The Santa Clara-based company confirmed the job cuts yesterday, the day after Intel Corp. Reported its profit and revenue had fallen for the second consecutive year.
The purge represents about 5 percent of the roughly 108,000 jobs that Intel had on its payroll at the end of December. The company intends to jettison the jobs without laying off workers, said Intel spokesman Bill Calder. The reductions instead will be achieved through attrition, buyouts and early retirement offers.
This marks Intel's first significant job cuts since a company insider, Bryan Krzanich, succeeded Paul Otellini as CEO eight months ago.
"We are constantly evaluating and realigning our resources to meet the needs of our business," Calder said.
The trend is a problem for Intel because most mobile devices don't rely on its processors.
As Intel has struggled to come up with a successful strategy for mobile computing, the company has turned into a stock market laggard.
Since Intel's stock hit a five-year high of $29.27 in May 2012, the shares have fallen by 12 percent. Meanwhile, the Standard & Poor's 500 index has climbed by 31 percent. Intel's stock dropped 69 cents yesterday to close at $25.85, then dipped another 4 cents in extended trading.
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