Alcatel to Cut 10,000 Jobs; Sees EU5 Bln 2001 Loss (Update2) By Molly Schuetz
Paris, Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Alcatel SA, Europe's fourth- largest phone-equipment maker, will eliminate 10,000 jobs in Europe and forecast a record 5 billion-euro ($4.5 billion) loss this year as demand for network gear slumps.
``We don't see a rebound for the first half of 2002,'' said Jean-Pierre Halbron, Alcatel's chief financial officer, on a conference call with journalists. ``Beyond that, we don't see anything.''
Alcatel, which in May tried to buy Lucent Technologies Inc., is now shedding a total of 33,000 jobs, or almost a third of its workers. The Paris-based company had a loss of 558 million euros, or 49 cents a share, in the third quarter.
Chief Executive Officer Serge Tchuruk plans to slash costs by a fifth so the company can break even on quarterly sales of less than 5 billion euros, he said at a press conference. Alcatel's sales dropped 18 percent in the third quarter to 5.6 billion euros as phone companies reined in spending.
Alcatel's shares rose as much as 91 cents, or 5.8 percent, to 16.61 euros, as investors applauded the cost-cutting measures. Before today the stock had fallen 74 percent this year, making it the worst performer on the Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50 Index. The company has a market value of 19.9 billion euros.
`Right Direction'
``Alcatel is heading in the right direction,'' said Jacques- Antoine Bretteil, who manages $700 million at International Capital Gestion in Paris, including Alcatel shares. The cost reductions ``correspond to what's needed,'' he said.
The additional job cuts will cost 1.2 billion euros this year, leading to a fourth-quarter operating loss ``similar'' to the 215 million-euro loss in the third, Tchuruk said. For 2001, the company expects an operating loss of between 100 million and 200 million euros, he said.
Fourth-quarter sales will probably rise more than 10 percent from the third, while full-year sales will be ``a few percent'' below last year's record level, the company said.
The phone-equipment market expanded in the late 1990s as investors speculated that new companies would successfully challenge the former national phone monopolies.
Since then, Alcatel and rivals such as Lucent and Ericsson AB have seen orders dwindle as the economy cooled and companies including France Telecom focused on reducing debt. Plunging stock prices and mounting debt made it harder for smaller companies to raise money to expand networks.
Rush to Cut
That's led to widening losses at equipment makers and a rush to cut costs. Lucent is slashing 49,500 jobs, Motorola Inc. 39,000, Ericsson 22,000 and Nortel Networks Corp. more than half the 94,500 workers it had at the start of the year.
The U.S. telecommunications market has dropped 30 percent this year, Tchuruk said, with U.S. phone companies cutting capital expenditures by 15 percent to 20 percent.
The third-quarter loss reported today compares with profit of 297 million euros, or 25 cents a share, in the year-earlier period. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News had forecast a loss of 283 million euros.
An annual loss of 5 billion euros would be the biggest ever for Alcatel, exceeding its 3.9 billion-euro loss in 1995.
Tchuruk said he expects positive cash flow of ``several hundred million euros'' in the fourth quarter. He plans to reduce the company's debt to 4 billion euros by the end of the year from 5.5 billion euros now.
The company may risk another cut in its credit rating because of its ``weak profitability and cash flow generation,'' Louis Landeman, an analyst at Bear Stearns, wrote in a note to clients.
Moody's Investors Service lowered the company's senior debt rating two notches to ``Baa1'' last month. Standard & Poor's rates Alcatel ``BBB+.'' Both have a negative outlook on the company.
Worsening Outlook
The company's operating loss compared with an operating profit of 579 million euros in the year-ago period.
The picture was different a year ago, when Tchuruk reported a tripling in third-quarter profit and forecast sales growth of ``at least'' 25 percent for 2001.
By September, Tchuruk warned the impact of the slowdown in the U.S. economy in the second quarter was ``stronger'' than anticipated. ``The outlook on the overall market is very weak at best. We don't expect a turnaround this year,'' he said then.
Rivals are also pessimistic. Ericsson, the biggest maker of wireless networks, projected no improvement in that market through 2002. The Swedish company, headed for its first annual loss in more than half a century, on Friday named a new chairman, Michael Treschow. |