SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Siemens -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Eric L who wrote (321)2/17/2006 1:24:12 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 356
 
Eric for the first time I''m implementing for Nokia. Siemens, I''ve heard, wanted to do a Infineon with Telecoms. I.e., set it up as a different entity. As they did did with the microchip division. It is a good idea. And I think that''s the way they'd do.

I think they already exhausted the idea of for instance: sell mobile to MOT and get Networks from MOT> That becaise they already sold mobile to BengQ.



To: Eric L who wrote (321)2/17/2006 1:26:44 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 356
 
"not the loss-making fixed-line networks business." This bit here is a drag on Siemens. They could not change and evolve. Nature kills what doesn''t evolve.

Solution: Closed down fixed. Sell to someone that would support installed base. Nokia gulps mobile.



To: Eric L who wrote (321)3/24/2006 5:32:56 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 356
 
Siemens’ Management Shakeup. Siemens has announced its first major shakeup since Klaus Kleinfeld took over as chief executive of the German electronics giant last year, replacing its chief financial officer, chief technology officer, and president of the company’s communications group.
Siemens’ Management Shakeup.

German electronics giant appoints new CFO, CTO, and other executives.
March 23, 2006

Siemens has announced its first major shakeup since Klaus Kleinfeld took over as chief executive of the German electronics giant last year, replacing its chief financial officer, chief technology officer, and president of the company’s communications group.

The Munich-based company, which also has engineering and mobile phone businesses, said Wednesday it also planned to propose the new board members at a meeting of its supervisory board on April 26. At the meeting, the board plans to also approve the executive changes.

Starting May 1, Joe Kaeser will succeed Heinz-Joachim Neub?rger, 53, as CFO. Mr. Neub?rger had been with Siemens since 1989 and took over as CFO in 1998. His contract expires on September 30, and won’t be extended.

At his suggestion, his successor, Mr. Kaeser, will be appointed earlier, since the company needs to make various financial decisions, such as converting its accounting system to the international IFRS standard.

Mr. Neuberger plans to make himself available as a financial advisor, especially to help with the company’s pension plans.

Mr. Kaeser, 48, is currently chief strategy officer with Siemens and has been with Siemens since 1980. He took over the chief strategy officer job in October 2004 after starting out in business administration. He will be succeeded by Horst J. Kayser, 45, chief executive of Siemens in South Korea.

The management changes are the first major shakeup since Mr. Kleinfeld, 48, took over as CEO last year. He has set high profit margin targets for the company’s 11 divisions to reach by next April and plans to change the company’s technology and communications units.

However, some analysts don’t think the CFO shakeup will produce changes soon enough.

A research note by Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein quoted by The Wall Street Journal, said, “We’d have preferred to see an external appointment to help stimulate change at Siemens. What we’ll probably see is more of the same within Siemens, with change likely to remain slow.”

Shares of Siemens fell $1.25 to $90.40 in recent trading.

Tech and Strategy Changes Possible

As chief technology officer, Siemens is naming Hermann Requardt, 51, to succeed Claus Weyrich, 62. Mr. Weyrich’s contract was also set to expire on September, and like Mr. Neub?rger, he said he did not wish the contract to be extended.

Mr. Weyrich has been with Siemens since 1969 and helped drive the internationalization of the company’s R&D network, setting up facilities in Germany, the United States, the United Kingdom, China, India, and Russia.


His successor, Mr. Requardt, joined Siemens in 1984 after a stint at the German Aerospace Research Institute. He headed R&D on various medical-imaging projects for the company.

His successor as member of the group board of medical solutions will be Siegfried Russwurm, 42, who now runs the motion controls division at Siemens Automation and Drives.

Another new appointee to the medical group board is Thomas Miller, 48, who is now president of the health services division of Siemens Medical Solutions USA.

As group president of communications, Siemens appointed Eduardo Montes Pérez, who joined the company in Spain in 1975 and has managed the company’s group in Spain since 1999. He is succeeding Thomas Ganswindt, who had been appointed for an interim period.

In other Siemens news, on Thursday, two former employees of the company’s power generation branch were charged with offering $7.3 million in bribes to procure contracts from Italian gas companies.



To: Eric L who wrote (321)6/2/2006 3:43:20 PM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 356
 
Taiwan-based parent, Benq Corp., an internationally recognized brand name. Still, with a market share of 3.5 percent in the first quarter, according to researcher Gartner Inc., Benq lags behind Nokia Oyj, Motorola and Samsung Electronics Co.

Benq Mobile Has Cut More Than 250 Mln Euros in Costs (Update1)
June 2 (Bloomberg) -- Benq Corp., which took over Siemens AG's unprofitable mobile-phone unit last year, is more than halfway through a cost-cut program at the enlarged division, on schedule to return the unit to profitability by the fourth quarter, Benq Mobile Chief Executive Officer Clemens Joos said.

``We've always said we want to wring 500 million euros ($640 million) from the cost base and I would say we've achieved more than half of that,'' Joos said in an interview during a conference in Bonn yesterday. ``It's a challenging target.''

