Nokia Siemens Networks to lay off up to 5,700 Nokia Siemens Networks to lay
off up to 5,700 workers to cut costs



HELSINKI (AP) -- Nokia Siemens Networks said Tuesday it will lay off up to
5,700 workers globally as part of a move to cut annual costs by euro500
million ($740 million).
  The mobile network equipment maker -- a joint venture between Finland's
Nokia Corp. and Siemens AG of Germany -- said it will reduce its five
business units to three by January, and strengthen its business through
partnerships and acquisitions.

The savings program could include cutting 7 to 9 percent of its current
global work force of some 64,000 employees, the mobile network equipment
maker said.

The company has been hard hit by waning demand in the recession and cited
"changes in the global economy and competitive environment" for the cost
cuts. It said it will also reduce overheads, expand its portfolio and
consider acquisitions "where assets would add scale to existing product
areas or customer relationships."

"As our customers make purchasing decisions, they want a partner who engages
in issues well beyond a traditional discussion of technology," said Rajeev
Suri, the new chief executive officer of Nokia Siemens Networks.

The company, formed in April 2007 by Nokia, the world's top mobile phone
maker, and industrial conglomerate Siemens, saw a 21 percent drop in sales
in the third quarter to euro2.8 billion, with an operating loss deepening to
euro1.1 billion, from euro1 million a year earlier.

Last month, Nokia upgraded estimates for the global network infrastructure
market, predicting a 5 percent fall in euro terms in 2009, but warned that
it expects Nokia Siemens' loss in market share to be bigger than its
previous forecast of a "moderate decline."

Nokia Siemens' main rivals in the mobile infrastructure industry are global
market leader L.M. Ericsson of Sweden and French-American company
Alcatel-Lucent.

Nokia's share price fell was almost unchanged at euro8.66 ($12.79) in
afternoon trading in Helsinki. In Frankfurt, Siemens stock was down more
than 1 percent at euro60.78 ($89.78).

In October, Nokia CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo said the company's networks
operations should become "a significant part, as it should be, of the
profitability of Nokia, and Siemens too," adding that was "room for new
thinking here."
Nokia Siemens Networks, based in Espoo just outside Helsinki, is one of the
world's biggest makers of wireless networks. It is a 50-50 joint venture of
Nokia and Siemens.

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