1992.

Both reports come just a day before a key employment report for April will be released and pointed to further weakness in the labor market, analysts said.

``It all smells of a weak employment report tomorrow,'' said Astrid Adolfson, an economist at MCM Moneywatch. ``It wouldn't surprise me if we get a negative employment number.''

Economists polled by Reuters expect the report to show a rise in the unemployment rate to 4.4 percent from 4.3 percent and for U.S. payrolls to add just 5,000 jobs after the economy shed 86,000 jobs in March.

Economists fear a sharp rise in unemployment could cause further undermine consumer confidence and provoke a pull-back in spending, exacerbating the current economic slowdown.

The Challenger report said telecommunications companies, computer companies and financial firms announced the highest number of layoffs in April.

``The fact that telecom, computer and electronics companies are among the top five job cutters in 2001 is a result of corporations reining in technology spending,'' said John Challenger, chief executive at Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

Telecommunications companies said they would cut 26,464 in April, pushing it ahead of the auto industry as the sector with the highest number of planned job cuts this year. Computer companies said they would 18,498 jobs, while financial firms said they planned to cut 16,515 jobs.

So far this year telecommunication companies have announced 91,799 job cuts, while automakers have said they planned to lay off 81,903 workers.

Computer companies have announced 53,774 job cuts, while electronics firms have said they would lay off 46,668 employees and retailers have announced 44,673 job cuts.>>