Ahead of today’s Q1 2016 earnings release and call, Intel has announced that they are going to be cutting a significant number of jobs over the next year. The job cuts come as part of Intel’s larger and ongoing restructuring efforts, as the company grapples with an overall soft PC market and continued struggle to carve out a larger piece of the mobile market. Ultimately Intel’s looking to invest in what they consider to be high-growth areas, which means laying off employees in stagnant business units while making other investments in those areas that are seeing continued growth.

The job cuts themselves are expected to involve up to 12,000 employees, or about 11% of the company’s workforce. Intel will be eliminating positions through a combination of both voluntary and involuntary layoffs, and in the process will be consolidating the remaining workforce and their respective sites. Intel expects the bulk of the layoffs to occur within the next 60 days, with the entire process stretching into mid-2017.

The company’s pre-earnings announcement does not state where these layoffs will come from, and we’re expecting at least some additional detail to come out of the company’s earnings call which is still on-going. However the company is reiterating what markets and businesses they see as growth opportunities and will be investing into for the future, which offers some basic guidance on what the company sees as their most important businesses. Intel’s Data Center and Internet of Things businesses are specifically being cited as their stand-out businesses, which combined with memory and FPGAs provided 40% of the company’s revenue and a majority of their operating profit. Meanwhile in the consumer/client market Intel has seen good returns on 2-in-1s, gaming and home gateways. Conversely, the overall (client) PC market is still in decline, and I expect that a number of the cuts will be centered on that.

Finally, Intel has also detailed the costs of their restructuring. The company will incur a one-time charge of $1.2 billion in Q2, with this presumably being a significant number of severance payments. In turn, the company expects to save $750 million this year, with an annual run rate savings of $1.4 billion per year after the last of the layoffs are completed in mid-2017.

We’ll update this article later today with more information once it comes out of Intel’s earnings call. Ultimately the soft PC market has been a continuing trend for Intel over the past few years, so that we’re seeing Intel react to it now is not unexpected. However it will be important to see just how the layoffs are organized – for example, if Intel makes much in the way of cuts in the fab business – as Intel is a large company. What this means for future client PC investments, mobile, could prove to be significant.

Update: Intel's earnings call has shed a bit more light on the restructuring, but Intel is not spelling out exactly where the bulk of the cuts are coming from at this time.

Overall Intel did reiterate that although the client business has been weak, the company's restructuring plans will be touching more than the client business. The impact to the client business then is that it is being refocused via the restructuring, hence the earlier comments on what Intel sees as the client growth markets. Undoubtedly aspects of the client business are in the crosshairs given the continued slowness in the market, but Intel isn't saying too much more than that.

The company has also made it clear that they're not backing off on fab/manufacturing investments in the near future. Capital expenditures on 10nm and 3D NAND continue untouched even with the restructuring, and overall Intel's technology cadence plans have not changed. Farther ahead, the company has indicated that they are being mindful of their capable competition, and that they need to stay ahead of them, including getting back to a two-year cycle if at all possible.

Finally, Intel has offered a bit more information on the timeline for the restructuring itself. While the majority of the notices to employees will go out in 60 days, the projection is that only about half of the layoffs will be completed by the end of this year, which implies the rest will happen in H1 2017. Part of this comes down to the fact that while Intel has a target number for employment, they have not decided whether they will end any product lines entirely. Intel is in the process of undergoing a complete review of the business to identify any products the company may want to cease, and Brian Krzanich has said that when the review is done there's likely to be a few products that get flagged.

Source: Intel

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  • ABR - Wednesday, April 20, 2016 - link

    A number of interesting points. For IoT though the numbers from their quarterly report back them up. Maybe not big numbers yet but fastest growing area. They don't need so many employees to stay ahead of AMD anymore so they're reloading to go after Qualcomm. And as far as Xeon Phi, it's not just pride, they need to stay in the race of specialized computing that Nvidia is so focused on, that could deliver significant growth depending on how things go.
  • MrSpadge - Wednesday, April 20, 2016 - link

    > Xeons? Core-m? mobile i3, i5, i7?

    If you design the core once, it's comparably easy to construct the derivatives. I'm sure they're not considering cutting any of them, unless they become very niche products.
  • Achtung_BG - Wednesday, April 20, 2016 - link

    Intel cuts more employees, than all the staff at AMD......
  • bug77 - Wednesday, April 20, 2016 - link

    Again the "PC market is in decline" argument. Well, what do you expect, if you offer basically the same performance since 2011? Who's gonna part with $150-200 just to get a more capable IGP?
  • Krysto - Wednesday, April 20, 2016 - link

    And that's the problem isn't it? Intel can't justify its high prices anymore. AMD already beats it on price/performance for all Celerons and Pentiums and even Core i3 if you count multi-thread performance.

    And that's without mentioning that the latest $30 high-end ARM chips are basically within 2x of the performance of Intel's $200 Core-M chips.
  • Krysto - Wednesday, April 20, 2016 - link

    Err. meant to say within 2x of Core i5 or even Core i7. They're almost equal to Core M.
  • bug77 - Wednesday, April 20, 2016 - link

    $200 for a mainstream chip doesn't sound like an awful lot to me. Plus, AMD is in the red, so their prices clearly don't cover their costs.
  • Kutark - Thursday, April 21, 2016 - link

    "Basically the same performance".

    So, let's see, I JUST upgraded from a -7-2600k that I had OC'd to 4.3ghz that I built in Jan 2011, to a i7-6700K build that I have clocked at 4.4ghz, and my Firestrike scores on the exact same video card went from ~13.4k, to ~16.7k... That's a roughly 20% increase almost clock for clock. I haven't finished doing my OC'ing, but im already at a stable 4.6 and will work on 4.7 tonight. So there's that also.

    Same video card.

    I get what you're saying that it's not like the past, where one generation could provide 30-50% or more performance boost. However, saying its "basically" the same performance is really just being intellectually dishonest.
  • Shadowmaster625 - Wednesday, April 20, 2016 - link

    They need to fire all of their integrated graphics group. And stop wasting silicon on it.
  • SirMaster - Wednesday, April 20, 2016 - link

    What? Then how will all the tablets and most laptops get video output?

    A discrete GPU from Nvidia or AMD? Sounds like extra complexity and additional cost to me.

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