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HP is reducing salaries and cutting back on travel By Patrick Thibodeau
20 Feb 2009

FRAMINGHAM, 19 FEBRUARY 2009 - Hewlett-Packard Co. has cut about 9,000 employees so far as part of the planned layoff of nearly 25,000 workers that it announced in October. Now HP is reducing salaries and cutting back on travel in an effort to avoid being further wounded by the sharp knife of the economic recession.

On Wednesday, HP reported a 13 per cent decline in earnings for its fiscal first quarter, which ended Jan. 31. Net income totaled US$1.854 billion in the quarter, down from $2.133 billion in the same period a year ago. Revenue grew just 1 per cent year over year, to $28.8 billion, and HP said it expects business to decline by 2 per cent to 3 per cent in the current second quarter.

The ongoing layoffs announced by HP last fall followed its $13.9 billion acquisition of Electronic Data Systems Corp. in August. Instead of making more job cuts now, HP CEO Mark Hurd said during a briefing on the Q1 results Wednesday that the company is cutting salaries, "significantly reducing travel" and eliminating or lowering various types of discretionary spending.

Hurd himself will take a 20 per cent cut on his $1.45 million base salary, for a reduction of about US$290,000. But stock awards and bonuses helped to increase his total compensation to more than $42 million last year, according to a filing that HP submitted to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

HP said in a statement issued after the Q1 briefing that the base pay of other members of its executive council will be cut by 15 per cent and that other executives will take 10 per cent salary cuts. The base pay of exempt employees -- typically defined as salaried workers -- will be reduced by 5 per cent, and nonexempt -- i.e., hourly -- employees will have a 2.5 per cent reduction.

HP also said that it will cap matching contributions to workers under its 401(k) plan at a maximum of 4 per cent of eligible employee contributions.

"As well as the company has done over the last few quarters, I think yesterday came as something of a shock," said Charles King, an analyst at Pund-IT Inc. in Hayward, Calif. "I don't think any vendor can expect to escape the systemic bad news. It was bound to catch up [to HP] eventually."

Like other hardware vendors, such as IBM, HP reported lower sales across its hardware lines as both businesses and consumers held back on purchases over the past few months. PCs, servers, storage equipment, and printing and imaging products were all affected, HP said.

For instance, enterprise storage and server revenue during the first quarter was $3.9 billion, down 18 per cent year over year. But there was a small silver lining: Blade server revenue increased 4 per cent, according to HP.

The decision to institute pay cuts across the company may indicate that Hurd thinks HP "has reached the end -- at least for the time being -- of what they can accomplish financially with layoffs," King said. "But you never know what could happen if things go even further south."

Rob Enderle, an analyst at Enderle Group in San Jose, said salary cuts "can typically do a lot of really ugly things to productivity -- except when you're in a market like this one, where everybody is even more afraid of losing their jobs." In the current economic climate, he added, "you can make a [salary] reduction and get away with it."

More layoffs may not be a good option for HP, according to Enderle. "When you're already running fairly lean," he asked, "who do you lay off without creating even bigger long-term problems?"

The only real bright spot for HP during the first quarter was in its services business, which generated $1.1 billion in profits. HP said its integration of EDS is ahead of plan.

Comments (8)

DontBelieveThisCrap says...
"Hurd himself will take a 20 per cent cut" haha what a laugh! HP’s CEO Mark Hurd made $42.5 million in fiscal 2008. Hewlett-Packard gave its boss $25.4 million in cash last year, including a $1.45 million salary and $23.9 million in bonus money, according to compensation figures contained in the company’s proxy which it filed late on Inauguration Day. You can lookup his annual and total compensation, stock options etc. right here: http://investing.businessweek.com/businessweek/research/stocks/people/person.asp?personId=214256&symbol=HPQ He gets $42,514,524 of which "only" $1,450,000 is his base salary. He offers to cut 20% of his base pay. Well, that still leaves him with $41.354.524 plus his stock options. His pay cut is not 20% but 1%. HP-EDS workers have NO job guarantee once they agree with the pay cut of 2,5 / 5%. There WILL be 20,000 people losing their jobs, this has nothing to do with this pay cutting plan. Time to say NO to the crazy men running our economy?
23 Feb 2009 12:24pm
Tommy says...
Interesting. At least HP is doing something!
25 Feb 2009 12:25pm
Darth Vader says...
a company should honor the terms in the labor contracts of their employees. cutting pay, reminds me of a line from star wars: "I am altering the deal!, pray, I do not alter it any further!"
25 Feb 2009 12:24pm
Pankaj Virmani says...
What is the source of your calculations DontBelieveThisCrap?
25 Feb 2009 2:00pm
EDS Wife says...
Well, they just cut salaries again today by another 10%!! This company, and Mark Hurd are a joke. They say they cut travel, even though a team of 'higher management' just returned from a planning session in Cabo!!!
16 Mar 2009 1:04pm
Mader Chodhn says...
Having read everywhere about these big corporations, such as IBM and its laying people off on the sly over in the US, I am not surprised that these HP senior execs are doing what DontBelieveThisCrap and EDS Wife are saying. I am inclined to believe them these days. FXXXXX bXXXXXXX CEOs and bosses everywhere are showing their true colors after all. My God, they really make my blood boil, now I can fully appreciate the excesses of the French Revolution, and why the Bolsheviks would kill the Nickhead Tsar and sundry!!! I think we should all be going round beheading these CEOs and CFOs, or lynching them!!! Shooting them in their Nickheads would be too good for them. BXXXXXX Nickheads!!!
25 Mar 2009 8:54pm
HurdWillRapeYou says...
EDSwife you are so right; but what's interesting is the reason some of these greedy, contemptuous individuals urinate on the average citizen. A clue about Mark is his background: Fortune Magazine March 2009: "Hurd actually is the product of New York City's Upper East Side, where his father hailed from a line of Yale-educated financiers and his mother was a daughter of a physician. (She was "introduced to society ... at a dinner given for her by her parents at the Waldorf-Astoria before the Debutante Cotillion and Christmas Ball," according to his parents' 1950 wedding announcement in the New York Times.) As his father did before him, Hurd attended the Browning School - a prestigious all-boys school where classmate Jamie Dimon, now CEO of J.P. Morgan Chase" So he was bred as swine to grind the bones of the working majority; speaking of which, have a look below at the citizens' opinions: http://www.damiansaunders.net/2009/02/26/commentary/hp-pay-cuts-an-unfair-act-of-economic-opportunism-and-greed/
31 Mar 2009 3:00pm
Diogenes says...
There were layoffs in Feb. of people close to retirement age in the US, from the only division that made money at HP. As a result, morale sucks and there are official slowdowns in Europe and "work to rule" other places. Mark Hurd will run HP into the ground. And then get millions for his "success". Perhaps the HP board should amend his contract so that his parachute is dependent on the company's results, so that if they're in the tank, he gets a normal HP worker's severance benefits at that time. I'd recommend buying one share of HP and clogging their meeting with requests for Hurd to step down, uncompensated.
16 Apr 2009 11:17am

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