Friday, February 27, 2009

Layoffs: Medtronic

http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/djf500/200902261058DOWJONESDJONLINE000959_FORTUNE5.htm
Medtronic Freezing Pay, Eying Layoffs Amid Econ Pressure
February 26, 2009: 10:58 AM ET

Medical-devices giant Medtronic Inc. (MDT) plans to freeze its workers' base salary and trim compensation for its executive team in an effort to control costs while it faces economic and market pressures.

The Minneapolis-based company is also considering layoffs, although no specific decisions about how many employees could be cut, or from which areas, have been made, spokesman Steve Cragle said Thursday. Reductions would start in the 2010 fiscal year that begins May 1.

Chief Executive William A. Hawkins "discussed the need for some restructuring or downsizing of the workforce" during a meeting with workers earlier this week, Cragle said. Medtronic has about 39,000 workers overall.

The company also discussed internal moves designed to control costs, such as the salary freeze that will start in the new fiscal year and plans for a 5% executive pay cut.

The company pegged the moves to the turbulent global economic environment, which is expected to pressure certain parts of its business. Medtronic has also dealt with tough competition and eroding market share in some of its key businesses, including the market for implantable cardioverter defibrillators, or ICDs.

Hawkins in January ratcheted back Medtronic's long-term sales growth outlook to a 5% to 8% range, but the company continues to target earnings growth in a double-digit range, indicating the need to control costs.

Because ICDs protect patients at risk for sudden cardiac death, they aren't viewed as vulnerable to an economic slump. But Hawkins noted during Medtronic's recent quarterly earnings call that other parts of the company are, including products that fix spinal problems, along with products in Medtronic's diabetes and surgical technologies businesses.

"There is a lot of uncertainty in the global economy right now and Medtronic is not immune to that," spokesman Cragle said.

He noted Medtronic feels it had a solid fiscal third quarter, in which the company showed some signs of stability in key markets where it has struggled with competitive pressure.

"Despite that performance, we still see a lot of uncertainty ahead," Cragle said.

Medtronic announced plans in May last year to trim about 1,100 jobs as it realigned the workforce, with cuts targeting businesses where growth had slowed or where the company saw a chance to improve its operating leverage. The cuts were set to take place throughout the current fiscal year, and were expected at that time to be offset to an unspecified degree with hiring in faster-growing businesses.

Medtronic recently traded down six cents to $33.80.
-By Jon Kamp, Dow Jones Newswires; 617-654-6728; jon.kamp@dowjones.com (END) Dow Jones Newswires
02-26-09 1058ET
Copyright (c) 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

No comments:

Post a Comment