Latest Entries »

Tamfelt Group has ended the joint consultations according to the Act on Co-operation within Undertakings concerning all personnel groups at the Group’s Tampere plant.

In the negotiation proposal given in December 2008, the estimated number for personnel reduction was 160. In the negotiations, the final figure was determined at 97. 25 of those to be laid off are office staff and 72 shop floor workers. 43 of these will enter a retirement process. In addition, employees at the Tampere plant will be laid off temporarily for 3-6 weeks in the average. The target is to time the temporary lay-offs stepwise. The total amount of the temporary lay-offs will be evaluated over the year according to the demand situation. In the negotiations it was also concluded that fixed-time employments will not be continued after they expire. At the moment, the Tampere plant employs a total of 745 permanent employees. (Stock exchange release, during trade)

In addition to 97 fired personnel, a total of 50 fixed-time employments are not renewed. Reduction accounts for roughly 20% of workers at Tampere. Thus the result is inline with company’s initial target (reduction of 160 employees).

As the trend of paper demand is still downward, the planned temporary layoffs may have to be extend also in H2’09.

*Neutral/Negative news for Tamfelt

Growth pattern sustained once again. Voith prepares itself for harder times ahead.

Heidenheim/Stuttgart. In fiscal 2007/2008 (the year to September 30, 2008), Voith once again successfully maintained the pattern of growth witnessed in the preceding years. The Group’s order intake rose 18.7% to €6.1 billion (previous year: €5.1 billion). Sales were up 17.8% to €4.9 billion (previous year: €4.2 billion) – the highest level in the history of the company.

Double-digit sales growth at all four Group Divisions contributed to robust business performance in fiscal 2007/2008. At the same time, Voith further expanded its strong position in the world’s key growth regions. Today, the Group generates around 30% of its product and system sales in the forward-looking markets of Asia. In the years ahead, we aim to become even more strongly established in China and India.

Some of the profits realized on ordinary business in fiscal 2007/2008 were invested to tap new lines of business in the transportation sector (locomotives and turbochargers) and in environmental technology (anaerobic reactors and ocean energy), for instance. The Group spent a total of around €400 million on investments and acquisitions in the period under review, while a further €250 million was channeled into research and development. Voith has thus laid a firm foundation for the future. The result was net income of €144 million in fiscal 2007/2008. In the previous year, net income (including a one-time item in the amount of €26 million) totaled €179 million.

Hubert Lienhard, Voith’s President and Chief Executive Officer, is upbeat about the fiscal year just ended: “2007/2008 was a good year for Voith. We have a footprint in all significant markets and business regions throughout the world. Our products provide answers to the pivotal questions of the 21st century, addressing issues such as the efficient use of energy and resources and the need for clean, renewable sources of energy. Our balance sheet is healthy and adequate capital resources are in place. All of which gives us room to maneuver in the difficult times that lie ahead.”

Lienhard expects business to flatten noticeably in the coming months. “A recession of this magnitude is naturally also going to affect Voith,” the Voith boss says. “In the business lines that are affected, we are therefore responding swiftly and resolutely to market requirements, adjusting our processes and capacity as and when necessary. We are already taking action that will leave us stable and healthy when the next growth phase begins.”
In the first three months of fiscal 2008/2009, the impact of the economic crisis varied throughout the Group. Both new orders and sales remained stable at Voith Siemens Hydro, Voith Turbo and Voith Industrial Services – the Group Divisions that service the markets for oil, gas, energy and public transport. Voith is nevertheless confident that the future holds strong business potential in these markets. The impact of the dramatic slump in the truck and automotive market on Voith Turbo and Voith Industrial Services is foreseeable and, indeed, already tangible.

Voith Paper has been hardest hit, however. Around the globe, business in the paper industry is slack. New plant business in particular has collapsed. Thanks to the Group’s singularly broad portfolio, it was nevertheless possible to cushion the impact of the economic crisis on the Group as a whole in the first quarter of fiscal 2008/2009.

Voith sets new standards in the paper, energy, mobility and service markets. Founded in 1867, it has grown to become one of the largest family-owned corporate groups in Europe, employing 43,000 people, posting annual sales of €4.9 billion and operating more than 270 facilities around the globe.

Jan 26, 2009 – The truck-production facilities of German MAN AG (FSE:MAN) will remain idle for 70 days in the first half of 2009, a spokesman for MAN’s truck division said on Monday.

There are no production plans for the second half of the year but further stoppages are possible if the negative economic conditions persist.

Of the 70 days with no production, 42 will be offset with short-time work, which will affect 9,400 workers in the three German plants of MAN.

MAN is preparing for an economic downturn of between two and two and a half years. The company expects a drop of around one-third in commercial-vehicle revenue in the current year and will therefore reduce production costs by almost one-third. Lay-offs have not been planned for now.

Caterpillar Inc.’s fourth-quarter net income fell 32% on a steep drop in demand at year-end, as the global economic downturn worsened and some customers cancelled orders.

The heavy-machinery maker projected 2009 earnings well below analysts’ estimates and said it would cut 20,000 jobs, or about 18% of its work force, to reflect the lower demand.

[Caterpillar]

Caterpillar is encouraging dealers to cut back on inventories, which has led to order cancellations.

The company’s shares were down 11% to $31.71 in premarket trading, amid the lower-than-expected estimates.

Caterpillar said it expects 2009 earnings of $2.50 a share on revenue of $36 billion to $46 billion. Analysts were expecting earnings of $4.27 a share on revenue of $47.27 billion.

