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Denmark’s Maersk to slash 3,500 jobs as revenues plunge

Danish shipping giant Maersk said on Friday it would slash 3,500 jobs as net profit and revenue plunged in the third quarter due to a sharp fall in freight rates.

Denmark's Maersk to slash 3,500 jobs as revenues plunge
Maersk HQ in Copenhagen. The freight giant is to cut thousands of jobs globally. Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

Maersk’s net profit nosedived to $521 million between July and September against $8.9 billion a year earlier.

“Our industry is facing a new normal with subdued demand, prices back in line with historical levels and inflationary pressure on our cost base,” CEO
Vincent Clerc said.

The company had already begun to cut costs, reducing staff levels from 110,000 at the start of 2023 “to around 103,500 today.”

“Maersk is intensifying those measures and today introduce plans to further decrease the workforce by 3,500 positions, with up to 2,500 to be carried out
in the coming months and the remaining to extend into 2024,” the company said.

“This will reduce the global workforce to below 100,000 positions,” it added.

Revenue for the period fell to $12.1 billion, compared to $22.8 billion a year earlier, especially in its shipping business.

“Ocean results have reached break-even levels due to continuing challenging market conditions resulting in substantially lower freight rates compared to the abnormally high rates in 2022,” the company said in its quarterly earnings report.

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LEGO

Denmark’s Lego stacks up profit as it gains market share

Lego, the world's largest toy maker, said on Wednesday that its net profit grew 16 percent in the first half of the year as it gained ground in a slowing market.

Denmark's Lego stacks up profit as it gains market share

The Danish company said its first-half sales rose 13 percent to 31 billion kroner ($4.6 billion) while net profit rose to 6 billion kroner.

“This growth has been driven by the Lego Group taking a higher share,” chief executive Niels Christiansen said in an interview with AFP.

The group, best known for its plastic bricks and whose name is a contraction of “play well” in Danish (“Leg godt”), launched around 300 new products during the first half, while continuing to see higher revenue from franchises such as Star Wars and Harry Potter.

The company also recently announced that it was forming a partnership with Nike to develop products and content together.

Sales rose the strongest in Europe and North America, but were slower in China.

“We will continue to build the Lego brand in China, to open stores. The potential is there,” Christiansen said.

The company is controlled by the descendants of its founder and is not quoted on the stock market.

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