The job cuts indicate fresh hiccups for the struggling Taiwanese
mobile phone maker that once sold one in 10 smartphones
globally, but has seen its market share decline amid mounting
competition from Apple, Samsung Electronics Co and Chinese
rivals.
HTC said it would cut 1,500 jobs in its manufacturing unit in
Taiwan. This represents about a quarter of the 6,450 staff it
employed globally as of June, data from the company shows.
"Today HTC announces plan toust optimize the manufacturing
organizations in Taiwan ... This plan will allow more effective
and flexible resource management going forward," HTC said.
The layoffs will be completed by the end of September. The move
is also part of a broader plan that brings HTC's smartphone and
VR businesses under common leadership in each region.
This follows a $1.1 billion deal late last year under which HTC
shifted around 2,000 staff, mainly handset engineers, to
Alphabet's Google, casting doubts over the Taiwanese firm's
longer-term future.
HTC's scaling down comes amid a decline in its revenues and
sales. The company reported a 55.5 percent plunge in April
revenues year-on-year and a 46.7 percent slide in March sales.
(Reporting by Jess Macy Yu and Hong Kong slot team; Editing by
Sayatani Ghosh and Himani Sarkar)
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