Thread regarding Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) layoffs

Server Business Plunge after Massive Diversification - Fire Meg Whitman

http://www.businessinsider.com/r-update-1-hpe-posts-steep-revenue-decline-in-key-servers-business-2017-5

Hewlett Packard Enterprise on Wednesday reported a steep fall in revenue in its biggest business that sells servers, networking and data storage equipment, hurt by tepid demand, intense competition and a strong dollar.

Shares of Palo Alto, California-based HPE fell 2.4 percent to $18.39 in trading after the bell.

Revenue in HPE's enterprise group division, largely made up of its server and storage products, fell nearly 13 percent to $6.24 billion in the quarter ended April 30 — the steepest decline in several quarters.

Servers revenue dipped 14 percent to $2.99 billion, while networking revenue plunged 30 percent.

Under Chief Executive Meg Whitman, HPE has inked a string of deals to sharpen its focus on its hardware business that sells servers, networking and data storage equipment to companies.

HPE — created from the breakup of Hewlett-Packard Co in 2015 — has shrunk by divesting its technology services unit and signing a deal to sell its software division.

Last month, HPE bought data storage provider Nimble Storage Inc for $1.09 billion.

HPE's results come following weak earnings reports from other big technology vendors including Cisco and IBM , which have faced slowing demand.

A strong dollar has eroded the value of HPE's overseas revenue. HPE gets over 60 percent of its revenue from outside the United States.

The company reported a net loss of $612 million, or 37 cents per share in the second quarter ended April 30, compared to a profit of $320 million, or 18 cents per share, a year earlier.

Revenue from continuing operations fell nearly 13 percent to $7.45 billion, largely reflecting the sale of its consulting and outsourcing services business.

Excluding items, the company earned 35 cents per share, in line with analysts' average expectation, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

HPE's shares had climbed 8.5 percent this year, slightly outperforming the S&P 500 index's 7.7 percent gain.

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| 2321 views | | 7 replies (last June 6, 2017) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+Nzp97St

7 replies (most recent on top)

She is mad that she has to sit in a crappy cube. Real CEOs don't sit in a cubicle

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Post ID: @5wiq+Nzp97St

Assuming that each employee costs approximately $100K per year, then HPE would need to layoff approximately 2500 employees to reduce costs by $250M. That would mean that one out of every 22 employees at HPE will get the ax by the second quarter.

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Post ID: @5eqr+Nzp97St

massive layoffs coming, the slate has already been submitted

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Post ID: @ade+Nzp97St

from Meg's email "We have also committed to take out an additional $200-$300M in costs during the second half of this year through a combination of spend control and organizational streamlining. "

aka more layoffs.

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Post ID: @zzt+Nzp97St

Meg Whitman and her cronies are destroying HPE. Board should boot her a-- out like she has don'e to so many employees. Can't you people see this.

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Post ID: @ure+Nzp97St

Time to layoff a few thousand more employees!

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Post ID: @jbf+Nzp97St

Guess these folks don't have to be subjected to performance reviews.

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Post ID: @ocs+Nzp97St

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