Seagate to cut 2,000 Singapore jobs, sees charges

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Computer hard disk maker Seagate Technology said it
will lay off 2,000 workers in Singapore, or more than 4 percent of its
global workforce, as it closes manufacturing facilities in the city-state in
a bid to cut costs by $40 million a year.

The move, which Seagate said would result in restructuring charges of $80
million, follows a slide in electronics exports from Singapore this year due
to weaker consumer demand in the economic downturn.

"We are moving our hard disk operation at Ang Mo Kio (in Singapore) to other
Seagate sites in other countries," company spokeswoman Lotus Tan told
Reuters but did not provide further details.

She said Seagate employed a total of 8,000 workers in Singapore and would
keep Seagate's Asia headquarters, media operation as well as a product
development and design center there. According to Seagate's website it has
about 45,000 employees around the world.

Seagate said the Ang Mo Kio hard drive factory would be closed by the end of
2010 but would not meaningfully change its production capacity as it will
move manufacturing to other locations, which include Thailand, China and
Malaysia.

Seagate said in a filing with U.S. regulators that total restructuring
charges of approximately $80 million would include about $60 million for
severance payments and about $10 million for the relocation of manufacturing
equipment.

It plans to record the severance charges of up to $60 million in the current
quarter, with the remainder of the charges to be incurred throughout the
calendar year of 2010. Seagate's fiscal year 2009 ended on July 3.

The company expects the move to generate annual savings of $40 million when
the closure is completed.

Singapore's overall unemployment rate stood at 3.3 percent in the second
quarter but the number of people employed in Singapore fell by 12,400 in
April-June, twice as much as in the first quarter.

Tuesday's announcement came after Seagate already said in May it had
initiated a restructuring plan that included a reduction of about 1,100
employees or 2.5 percent of the company's global workforce. In July, Seagate
raised its forecast for margins and overall industry sales in the current
quarter, citing a larger-than-expected increase in corporate demand for
computers.
http://in.biz.yahoo.com/090804/137/batzsh.html

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