Business

Japan's Pioneer to cut 10,000 jobs globally

Japanese electronics company Pioneer Corp. said Thursday it will cut 10,000 jobs globally to cope with sinking sales of car audio equipment and flat-screen televisions. It also said it will withdraw from its money-losing plasma display business.

Predicts annual loss for 5th consecutive year

Japanese electronics company Pioneer Corp. said Thursday it will cut 10,000 jobs globally to cope with sinking sales of car audio equipment and flat-screen televisions. It also said it will withdraw from its money-losing plasma display business.

The massive job cuts are the latest coming from Japan, where corporate giants like Sony Corp. and Nissan Motor Co. are slashing their payrolls, reducing production and forecasting annual losses.

Hit by the collapse in demand for car audio equipment and plasma TVs, Pioneer said its net loss in the current fiscal year to March will grow to 130 billion yen ($1.78 billion) from its previous estimate of a 78 billion yen net loss.

The company reported a net loss of 26.15 billion yen ($358.3 million) for the latest quarter covering October-December, nose-diving from a profit of 1.69 billion ($23.37 million) the previous year. Operating revenue declined 37.8 per cent to 131.23 billion yen ($1.81 billion).

Pioneer said it will likely incur an annual loss for the fifth consecutive year.

"Since the U.S. financial crisis and ensuing global downturn, our sales of car electronics products and flat-screen TVs plunged worldwide. We were severely hit by battered consumer sentiment," said Pioneer spokeswoman Michiko Kadoi.

A company statement said Pioneer would continue facing a tough business environment amid "intensifying competition involving our core products, as well as the impact of the worsening global economic downturn and the Japanese yen's rapid appreciation."

The Tokyo-based company said it will slash 6,000 full-time salaried workers at home and abroad, accounting for 16 per cent of the company's global workforce of 36,900. It will also cut 4,000 contract workers at its Japanese and foreign plants.

The company did not give a regional breakdown.

Pioneer also said that it has decided to close down two overseas plasma display assembly plants —one in Pomona, Calif., and the other in Castleford, Britain — by April.