ECON - Nortel, 20,000 more, 3rd quarter loss is $3.6 BILLION

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This may just shut down the RTP facility.

Tuesday, 2 October, 2001, 21:41 GMT 22:41 UK Nortel axes 20,000 more jobs The troubled Canadian telecoms and communications equipment maker Nortel Networks has announced that it will cut 20,000 more jobs, warned of billion-dollar losses and named a new chief executive.

It is the latest of several rounds of sweeping job cuts at Nortel this year. 20,000 workers will have to go, on top of 30,000 people sacked earlier.

Nortel went into the year 2001 employing 95,000 people. There is some hope for about 10,000 workers, their divisions may be sold off to rivals, which could secure their jobs.

Leading the company into an uncertain future will be its chief financial officer, Frank Dunn. He will replace John Roth, who had announced his intention to resign in April.

Nortel also warned that it would post a third-quarter loss of about $3.6bn.

And in a sign of how bad things are, Nortel said the "visibility" for the fourth quarter was so bad that it could not make any further earning forecasts.

In afterhours trading, Nortel shares dropped more than 8%.

Industry weakness

Not too long ago, Nortel was considered one of the top names in the hi-tech industry, specialising in building components and the infrastructure for the data networks of the internet economy.

But the sharp slowdown in the technology sector worldwide has hit Nortel hard. Other victims in the sector are well-known names like Lucent in the US and British firm Marconi.

Nortel hopes that the sweeping job cuts will allow it to cut costs and regain some profitability, at least in the medium-term.

Sell-off - and hopes for a turnaround

Sales of subsidiaries are another option to cut losses, and Nortel has already announced the sale of its Clarify subsidiary for about $200m in cash. Nortel had bought the customer relations management company just a year ago, for $2.1bn in stock.

Outgoing chief executive John Roth said while the "magnitude of the market adjustment from previous levels of expenditures has been challenging, we believe we are beginning to see some early signs that the expected capital spending by service providers is approaching sustainable levels".

This assumes that some telecoms and internet firms are seeing the first signs of a turnaround.

AOL Time Warner is one of these companies, with a huge interest in broadband internet services. Its boss, Steve Case, told a conference in New York that he could not "predict that it is an absolute bottom, but it feels like it will be up from here".

-- Anonymous, October 02, 2001


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