Joos shut a handset site in Ulm, south Germany, and last month agreed to sell a Danish center to Motorola Inc. to cut costs and consolidate research and development in two plants in the cities of Munich and Kamp-Lintfort. Benq Mobile has released 14 handsets this year and will debut a similar number in the second half of the year, Joos said.

The takeover of Siemens's business vaulted Benq from near obscurity to the No. 6 ranking on the global cell-phone market and handed the Taipei, Taiwan-based parent, Benq Corp., an internationally recognized brand name. Still, with a market share of 3.5 percent in the first quarter, according to researcher Gartner Inc., Benq lags behind Nokia Oyj, Motorola and Samsung Electronics Co.

Shares Fell

Shares in Benq fell 0.2 percent to NT$23.85 as of 10:48 a.m. in Taipei. The stock has fallen 25 percent this year, compared with a 5.5 percent gain in the island's benchmark Taiex Index.

``Benq's costs saving is pretty in line with its own guidance,'' said Andrew Lin, a Taipei-based analyst with KGI Securities Co. ``Market acceptance of its new models, which mostly will be rolled out in second half, will be the key variable for the company to return to profit.''

Benq said April 24 it shipped 7 million mobile phones in the first quarter and expected that figure to rise by more than 30 percent in the second quarter.

Nokia and Motorola, which together control more than half of the global handset market by shipments, are increasingly relying on sales of lower-priced models in China and India as demand growth in those countries outpaces Europe and America.

Jorma Ollila, chief executive of market leader Nokia, told CNBC in an April 20 interview that average selling prices are ``likely to go down a bit for the industry this year'' because of the rising share of phone sales in emerging markets. The average price of a Nokia handset has dropped more than a fifth in the past two years.

Average Prices

In contrast, Benq, whose average prices have lagged behind rivals, is seeking to narrow the gap by focusing on more expensive models that feature music players and high-resolution cameras.

``Nokia and Motorola are adding many first-time users,'' Joos said. ``We don't try to compete on scale.''

Benq phones' average selling price, which was close to 80 euros in the first quarter, will rise by more than 10 percent in the current quarter, Joos said, reiterating an April forecast. Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications Ltd., which ranks one notch above Benq by market share, reported a first-quarter average selling price of 150 euros.

Benq Corp., which also makes laptop computers, DVD recorders and digital projectors, posted a first-quarter net loss of NT$4.99 billion ($155 million) because of costs related to the purchase of the phone unit from Siemens, Germany's largest engineering company. The enlarged handset division accounted for 35 percent of Benq's sales in the period. Benq Mobile will be profitable by the end of this year, Joos said.

Advertising spending for Benq Mobile will increase this year and includes sponsoring Spanish soccer club Real Madrid from next season through 2010, gaining an advertising platform on jerseys of players including Brazil's Ronaldo and David Beckham.


To contact the reporter on this story:
Kenneth Wong in Bonn at kwong11@bloomberg.net.



To: Eric L who wrote (321)6/19/2006 7:29:29 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 356
 
FIVE SUBMIT BIDS FOR BSNL TENDER (Motorola, Siemens, Nokia, Ericsson and ZTE)

(India Business Insight Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge) Five companies have submitted bids for the $4.8-billion tender of Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd (BSNL) to add 45.5 million GSM lines. Motorola, Siemens, Nokia, Ericsson and ZTE have participated in the bidding process.

tmcnet.com

After a merge it becomes: Motorola, Sinok, Ericsson, ZTE



To: Eric L who wrote (321)8/18/2006 7:27:45 PM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 356
 
Siemens receives UMTS orders from Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia
Siemens' Communications division (Com) has received two orders for setting up high-speed mobile data networks, from Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia respectively. For Telephone Systems International Ltd. (TSI) Siemens Com is to set up a UMTS network in Kabul to be used by Afghan Wireless Communication Company (AWCC). TSI, whose official headquarters are in New York and which was founded by the Kabul-born Ehsan Bayat, holds an 80 percent stake in AWCC. The other 20 percent of shares belong to the Afghan Ministry of Communications. Besides 3G technology Siemens is to supply AWCC with 2G equipment for about 50 towns and cities in Afghanistan. In Afghanistan some 1.5 million people currently avail themselves of mobile telephone services, which amounts to a market penetration of about four percent.

In Saudi Arabia Siemens Communications will upgrade the mobile radio network of Saudi Telecom in the north of the country with UMTS technology. "Siemens built our GSM network and has impressed us in recent years with its technology and the way it works," Dr. Ziad Al-Otaibi, Vice President of Saudi Telecom, explained. "We will continue to expand W-CDMA coverage in the country in the future, both geographically and in terms of subscriber capacity," he added. Saudi Telecom was the first commercial GSM mobile operator in Saudi Arabia. Siemens Com was neither prepared to make available information on the financial scope of the project agreed with the company from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, nor to release financial details of the deal with TSI, the company that operates in the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan. (Robert W. Smith) / (jk/c't)