The Macomb Daily

Top PC maker warns of job cuts as slump persists

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Lenovo’s profit fell for the first time in almost three years on waning demand for personal computers, forcing it to warn of job cuts ahead.

Net income fell for the first time since 2020, after revenue dropped a biggerthan-expected 24% to $15.3 billion in the final quarter of last year, according to a company statement. Analysts had expected sales of $16.4 billion on average.

The world’s largest maker of personal computers has been struggling with a tumble in global demand following a pandemic-era work-fromhome boom. PC shipments worldwide plunged 28% last quarter to 2018 levels, according to IDC, hurting it and longtime rivals HP and Dell.

“We think the smart devices market is in its worst period,” Lenovo Chief Executive Officer Yang Yuanqing said on an earnings call Friday. The company will need to make adjustment­s in its workforce to cut expenses in some operations, while hiring in high-growth areas such as services, he said.

Yang didn’t provide details on how large the job cuts might be, but he said head count would be “just a very small portion” of the overall operationa­l cost reduction.

The PC market might stabilize sooner than expected this year, and the company will in the meantime raise efficiency and invest in innovation, Lenovo said. Such cost cuts helped Lenovo’s quarterly net income fall a smaller-thanexpect­ed 32% to $437 million.

“Real demand, reflected by users’ device activation­s, was much better than industry shipment data,” Yang said. The market is still working its way through pandemic-era inventory, he said. “We think the market demand is not as bad as many expected.”

Still, shares of Lenovo extended losses to more than 4.9% in Hong Kong on Friday, in their biggest intraday drop in a month.

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