FRANKFURT-German industrial giant Siemens said on March 18 that it planned to cut more than 6,000 jobs worldwide due to weak demand and increasing competition in China and in its home market.
Siemens announced today that it’s cutting around 6,000 jobs worldwide, and 450 of them will be in its EV charging business. The German tech giant is laying off 450 employees in the EV charging ...
Siemens AG plans to reduce its global headcount by some 6,000 workers, with about half of the cuts coming in Germany, as the company seeks savings at its factory automation business that’s ...
Siemens SIE-1.47%decrease; red down pointing triangle said it will cut more than 6,000 jobs in its automation and electric-vehicle charging businesses as part of its plans to boost competitiveness.
US factory output rose by the most in a year as a surge in motor vehicle production led a broader increase that helps ease some concerns about weakening in manufacturing. Manufacturing output ...
The sign "Entrance G" is seen at an entrance to the Siemens headquarters. Siemens plans to cut around 6,000 jobs worldwide, including 2,850 in Germany, with the automation business being ...
ZURICH (Reuters) -Siemens will cut 5,600 jobs at its Digital Industries business, the engineering company said on Tuesday, in the latest blow for German industry shaken by weak demand at home and ...
ZURICH (Reuters) -Siemens will cut 5,600 jobs at its Digital Industries business, the engineering company said on Tuesday, in the latest blow for German industry shaken by weak demand at home and ...
Siemens (SIEGY) has “presented plans to further increase its global competitiveness to employee representatives,” the company announced. “The plans affect units of the automation business ...
ZURICH, March 18 (Reuters) - Siemens (SIEGn.DE), opens new tab will cut 5,600 jobs at its Digital Industries business, the engineering company said on Tuesday, in the latest blow for German ...
PARIS, March 14 (Reuters) - A German court has decided to launch a criminal trial against two former executives of German engineering giant Siemens who are accused of violating sanctions by ...
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