Silicon Valley companies post record profits -- but no job growth

posted by Louise Auerhahn

Monday, April 14, 2008, at

The Mercury News yesterday published their annual feature on the "SV150" -- the top 150 public companies in Silicon Valley for 2007, ranked by worldwide sales. The top 150 companies had a good year. Both sales and profits reached record highs, with sales growing by 10.6% over the year and profits roaring ahead with growth at 35%.

So, what about jobs? It turns out that employment at the SV150 dropped in 2007 by -0.5%, down about 4,700 jobs from 2006, even as sales and profits grew. It was the first year since 2004 that total jobs among the SV150 declined. (This number represents total employment at each firm, not just jobs in Silicon Valley.)

The chart below (adapted from the Merc's chart) shows the top 10 companies that added and eliminated the most jobs, along with their sales trend and profit margin. Some of the job-losing companies performed poorly overall in 2007; it's no surprise that a company like Sanmina-SCI, with falling sales and a negative profits margin, would lay off workers. But what about the top two job eliminators -- Intel and Sun -- both with substantial profit margins and increasing sales? (Continued...)




If these companies created no new net jobs even with record profits, the prospects for job creation in 2008 look dim indeed. Many of the companies that finished strong in 2007 have been struggling in 2008, and the SV150's stock prices have been dropping for the last several months as investors shy away from tech.

While the Merc article still tried to paint a rosy picture, the story has a whiff of desperation about it. The front-page graphic lists four reasons "why Silicon Valley isn't in a recession" and leads with the line "If there's a recession going on, someone forgot to tell Silicon Valley."

Unfortunately, the people who live and work in this economy don't need anyone to tell them that times are tight. Bay Area residents now rate the economy as the region's number one problem, according to a recent poll by the Bay Area Council. Last year the economy wasn't even among the top three concerns. Silicon Valley's slowdown has also drawn the attention of the New York Times, which notes that "Job growth has slowed, start-up companies are hiring and spending more cautiously, and early-stage investors who nurture the start-ups with money and expertise are growing more frugal."


In another worrisome sign for the local economy, chip-maker Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) laid off 1,600 workers last week. One analyst suggested AMD might close its Sunnyvale headquarters altogether by the end of the year. Even the mighty Google recently laid off 300 employees

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