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Halliburton says it will cut 5,000 to 6,200 jobs in response to plunge in oil prices

February 10, 2015 1:16 PM
The Canadian Press

NEW YORK – Oil and gas drilling services company Halliburton said Tuesday that it will eliminate at least 5,000 jobs in response to falling oil prices.

The Houston company said it will lay off 6.5 to 8 per cent of its staff, which represents 5,005 to 6,160 employees based on its total from the end of 2014.

The company said the cuts will come from all areas of its operations and that the moves are necessary because of the difficult market. Halliburton did not provide any details on the timing of the cuts or what the moves might cost.

Halliburton Co. also cut about 1,000 jobs from its Eastern hemisphere workforce in December. Halliburton said the moves are not related to its pending acquisition of competitor Baker Hughes Inc.

Shares of Halliburton fell $1.13, or 2.6 per cent, to $42.38 in afternoon trading.

Oil prices plunged 60 per cent from June to January, although they have recovered some of those losses recently. In January Halliburton said 2015 will be a difficult year for its industry, saying its customers have cut their capital spending budgets by 25 or 30 per cent in response to lower oil prices.

Halliburton also took $129 million in restructuring charges because of expected business declines.

Halliburton competitor Schlumberger Ltd. said in January that it would eliminate 9,000 jobs in response to falling oil prices. That represented about 7.3 per cent of Schlumberger’s staff.

Also last month, Halliburton takeover target Baker Hughes said it would lay off about 7,000 workers as it braced for a downturn in orders because of the plunge in crude prices. That represented about an 11 per cent cut to the 62,000-plus workers Baker Hughes says it employs worldwide.

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