July 25, 2010 Industries Find Surging Profits in Deeper Cuts By NELSON
D. SCHWARTZ New York Times

By most measures, Harley-Davidson has been having a rough ride.

Motorcycle sales are falling in 2010, as they have for each of the
last three years. The company does not expect a turnaround anytime
soon.

But despite that drought, Harley’s profits are rising — soaring, in
fact. Last week, Harley reported a $71 million profit in the second
quarter, more than triple what it earned a year ago.

This seeming contradiction — falling sales and rising profits — is one
reason the mood on Wall Street is so much more buoyant than in
households, where pessimism runs deep and joblessness shows few signs
of easing.

Many companies are focusing on cost-cutting to keep profits growing,
but the benefits are mostly going to shareholders instead of the
broader economy, as management conserves cash rather than bolstering
hiring and production. Harley, for example, has announced plans to cut
1,400 to 1,600 more jobs by the end of next year. That is on top of
2,000 job cuts last year — more than a fifth of its work force.

As companies this month report earnings for the second quarter, news
of healthy profits has helped the stock market — the Standard & Poor’s
500-stock index is up 7 percent for July — but the source of those
gains raises deep questions about the sustainability of the growth, as
well as the fate of more than 14 million unemployed workers hoping to
rejoin the work force as the economy recovers.

“Because of high unemployment, management is using its leverage to get
more hours out of workers,” said Robert C. Pozen, a senior lecturer at
Harvard Business School and the former president of Fidelity
Investments. “What’s worrisome is that American business has gotten
used to being a lot leaner, and it could take a while before they
start hiring again.”

And some of those businesses, including Harley-Davidson, are preparing
for a future where they can prosper even if sales do not recover.
Harley’s goal is to permanently be in a position to generate strong
profits on a lower revenue base.

In some ways, the ability to raise profits in the face of declining
sales is a triumph of productivity that makes the United States more
globally competitive. The problem is that companies are not investing
those earnings, instead letting cash pile up to levels not reached in
nearly half a century.

“As long as corporations are reinvesting, the economy can grow,” said
Ethan Harris, chief economist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. “But
if they’re taking those profits and saving them, rather than buying
new equipment, it hurts overall growth. The longer this goes on, the
more you worry about income being diverted to a sector that’s not
spending.”

“There’s no question that there is an income shift going on in the
economy,” Mr. Harris added. “Companies are squeezing their labor costs
to build profits.”

The trend is hardly limited to Harley. Giants like General Electric
and JPMorgan Chase, as well as smaller companies like Hasbro, the
toymaker, all improved their bottom lines despite slowing sales in the
second quarter. Among the S.& P. 500 companies that have reported
second-quarter results, more than one in 10 had higher profits on
lower sales, nearly twice the number in a typical quarter before the
recession, according to Thomson Reuters.

“Whole industries are operating at new levels of profitability,” said
David J. Kostin, chief United States equity strategist at Goldman
Sachs. “In the downturn, companies managed to maintain higher profit
margins than ever before.”

Profit margins — the percentage of revenue left over after expenses —
crumble in most recessions, as overall sales fall but fixed costs like
infrastructure, commodities and rent remain the same. In 2002, during
the recession that followed the bursting of the technology bubble in
addition to the Sept. 11 attacks, margins sank to 4.7 percent.
Although the most recent downturn was far more severe, profit margins
bottomed out at 5.9 percent in 2009 and quickly rebounded. By next
year, analysts expect margins to hit 8.9 percent, a record high.

The difference this time is that companies wrung more savings out of
their work forces, said Neal Soss, chief economist for Credit Suisse
in New York. In fact, while wages and salaries have barely budged from
recession lows, profits have staged a vigorous recovery, jumping 40
percent between late 2008 and the first quarter of 2010.

Harley-Davidson’s profit gain last quarter was helped by a turnaround
in its financing unit, as well as more efficient production, but the
company is still cutting.

Harley has warned union employees at its Milwaukee factory that it
would move production elsewhere in the United States if they did not
agree to more flexible work rules and tens of millions in cost-saving
measures.

Even if sales do improve, a surge in hiring is unlikely.

“The last thing we’re worried about is when are we going to have to
add more capacity, because what we’re really doing is reconfiguring
our entire operational system for greater flexibility,” Keith Wandell,
the company’s chief executive, said on a conference call with analysts
last week.

Harley’s evolution is part of longer-term shift in American
manufacturing, said Rod Lache, an analyst with Deutsche Bank.

At Ford, revenue in its North American operations is down by $20
billion since 2005, but instead of a loss like it had that year, the
unit is expected to earn more than $5 billion in 2010. In large part,
that is because Ford has shrunk its North American work force by
nearly 50 percent over the last five years.

“These companies have cracked the code of a successful industrial
turnaround,” Mr. Lache said. “They’re shrinking the business to a size
that’s defendable, and growing off that lower base.”

To be sure, sales are rising for many companies, albeit at a much
slower pace than the increase in profits. Among the 175 companies in
the S.& P. 500 that have reported earnings for the second quarter,
revenues rose 6.9 percent on average while profits jumped 42.3
percent, according to Thomson Reuters.

Still, even at corporations where both the top and bottom lines are
expanding, the focus remains on keeping profits high, not rebuilding
work forces decimated by the recession.

When Alcoa reported a turnaround this month in profits and a 22
percent jump in revenue, its chief financial officer, Charles D.
McLane Jr., assured investors that it was not eager to recall the
37,000 workers let go since late 2008. “We have a tight focus on
spending as market activity increases, operating more effectively and
minimizing rehires where possible,” he said. “We’re not only holding
headcount levels, but are also driving restructuring this quarter that
will result in further reductions.”

Michael E. Belwood, a spokesman for Alcoa, said more than 17,500 of
the former workers were employed at units Alcoa has since sold, but
added that the company “had to be resized to match the realities of
the recession.”

“We’re keeping a close eye on costs because there is still uncertainty
about the stability of this recovery,” he said.

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