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Billion dollar profits but still axing jobs

makapaaa

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<TABLE id=msgUN cellSpacing=3 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD id=msgUNsubj vAlign=top>Coffee Shop Talk - Billion dollar profits but still axe job</TD><TD id=msgunetc noWrap align=right>
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Subscribe </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE class=msgtable cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="96%"><TBODY><TR><TD class=msg vAlign=top><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR class=msghead><TD class=msgbfr1 width="1%"> </TD><TD><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 border=0><TBODY><TR class=msghead><TD class=msgF noWrap align=right width="1%">From: </TD><TD class=msgFname noWrap width="68%">T_O_C <NOBR></NOBR> </TD><TD class=msgDate noWrap align=right width="30%">9:55 am </TD></TR><TR class=msghead><TD class=msgT noWrap align=right width="1%" height=20>To: </TD><TD class=msgTname noWrap width="68%">ALL <NOBR></NOBR></TD><TD class=msgNum noWrap align=right> (1 of 3) </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><TD class=msgleft width="1%" rowSpan=4> </TD><TD class=wintiny noWrap align=right>12234.1 </TD></TR><TR><TD height=8></TD></TR><TR><TD class=msgtxt>Billion dollar profits but still axing jobs
Saturday, 8 November 2008, 10:43 pm
Gerald Giam / Senior Writer
The stunning news blared out on Friday that Singapore’s largest bank, DBS, will be cutting 900 jobs by the end of this month. (See here). At least half of the job cuts will be from its 7,600 workforce in Singapore.
DBS CEO Richard Stanley said that the cuts will be “across all business units and functions, and at all levels of the organisation”.
When I first informed my editor of the news, his immediate reaction was, “Damn, the retrenchments have started.”
It is natural to assume that retrenchments point to an economy that is hitting the doldrums. After all, won’t companies only start retrenching staff after all other avenues of cost cutting have been exhausted and the company is starting to bleed?
Mr Stanley’s explanation for cutting jobs tells another story: “To be a more streamlined organisation” and to “run a tighter ship”.
Indeed DBS Group Holdings reported that for the first nine months of 2008, net earnings were S$1.67 billion, albeit down 13% from 2007. Profit before allowances was S$2.64 billion, down just 1% from last year. Third quarter earnings stood at S$402 million. The bank’s press statement emphasized that their “balance sheet remains strong”.
Of course, from a profit-driven business standpoint, job cuts make sense to help the company maintain its profitability and obligations to shareholders. In most organisations, employee payroll takes up the biggest chunk of expenses, so cost cutting cannot be complete without job cuts.
This is very much the pure capitalist, hire-and-fire approach, of which banks epitomize. One could argue that in good times, bankers can earn 12, 18 even 24-month bonuses, so why can’t they also suffer the downside of a slowing economy? Working in a bank could be seen as high returns but high risk.
But banks are not the only companies who operate in this fashion. Back in early 2003, PSA Corporation, the port operator, retrenched 800 staff — 14% of its workforce — in its bid to remain competitive after its loss of major shipping firms Maersk and Evergreen. This despite posting a S$559 million net profit in 2002.
I can understand if a small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) has to cut its workforce to remain in the black. But is it ethical for large, profitable companies which have enjoyed years of profits and built up a war chest of reserves, to axe employees the moment dark clouds start to gather?
Shouldn’t layoffs be a tool of last resort? Have these staff been given the option of working with reduced salary in order to keep their job? Or are retrenchment exercises a way of shedding off more expensive older workers, and replacing them with younger — sometimes foreign — talent. Keep in mind we are dealing with people’s lives, not just digits on a spreadsheet.
Obviously I am not in a position to judge whether the DBS management has done their due diligence. Their press statement said that their expenses fell 16% from the previous quarter, due to what they claimed were “proactive management of controllable expenses”. To their credit, they seem to have at least attempted other measures.
Some listed companies are known to conduct manpower reduction exercises to reassure investors that they are doing something to improve profitability. In most cases, the companies’ stock prices rise immediately after the announcement is made. So while the axed employees are thrust into the jobless wilderness, the biggest beneficiaries of job cuts are often the executives who make the retrenchment decisions, as they stand to benefit from rising share prices and bonuses due to increased profitability.
There is a lot of talk about corporate social responsibility (CSR) these days. About how companies should give back to the community they operate in and spruce up their corporate image at the same time. But charity should begin at home. A company’s first social responsibility ought to be to its employees, which depend on it for their living.
A company which retrenches staff when it can afford not to would be hard pressed to earn much loyalty and attachment from them. The net result is that it will find it much harder to attract and retain talented workers in the future, especially when the economy improves. This will force them to offer obscene salaries and bonuses to entice talent, setting themselves up for unsustainable manpower costs later.
Running a listed company is not easy, and it is made harder during lean economic times like these. However as Singapore and the rest of the world heads into recession, company executives will do well to remember that people should come before profits. This would benefit not only employees, but the company as well in the long run.
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makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
>>>Or are retrenchment exercises a way of shedding off more expensive older workers, and replacing them with younger — sometimes foreign — talent. Keep in mind we are dealing with people’s lives, not just digits on a spreadsheet.<<<

