Western Digital to lay off 2,500, close plants

By Tim Conneally | Published December 17, 2008, 9:55 AM

Storage company Western Digital today joined the ranks of companies scaling back their workforces, announcing a cost restructuring that will involve a worldwide headcount reduction and closure of manufacturing facilities.

"We expect demand weakness to last well into the middle of the 2009 calendar year," John Coyne, president and CEO of WD said in a prepared statement. The company has seen increasingly competitive pricing from the likes of Hitachi and Seagate coupled with a decreased demand for hard drives overall. The projected revenue ceiling for the December quarter has dropped from $2.15 billion down to $1.8 billion.

Therefore, in the interest of cutting operating expenses, WD enacted a production freeze that will last from December 20 to January 1.

This is, of course, a short term solution. For the long term, it looks like most of WD's employees will be affected. Bonuses for executives, senior management and the board of directors will be cut back, hourly employees' schedules will be cut back 20%, and capital spending will be reduced by about $250 million.

Approximately 2,500 employees will be laid off in this cost-cutting plan, amounting to 5% of WD's total workforce. The company will also be closing one of its three hard drive manufacturing plants in Thailand, and either close or sell one of its media substrate factories in Malaysia.

WD anticipates the cutbacks will save $150 million in annual operating costs.

Comments

wow. from a technology standpoint i didnt see this at all. their 640GB sata drives are the fastest 7200rpm drives in the world and sell like hotcakes. $80 for basically a 640GB raptor 150...yes plz.

i know much business comes from oem PC components but i see tons of HP and Dell Media Center PCs with these drives. i guess theyre not as profitable as most people thought...

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So is this a good time to buy? Decreased production will inevitably drive prices up right?

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They should worry about SSDs not Hitachi which is going to sell the HDDs division. Seagate is interested in SSDs ;)

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I fear your concern is a bit overstated.
SSD will remain a niche market for some time.
Not even Samsung/SanDisk/or Toshiba are anticipating their being any kind of significant profit center in the near term.

And tape and Ethernet are dead too... ;-))

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