Nokia Oyj will slash 1,700 jobs globally over the coming few months because of falling demand, the worlds top cellphone maker said on Tuesday. Nokia said in January it aimed to cut annual costs at its key handset unit alone by more than 700 million euros ($909.3 million) to counter the plunging demand.
Nokia said on Tuesday that, in addition to its handset unit, it would also cut jobs in its marketing unit, corporate development office and global support functions. Up to 700 jobs would be cut in Finland. The overall cellphone market is expected to contract by about 10 percent this year, hurt as consumers rein in spending and handset sellers try to clear out unsold phones.
"The first quarter will be weak, then it will improve a little," said Nordea analyst Martti Larjo. "Some component suppliers have signalled slight improvement." Nokia is expected to report January-March earnings per share (EPS) falling to 0.08 euros, the weakest level since the third quarter of 2001, when all vendors in total sold just 94 million phones - less than Nokia alone is seen selling this quarter. Nokia said it was continuing to seek savings in operational expenses, looking at all areas and activities. Earlier on Tuesday, Goldman Sachs cut Nokia EPS forecasts for 2009 and 2010 due to weaker demand, a lower smartphone market share and greater margin impact from a strong yen.
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