Chief Executive Jim Owens said the company saw booming demand in the first three quarters, but “then we were whipsawed in the fourth quarter as key industries were hit by a rapidly deteriorating global economy and plunging commodity prices.” View full article »

23.12.2008
Etteplanissa 4.11.2008 käynnistyneet yhteistoiminta-neuvottelut päättyneet
Etteplanin Paperi ja Sellu yksikön Järvenpään, Kotkan, Tampereen, Vaajakosken, Valkeakosken toimipisteitä ja Tuotantolinjat ja Prosessilaitokset yksikön Hollolan, Joensuun, Varkauden, Mikkelin ja Savonlinnan toimipisteitä sekä Etteplan Technical Information Oy:n yksiköitä koskevat yt-neuvottelut ovat päättyneet.

Henkilöstön vähennykset toteutetaan vaiheittain työtilanteiden mukaan. Päättyneiden neuvottelujen osalta lomautukset koskevat ensimmäisessa vaiheessa yhteensä 55 henkilöä. Lomautukset alkavat tammikuun aikana 2009 ja lomautukset jatkuvat toistaiseksi. Yhteensä 16 henkilön työsuhde päättyy. Osalle lomautettavista työntekijöistä on löytynyt töitä oman toimipaikan ulkopuolella muualla yhtiössä.

Lähde: Suomi24.fi

Jan. 26 (Bloomberg) — Volvo AB has outstanding loans of 27.1 billion kronor ($3.3 billion) that are coming due this year, Dagens Nyheter reported, citing its own calculations.

Ten large Swedish companies have bank loans from institutions outside the Nordic region for a total of 1.5 trillion kronor that are coming due in 2009, the newspaper said. If big companies have to rely on extended credit lines for financing, there will be less credit for smaller firms, putting them at risk of bankruptcy, DN reported.

Volvo is the world’s second-largest truckmaker.

Jan. 23 (Bloomberg) — The slump in European heavy-truck sales slowed last month, with deliveries falling 15 percent, about half the drop in November, as Italy and the U.K. defied the economic recession and tighter credit.

Manufacturers sold 16,674 trucks weighing 16 metric tons or more in December, compared with 19,708 a year earlier, the Brussels-based European Automobile Manufacturers Association said in a statement today. Full-year deliveries fell 2.2 percent to 313,765 vehicles. View full article »

Jan. 23 (Bloomberg) — Komatsu Ltd., the world’s second- biggest maker of earthmoving equipment, cut its profit forecast 42 percent, citing slowing demand from emerging markets.

Net income will probably be 110 billion yen ($1.2 billion) in the year ending March 31, compared with its Oct. 29 outlook of 190 billion yen, the Tokyo-based company said in a statement today. That’s a 47 percent drop from last year’s results.

View full article »

Jan. 23 (Bloomberg) — Caterpillar Inc., the world’s largest maker of construction equipment, may say profit fell again as sales slowed, a pattern that might extend into 2009 even if President Barack Obama’s $825 billion stimulus package is approved.

Caterpillar, the Peoria, Illinois-based builder of iconic mustard-hued earthmovers and excavators, may say Jan. 26 that fourth-quarter net income fell 18 percent to $804.3 million, the average estimate of seven analysts polled by Bloomberg. Sales probably rose 3.5 percent to $12.56 billion, the slowest growth rate in six years.

Caterpillar, Terex Corp., Joy Global Inc. and Deere & Co., which span the mining and agricultural machine industries, are among the major heavy-equipment makers whose profit and sales estimates have been cut by Bloomberg analysts from highs as recent as last fall. Those companies report earnings during the next two months.

“2009 is shaping up to be buck-naked ugly,” Sterne Agee & Leach Inc.’s Nicholas Heymann said in a Jan. 20 note to clients. Heymann, who has already projected that earnings for industrial companies would fall on average 20 percent to 30 percent this year, now expects earnings to fall as much as 40 percent. He said he might slash still further.

Results for heavy equipment makers may come under increasing pressure if Obama’s infrastructure package, which includes $44 billion for roads, bridges, rail and transport projects, isn’t approved before the President’s Day recess next month, said Heymann, a New York-based analyst who heads Sterne Agee’s infrastructure research.

View full article »

* Economic crisis to pressure Sonae Industria 2009 sales

* Company says not under financial strain, credit lines open

* Eyeing consolidation opportunities in South America

LISBON, 22 Jan (Reuters) – Portugal’s Sonae Industria, the world’s second largest wood panel maker, may close factories and sell assets in response to weakening demand during the global crisis, CEO Carlos Bianchi de Aguiar said.

Sonae Industria has 34 factories in nine countries and its business depends on the construction, furniture and decoration sectors, all of which are among the hardest hit by the economic downturn.

The company earlier this month announced downsizing and production line cuts at factories in Portugal and Ireland. “The situation we are in right now has no precedents, it is all open,” de Aguiar said when questioned about possible factory closures, layoffs and asset sales.

On Tuesday, Sonae Industria’s German peer Pleifderer said it wants to have a key role in any consolidation of the sector and has a 600 million euro credit line to do so and may conduct a capital hike if required.

In a written interview with Reuters, de Aguiar said the company’s strategy “has to be sufficiently flexible and open to all possibilities”.

Sonae Industria’s swing to a 27 million euro loss in the first nine months of 2008 from a 63 million euro profit a year earlier was caused not only by a 12 percent drop in sales, but also by higher prices of raw materials.

De Aguiar said, however, that the company is not under financial pressure as it has credit lines ready to be used, but he did not provide any figures for these.

He added that Sonae Industria is still eyeing M&A opportunities in South America after talks for a merger of its Brazilian operations with Chile’s Masisa fell through last year. (Reporting by Elisabete Tavares; Writing by Shrikesh Laxmidas; Editing by Axel Bugge and Jon Loades-Carter)

via INTERVIEW-Sonae Industria may close factories, sell assets By Reuters.