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AT&T to Cut 7,000 Jobs and Reduce Assets by $11.4 Billion
AT&T is no longer on the Dow Jones Industrial Average list. It was replaced on April 8th 2004.
| quote: | | On 8 April 2004, American International Group, Pfizer, and Verizon joined the average, replacing AT&T, Eastman Kodak, and International Paper |
AT&T to Cut 7,000 Jobs and Reduce Assets by $11.4 Billion
| quote: | October 7, 2004
AT&T to Cut 7,000 Jobs and Reduce Assets by $11.4 Billion
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 9:52 p.m. ET
NEW YORK (AP) -- AT&T Corp. is cutting at least 7,500 more jobs and slashing the book value of its assets by $11.4 billion, drastic moves prompted by the company's plan to retreat from the traditional consumer telephone business following a lost court battle.
The company announced Thursday that it now plans to shrink its work force by more than a fifth, or about 12,500 jobs, during 2004 -- up from a previous target of about 4,900 jobs.
Most of the jobs cuts are layoffs. About 9,000 of the people affected have already left the company or been notified. AT&T now expects to finish the year with about 49,000 workers, down from nearly 62,000 at the start of 2004.
Severance costs and other expenses related to the job cuts will reduce third-quarter earnings by $1.1 billion, the company said.
The asset writedown of $11.4 billion -- about a quarter of the company's assets -- reflects the reduced value of AT&T's network now that it will be carrying less consumer voice traffic. It will be charged against earnings in the third quarter.
While the writedown is an acknowledgment that AT&T wasted billions of dollars upgrading its network and marketing to consumers, the sharply reduced value of the company's assets will mean tremendous savings on paper in terms of depreciation expense.
To begin with, AT&T said, the writedown will reduce depreciation expense by about $1 billion in the second half of 2004.
Depreciation is an accounting method that reflects how wear and tear reduces the worth of property and equipment. An estimated share of an asset's value is subtracted from earnings with every passing quarter. Because AT&T's assets will be worth $11.4 billion less, the quarterly value lost to wear and tear falls.
The announcement came after the close of Thursday's regular stock trading. But shares of AT&T, which had slipped 16 cents to $15.04 on the New York Stock Exchange, rose 2.5 percent in after-hours trading, or 38 cents, to $15.42.
Many analysts have speculated that AT&T will make itself a more attractive takeover candidate by cleaning up its books and reducing depreciation expense. Talks to be acquired by former subsidiary BellSouth Corp. collapsed earlier this year.
AT&T, still the nation's biggest long-distance carrier with about 30 million customers, announced in July that it would no longer spend money to sell long distance or local service to consumers. The company is still spending aggressively to sign up homes for its new Internet-based phone service.
The withdrawal from the traditional phone business followed a federal court decision that will make it more expensive for AT&T to sell local service by leasing residential lines from the four regional Bells -- who at the same time are luring away AT&T's long-distance customers.
Federal regulations struck down by the court decision had enabled AT&T, MCI Corp. and Sprint Corp. to lease those Bell lines at appealing rates set by state agencies.
Based on those regulations, AT&T invested heavily in advertising bundles of unlimited local and long distance, signing up 4.6 million homes for local service by the end of June.
The consumer business, once a cash cow that generated $25 billion a year in long-distance revenue, is expected to bring in less than a third of that amount in 2004. In addition to Bell competition, the business has been hit hard by rival technologies such as cell phones and Internet phone service.
With the company due to report third-quarter results in two weeks, the announcement of more job cuts and an asset writedown had been expected.
In an August filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, AT&T warned that the value of its national phone network would need to be recalculated since it could no longer be relied upon to generate as much revenue.
AT&T invested billions of dollars upgrading that network, the company's biggest single asset, during the technology boom.
At the end of June, AT&T's assets totaled $43.8 billion, including $22.8 billion in property and equipment and $4.8 billion worth of goodwill, which reflects the premium AT&T paid above market value for acquisitions.
``In response to recent regulatory developments and a highly competitive market, we have made some tough decisions to reduce our work force and cut costs,'' said AT&T chairman and chief executive Dave Dorman.
The company said the acceleration of job cuts, reduced marketing and other efforts to reduce costs are having a positive impact on profitability.
AT&T also said it continues to generate significant cash flow in line with its previous targets for 2004. As a result, the company is on course to finish the year with net debt of under $7 billion, a reduction of almost 50 percent over the past two years. Net debt is calculated by subtracting a company's cash and liquid assets from its long-term liabilities.
Copyright 2004 The Associated Press |
From their balance sheet:
(Billion=1,000)
code: AT&T CORP. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
At December 31,
2003 2002
(Dollars in millions)
Assets
Cash and cash equivalents $ 4,353 $ 8,014
Accounts receivable, less allowances of $579 and $669 4,036 5,286
Deferred income taxes 715 1,075
Other current assets 744 1,693
Total Current Assets 9,848 16,068
Property, plant and equipment, net 24,376 25,604
Goodwill 4,801 4,626
Other purchased intangible assets, net of accumulated amortization of $320
and $244 499 556
Prepaid pension costs 3,861 3,596
Other assets 4,603 4,987
Total Assets $ 47,988$ 55,437
Liabilities
Accounts payable and accrued expenses $ 3,256 $ 3,819
Compensation and benefit-related liabilities 1,783 1,949
Debt maturing within one year 1,343 3,762
Other current liabilities 2,501 2,924
Total Current Liabilities 8,883 12,454
Long-term debt 13,066 18,812
Long-term compensation and benefit-related liabilities 3,528 4,144
Deferred income taxes 5,395 3,992
Other long-term liabilities and deferred credits 3,160 3,723
Total Liabilities 34,032 43,125
Shareowners' Equity
AT&T Common Stock, $1 par value, authorized 6,000,000,000 shares; issued and
outstanding 791,911,022 shares (net of 172,179,303 treasury shares) at
December 31, 2003 and 783,037,580 shares (net of 171,801,716 treasury shares)
at December 31, 2002 792 783
Additional paid-in capital 27,722 28,163
Accumulated deficit (14,707) (16,566)
Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) 149 (68)
Total Shareowners' Equity 13,956 12,312
Total Liabilities and Shareowners' Equity $ 47,988$ 55,437
The notes are an integral part of the consolidated financial statements
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Last edited by ogvh5150 on Oct-08-2004 at 10:58
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