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Dell to shut down manufacturing plant |
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Written by LNC
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Tuesday, 01 April 2008 |
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Someone ask John McCain if these Dell jobs are the high tech jobs he's talking about in his free trade talks.
Dell to shut down manufacturing plant
by Richard Walters in The Financial Times
Dell is to shut a manufacturing plant for what is believed to be the first time in its 24-year history as it struggles to slash costs and rebuilt its profit margins.
The closure of the plant - which assembles PCs - is located in Austin, Texas, Dells headquarters, will result in the loss of some 900 jobs. The move is part of what Dell characterised as an attempt to wipe $3bn from its annual operating costs, which last year topped $50bn.
The PC maker also said it was considering alternatives for part of its financial services division, and that it may sell the business. The financing arm was set up as a joint venture with finance company CIT more than a decade ago but Dell assumed full control of the venture late last year, leaving it in a position to consider different strategic options for the business.
Dell was looking at options only for that part of the business that provides credit to support consumers purchases of its equipment, not the operation that handles lease finance for larger corporate customers.
Dell recently assessed the value of the entire financing arm at around $1bn, given its purchase of the remaining 30 per cent of the company from CIT at the end of last year for $306m.
News of the plant closure and possible sale, announced on Monday, come ahead of Wednesdays widely-anticipated financial analysts event that will mark Dells first meeting with Wall Street in three years. The companys financial communications were restricted during an SEC investigation into its accounting.
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In the news
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Colorado CPA member Milt Heft has these thoughts on money, wealth and the economy. Heft is the owner of Petrogen, Inc in Colorado Springs.
A few thoughts about manufacturing:
There is a great misunderstanding of the relationship- between money and wealth. The beginning principles with which we can all agree are a few and simple noble truths:
1. Money is meaningless without wealth.
2. Wealth is difficult to distribute without money.
3. Wealth is the reality of the physical things we need to survive and thrive: food, clothing, shelter, ice cream & computers. It is the product of mining, industrial production, and agriculture.
4. Money is anything that make the wheels of production and distribution go round.
5. Money is easy to manufacture and control.
6. Wealth takes a lot of blood, sweat, toil and tears.
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