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    "weather proof" occupation

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    • MMMM Offline
      MMM
      last edited by

      Yes, unfortunately, ppl are taken as HC.


      Eg. we were asked to do a budget cut in 2009. My VP is aligned with me that we will put headcount reduction as last resort and let’s look at the areas that we can cut. I feel that we should behave ethically.

      In the end, we are still being made to do Head cuts despite the VP’s protests and assurance that we can achieve the $ savings that they are looking at. There is this obsession about headcount numbers in the corporate world that’s why they are turning to contractors that doesn’t appear on their heads.

      Also, if you do not cut headcount, it appears that the cut is not DEEP enough. "You’ve not bled to death so it’s not serious yet."

      Personally I feel that it’s very unfortunate and such actions are not being fair to the employees. Of course, no one would want to be on that list. Maybe I was being too "idealistic" also being a libran, I strive on "fairness" alot of time.

      Frankly, when I heard abt the potential head cuts, I was concerned abt my job security too and had lots of questions within myself. It appears for now my job is untouchable as they are looking to strengthen the role rather than eliminate it. Such is corporate life. So unpredictable.

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      • K Offline
        kaitlynangelica
        last edited by

        mincy:
        It's sad how some firms treat people when reducing headcount. For banking though, it is a high risk high return thing. hopefully they have save for the rainy day when they are getting 6-15 months bonus...


        But I think the other sectors will follow suit soon...Construction is already slowing down.
        Not everyone gets so much. The local banks certeinly pay so much.

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        • M Offline
          mintcc
          last edited by

          Hi MMM, I know, things are so unpredictable. my co/dept went through a few rounds of "restructuring" / take over before and sometimes the HC cutting can be quite cruel and unfair. Sometimes, alot is base on perception, but that’s the corporate world. hianz.


          kaitlynangelica, I suppose you are right. It’s espescially trying for those who have not rip the rewards but suffered the stress and long hours and finally get the pink slips.

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          • MMMM Offline
            MMM
            last edited by

            I think what is more worrying is that this is a widespread thing and affect not just banking but all other industry as well including those that are still doing well.

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            • M Offline
              matrix0405
              last edited by

              Merck to cut 7,200 jobs

              Drugmaker will eliminate more than 10% of its work force to cut costs. Weak sales and a restructuring charge also hurt third-quarter results.

              Semicon industry has started retrenchment but not reported in the news. What got reported big big is 10K jobs needed for IR.

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              • M Offline
                matrix0405
                last edited by

                Stanchart lays off senior staff

                Wed, Oct 29, 2008
                The Straits Times

                THE axe continues to fall across corporate Singapore with Standard Chartered (Stanchart) sacking several staff members from the group’s consumer banking division last week.

                Senior people in Hong Kong and Taiwan were affected by the bank’s ‘restructuring exercise’ but most of the 35 job cuts were made here. One to go was Singapore-based Sunil Thakar, the head of risk assurance for the group consumer bank. Stanchart has more than 5,300 people based in Singapore.

                Hong Kong-based Helen Kan, global head of customer and frontline experience, and Hong Kong-based Arthur Chan, who reports to Ms Kan, have also been asked to go, sources say. Sources say the restructuring exercise - which gained traction about a month ago - includes areas such as wholesale banking, but is particularly ‘prevalent’ at the group consumer bank.

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                • M Offline
                  matrix0405
                  last edited by

                  SINGAPORE : In what is the first large-scale retrenchment here since the economy turned sour, IM Flash Technologies (IMFT) - a joint venture between chip giants Micron and Intel - has scrapped plans to build a wafer fabrication plant, laying off 800 employees in the process.


                  It became known on Thursday that the staff, 500 of whom are undergoing training in Utah, United States, were informed of the decision on October 13 in a meeting at the company’s Lehi facility. The remaining 300 - hired as production operators and who are mostly from India - have already left the company.

                  At press time, IMFT’s management, which is based in the US, could not be reached for comment. According to one affected Singaporean employee, the majority of the staff are non-Singaporeans. The employee told TODAY: "Prior to the meeting, everyone was already quite down. Because of the market conditions, some of us had suspicions (that there would be a massive layoff)."

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                  • M Offline
                    matrix0405
                    last edited by

                    AIA staff laid off

                    By Lorna Tan, Financial Correspondent



                    The axings come just six weeks after AIA’s US parent AIG almost collapsed under the weight of massive liabilities. – ST PHOTO: SHAHRIYA YAHAYA
                    INSURER AIA Singapore laid off about 20 employees from two of its divisions on Thursday as part of its efforts to trim fat.

                    The affected employees included chief marketing officer Lance Tay, who oversaw the Life Profit Centre (LPC), and Mr Stanz Tan, the head of LPC and AIA’s vice-president.

                    Sources said that Thursday’s cuts are unlikely to be the last among the 800-strong workforce. It is believed that there will be more job losses, either through retrenchment, re-deployment, outsourcing or natural attrition. There are no plans to reduce its life agency strength.

                    The axings come just six weeks after AIA’s US parent AIG almost collapsed under the weight of massive liabilities.

                    It was bailed out by the US taxpayer to the tune of US$85 billion but the uncertainty affected operations here and sparked two days of panic with policyholders besieging the Singapore office demanding their money back.

                    The crisis raised the spectre of cost cutting among some staff here. One told The Straits Times on Friday: ‘There are so many changes here. But when you work in a corporate, these things do happen and we just have to move on.’

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                    • M Offline
                      matrix0405
                      last edited by

                      21 Oct - from blog

                      Employees of Chartered Semiconductor Manufacturing are the latest casualties of the electronics slowdown that has been hitting the Singapore economy for nearly 2 years running. Reliable sources have informed me that the company has just announced an across-the-board salary cut by between 5% to 10% as follows :

                      Director level : 10%
                      Manager level : 7.5%
                      All other employees : 5%

                      Apparently senior management is trying to avoid outright layoffs by implementing this pay cut, and it is at least encouraging to note that the management is taking the lead by absorbing a larger reduction on their own wages.

                      The slowdown is not going away any time soon, with the credit crisis not over yet, and with more to come as more mortgage loans reset in 2009, interest rates go up, and housing prices continue to fall. There will be no respite for the American consumer, whose support in purchasing all manner of electronics goods has been so vital to semiconductor makers like Chartered, which churns out chips for the likes of AMD and Microsoft’s Xbox360, and various chipsets for mobile phones and other equipment.

                      Chartered employes around 5000-6000 employees, and you can be sure that these will be 5000-6000 employees who will definitely be pulling back and will not be spending further in the local economy, or that of our neighbour Malaysia where many of these employees come from. One can well imagine the wider impact as the ripple effects reverberate through the system.

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                      • M Offline
                        matrix0405
                        last edited by

                        SINGAPORE, Nov 7 (Reuters) - DBS Group (DBSM.SI: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), Southeast Asia’s biggest bank, will cut 900 staff from Singapore and Hong Kong or six percent of its workforce by the end of this month to reduce costs, its CEO Richard Stanley said on Friday.


                        DBS earlier on Friday posted a 38 percent drop in quarterly profit, below expectations, as losses from bad debts quadrupled and it warned the financial crisis has made business challenging [ID:nSP310666]. (Reporting by Saeed Azhar and Kevin Lim; Editing by Neil Chatterjee)

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