CORRECT: UPDATE: 3M Posts 17% Drop In 2Q Profit; Tops Views
24 July 2009 - 2:16AM
Dow Jones News
3M Co.'s (MMM) second-quarter earnings fell 17% on lower demand,
but the diversified manufacturer's results exceeded expectations
and the company firmed its earnings outlook for 2009.
The company's cost-reduction strategies and improved demand for
3M components used in consumer electronics products and face masks
to combat the spread of the H1N1 virus bolstered results in the
quarter.
3M, which makes thousands of products ranging from Scotch tape
and Post-It notes to furnace filters and power lines, said its
restructuring activities in the quarter included reducing its work
force by about 1,600 employees, who were either laid off or opted
for early retirement in the second quarter. Another 1,200 workers
were cut in the first quarter.
"The benefits of these actions are really starting to impact
results," said Patrick Campbell, chief financial officer, during a
conference call with Wall Street analysts Thursday.
The St. Paul, Minn., company raised its full-year earnings
forecast to $4.10 to $4.30 a share, compared with its view in April
for earnings of $3.90 to $4.30 a share. The company also tightened
its 2009 forecast for sales excluding revenue from acquisitions and
currency value fluctuations. The company now sees organic sales
declining by 10% to 13% from 2008. It had previously expected a
decline of 11% to 15%.
Chairman and Chief Executive George Buckley reiterated his
prediction from April that the economic recession in the U.S. is
either at or close to reaching a bottom.
"All the evidence that we've seen continues to support that
view," Buckley said. He added that Asia, particularly China, will
be the first geographic region to recover, while Europe will be the
last to rebound.
Nevertheless, Buckley cautioned that 3M is still facing a
challenging sales environment with no meaningful improvement in
demand yet from several major industrial customers, particularly
the automotive industry and the construction sector. He added there
is a risk that recent upticks in orders could be a "false dawn"
caused by an over-correction in inventory levels earlier this year
by 3M's customers rather than a sustainable recovery in demand.
"The green shoots are certainly there, but we just want to make
sure they're not weeds," Buckley said about the sales-growth
indications he's seen.
Second-quarter sales were lower from a year ago in all of the
company's major business lines and in all of 3M's geographic
markets.
The company's second-quarter earnings fell to $783 million, or
$1.12 a share, from $945 million, or $1.33 a share, a year earlier.
Excluding items such as restructuring-related expenses, earnings
dropped to $1.20 from $1.39. Revenue fell 15% from a year ago to
$5.7 billion.
Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected per-share earnings
of 94 cents on revenue of $5.41 billion.
3M's stock was recently trading up 4.7% at $67.70.
-By Bob Tita, Dow Jones Newswires; 312-750-4129;
robert.tita@dowjones.com
(Melissa Korn and Tess Stynes contributed to this report.)