retrench.jpg
 

Bigfuck

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
All this voodonomics. Rather than return profits to shareholders, use personal expenses in salaries bonuses and perks to so called attract talent which are just rubbish and use the corporate ladder climb as a headcount and cost balancing tool through a pyramind shaped staff structure. Good when used overseas on other nations but bad against own people. USA can do it with it their own people due to high unemployment benefits and the de facto reserve currency country in the world. This kind of prostitution behavior followed by other countries besides USA is a recipe to be an American slave for life. But dummies in Leegime cannot understand this.
 

mscitw

Alfrescian
Loyal
DBS have not totally disclosed their exposure to CDOs. FT Stanley was also coy by saying he does not expect to see Sands belly up and hence no increase of bad loans.
 

po2wq

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
y nt? ...

billion $ profit can still raise fare ... billion $ profit can still raise tariff ...
 

Merl Haggard

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
DBS have not totally disclosed their exposure to CDOs. FT Stanley was also coy by saying he does not expect to see Sands belly up and hence no increase of bad loans.


Struggling Las Vegas Sands names new finance chief

AFX | 09 Nov 2008 | Reuters - Casino operator Las Vegas Sands Corp, overextended and struggling for survival as the economy sours, named a new finance chief on Friday in a move to regain some fiscal stability.

The company named Kenneth Kay, effective Dec 1, to replace CFO Michael Quartieri who suddenly resigned last week. Kay was previously CFO of commercial real estate company CB Richard Ellis Group Inc.

Sands did not immediately return a call requesting comment. On Thursday, the company's auditor said in a regulatory filing there are doubts about Sands' ability to continue as a going concern. In addition, Sands does not expect to be in compliance with its maximum ratio covenant for the fourth quarter and into subsequent quarters, the filing said.

Sands' shares have plummeted more than 90 percent this year as consumers, faced with a looming recession, have been less willing to spend money in the company's hotels and casinos. Sands has also been expanding too rapidly. It opened the world's biggest casino in Macau last year and is working on additional projects in Singapore, Macao and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.

It also operates the Palazzo and Venetian resorts in Las Vegas. Sands said it is working on a capital-raising program, but the company may have a tough time raising any financing that does not include the participation of Chief Executive Sheldon Adelson, a multimillionaire and the company's principal shareholder.

Las Vegas Sands shares closed the regular session down 82 cents, or 10 percent, at $7.03.

Copyright Thomson Reuters 2008.

 

lifeafter41

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
>>>Or are retrenchment exercises a way of shedding off more expensive older workers, and replacing them with younger — sometimes foreign — talent. Keep in mind we are dealing with people’s lives, not just digits on a spreadsheet.<<<

retrench.jpg

DBS CEO Richard Stanley said that the cuts will be “across all business units and functions, and at all levels of the organisation”.

Except his job, remains safe and sound. A FT is being used to axed jobs of Singaporean and they will tell you its a business decision. Nobody cares a hoot about people's lives, end of the day it's the CEO performance and kpi that he is coming into play.

