. The Windows Observer--Intel CEO Otellini Promises Big Changes, $1 Billion in Cuts
 

two
Volume 3, Number 15 -- May 3, 2006

Intel CEO Otellini Promises Big Changes, $1 Billion in Cuts

Published: May 3, 2006

by Timothy Prickett Morgan

Chip maker Intel hosted its spring conference with industry and Wall Street analysts late last week, and the company's top brass said that 2006 is looking to be a tough year for Intel. Which is why Intel president and chief executive officer, Paul Otellini, announced that the company would be looking for ways to cut $1 billion out of operating expenses and $300 million out of capital equipment investments to bring its business back to more solid profitability.

"We are positioning ourselves for our most comprehensive, largest, and most competitive product rollout in years," Otellini boasted, referring to the laptop, desktop, and server variants of the Core architecture chips that Intel previewed earlier this year at Intel Developer Forum. But, he then went over some financials that showed Intel is facing some tough issues, and considering that these much-improved products are built into Intel's models, it is hard to see how this cannot be read as Intel gearing up for a price and technology war with AMD.

Last year was the best one in history for Intel, with $38.8 billion in sales and a $12.1 billion operating profit. But Intel is projecting PC sales will only be up in the single digits this year, compared to 12 to 13 percent in prior years, and when you add in competitive pressures from AMD and several million CPUs at Intel's server and PC partners that started building up in inventories last September, 2006 looks to be a bit rough. In fact, Intel is forecasting sales to be down 3 percent to $37.7 billion this year, and for operating profits to be down 23 percent to $9.3 billion. And that is after Intel takes out the $1 billion in operating expenses. Otellini said that Intel's partners had expected the fourth quarter of 2005 to be better than it turned out to be.

"We see a much tighter 2006 from a marketing perspective than we saw a few months ago," explained Otellini to the analysts. And he said that Intel was doing a top to bottom review of its entire business, not unlike the one that Intel did in the mid-1980s that lead the company to ditch the memory business and devote itself to the CPU business. "Every part of Intel will be part of this," he said. "You will see a leaner, more efficient, more agile Intel at the end of this process." Otellini said that the review would take about 90 days, but because it needs to cut expenses now, it will make cuts as it becomes obvious where they need to be made.



Sponsored By
MKS

Knowledge is Power.

MKS brings you real-time visibility and traceability across platforms,
teams and the entire application lifecycle from requirements through deployment.

More than 60% of software projects in the U.S. fail, and poor requirements is
one of the top 5 reasons. Are your projects at risk?

With poor requirements being cited as one of the top 5 reasons for software project failures in the U.S. it is clear that requirements management must be an integral part of the development process, and is vital to mitigating risk on large projects. MKS offers you a truly unique solution - the first requirements management tool built into a complete application lifecycle management solution. The result is greater visibility and traceability for requirements throughout the lifecycle and better communication between development, QA and business users.

For more information, download the white paper: An Innovative Approach to Managing Software Requirements

Components of MKS Integrity for application lifecycle management include:
· MKS Requirements for integrated requirements management
· MKS Integrity Manager for process and workflow management and defect tracking
· MKS Source Integrity Enterprise for software configuration management,
   version control and globally distributed team development
· Implementer for software configuration management and deployment on the iSeries
· OpenMake for enterprise build management
· MKS Build and Deploy for deployment management to production environments

MKS integrates with leading modernization tools such as IBM WebSphere and Microsoft Visual Studio .NET.

For more information, visit http://www.mks.com/solutions/index.jsp

Contact MKS Sales at 1-800-613-7535 or sales@mks.com



Editor: Alex Woodie
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik,
Shannon O'Donnell, Timothy Prickett Morgan
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.

Sponsored Links

Micro Focus:  Develop, extend and deploy applications with Server Express and Enterprise Server
Wolf Computer Consulting:  Reliable service and affordable rates for business computing needs
COMMON:  Join us at the Fall 2006 conference, September 17-21, in Miami Beach, Florida

 


 
Subscription Information:
You can unsubscribe, change your email address, or sign up for any of IT Jungle's free e-newsletters through our Web site at http://www.itjungle.com/sub/subscribe.html.

Copyright © 1996-2008 Guild Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Guild Companies, Inc., 50 Park Terrace East, Suite 8F, New York, NY 10034

Privacy Statement