2nd UPDATE: Goodyear Returns To Profit But Shares Tumble
October 28 2009 - 10:23AM
Dow Jones News
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. (GT) reported its first profit in
four quarters but saw its market value fall by a quarter in early
trading.
The tire maker beat analyst expectations amid lower raw
materials costs and job cuts and forecast a return to industry
growth in 2010.
However, its shares fell from the open and were recently trading
down 24.5% at $12.63.
Earnings were $72 million, or 30 cents a share, compared with a
profit of $31 million, or 13 cents a share, for the same period a
year earlier, the Akron, Ohio, company said in a statement
Wednesday. Sales fell 15% to $4.39 billion from $5.17 billion for
the same period a year earlier.
Excluding items, Goodyear reported a profit of 45 cents a share,
exceeding the average analyst estimate of 40 cents a share,
according to a survey by Thomson Reuters.
The largest North American tire maker has struggled with the
downturn in demand as consumers slow their purchases of new
vehicles and delay tire replacement.
The company received a boost from falling oil prices, which
reduced the cost of synthetic rubber and other tire building
products such as carbon black. Goodyear said it saved $207 million
on raw material expenses compared with the same period a year
earlier.
Goodyear has moved aggressively to slash jobs in higher cost
plants. It cut 300 positions during the third quarter which is in
addition to the approximately 5,500 jobs cut in the first half of
the year. The company's full-year target was a reduction of 5,000
jobs.
The company also achieved $195 million in new savings during the
third quarter, for a total of $540 million in the first nine months
of 2009.
Goodyear plans to trim another $215 million in expenses under a
new four-year union contract reached with the United Steelworkers
late last month.
The union deal relaxes work rules, ends the defined pension
benefit plan and leaves the Union City, Tenn., plant in an
"unprotected status," meaning Goodyear could shut the facility.
Lack of auto maker demand for products hurt Goodyear across all
of its segments.
In North America, Goodyear sold 1 million fewer tires as auto
maker sales fell 21% compared with the same period a year earlier.
The company shipped 17.1 million tires as auto makers cut
production during the economic slowdown. Consumer replacement tire
shipments rose less than 1%. Sales in Goodyear's North America unit
fell 15% to $1.86 billion.
The number of tires shipped in the company's Europe, Middle East
and Africa unit fell to 17.8 million from 19.7 million as auto
maker sales dropped 20%. Sales fell 18% to $1.58 billion. Consumer
replacement tire shipments fell 6%.
Latin America's tire volume fell slightly to 5 million from 5.3
million. Auto maker sales dropped 8% and sales fell 16% to $486
million. Consumer replacement tire shipments fell 7%.
-By Jeff Bennett, Dow Jones Newswires;
jeff.bennett@dowjones.com; 248-204-5542