Cynical as it may sounds, but that is the sad truth. DBS has started the first round, more will come from the other banks as Big Brother has start the ball rolling.

So much for loyalty towards companies these days......
 

soikee

Alfrescian
Loyal
Struggling Las Vegas Sands names new finance chief

AFX | 09 Nov 2008 | Reuters - Casino operator Las Vegas Sands Corp, overextended and struggling for survival as the economy sours, named a new finance chief on Friday in a move to regain some fiscal stability.

The company named Kenneth Kay, effective Dec 1, to replace CFO Michael Quartieri who suddenly resigned last week. Kay was previously CFO of commercial real estate company CB Richard Ellis Group Inc.

Sands did not immediately return a call requesting comment. On Thursday, the company's auditor said in a regulatory filing there are doubts about Sands' ability to continue as a going concern. In addition, Sands does not expect to be in compliance with its maximum ratio covenant for the fourth quarter and into subsequent quarters, the filing said.

Sands' shares have plummeted more than 90 percent this year as consumers, faced with a looming recession, have been less willing to spend money in the company's hotels and casinos. Sands has also been expanding too rapidly. It opened the world's biggest casino in Macau last year and is working on additional projects in Singapore, Macao and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.

It also operates the Palazzo and Venetian resorts in Las Vegas. Sands said it is working on a capital-raising program, but the company may have a tough time raising any financing that does not include the participation of Chief Executive Sheldon Adelson, a multimillionaire and the company's principal shareholder.

Las Vegas Sands shares closed the regular session down 82 cents, or 10 percent, at $7.03.

Copyright Thomson Reuters 2008.



Sand's Chairman & CEO Sheldon Adelson, formerly a taxi-driver in Las Vegas is indeed a very shrewd person and he has outsmarted your Lee Kuan Yew.

During the 5 months preceding the Marina Bay Casino award by your government, Sheldon's LVS shares surged to US$179 at the NYSE.

According to filings to the relevant US authority, Sheldon during that time had sold 110 million of his LVS shares at an average price of US$160. He netted about US$18 bln from this transaction.

We believe that Sheldon is no longer interested to complete his global developments for he can walk away with more than 20 billion US Dollars.
 

popdod

Alfrescian
Loyal
So much for loyalty towards companies these days......


Loyalty is a thing from the past.
Those days...bosses will try their means to keep employees in the job despite not earning alot.

These days, companies will NOT hestitate to retrench employees when their
profits are dipped by a little.

And funny part is....companies dare to complain employees are less faithful
to companies..

When bad times, loyal employees had to go.
When good times, still remember those loyal employees?

:o :confused: :o
 

pia

Alfrescian
Loyal
Sand's Chairman & CEO Sheldon Adelson, formerly a taxi-driver in Las Vegas is indeed a very shrewd person and he has outsmarted your Lee Kuan Yew.

During the 5 months preceding the Marina Bay Casino award by your government, Sheldon's LVS shares surged to US$179 at the NYSE.

According to filings to the relevant US authority, Sheldon during that time had sold 110 million of his LVS shares at an average price of US$160. He netted about US$18 bln from this transaction.

We believe that Sheldon is no longer interested to complete his global developments for he can walk away with more than 20 billion US Dollars.

Like all filthy rich a**holes, he'll just let LVS go bankrupt as long as his personal wealth is intact. :mad:
 

soikee

Alfrescian
Loyal
Like all filthy rich a**holes, he'll just let LVS go bankrupt as long as his personal wealth is intact. :mad:

There is no need for Sheldon to let LVS go bankrupt.

According to inside information, if he can't get your govt GIC to rescue LVS to complete the Marina project, LVS will go for Chapter 11.

Thereafter he'll just rescue his two mega casinos at Venetian & Palazzo in Vegas and then he'll walk away from Macao and S'pore.

We also hear that your LKY who now has discovered that Sheldon has outsmarted him, he is extremely angry with his team of ministers involved with the casino award to LVS.
 
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