About 3,300 of the jobs will be cut at Siemens’s German operations, the Munich-based company said in a statement today.
Kaeser said last year he seeks to slash about 1 billion euros ($1.1 billion) in costs by creating a leaner divisional structure and simplifying regional operations. The cuts come at a time when Siemens’ health-care and energy generation divisions, once the prized assets of the company, risk jeopardizing Kaeser’s turnaround plan.
Still, Kaeser has been focusing Siemens on energy generation and supply, buying oil-and-gas equipment maker Dresser-Rand Inc. and the energy operations of Rolls-Royce Holdings Plc last year.
The decline in the price of oil has led
some analysts and investors to question the wisdom of the Dresser-Rand deal, which was priced at 14.1 times the average expectation for 2015 earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. Brent crude has fallen about 50 percent to less than $50 a barrel since the acquisition was announced.
Kaeser announced a separate 15,000 job cuts in Sept. 2013, a further 1,200 losses at the power and gas division in December, and has sold the company’s hearing-aid, hospital IT and microbiology units. About 18 percent of its 72 billion euros annual revenue is generated by loss-making units, he said last month.
Siemens has risen 16 percent in Frankfurt trading since Kaeser took over, while Germany’s DAX index gained 31 percent.
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