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Thai flooding disrupting hard drive supplies
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 28, 2011


The massive flooding in Thailand is disrupting supplies of hard disk drives (HDDs) for the world's personal computer makers, according to companies and market intelligence firms.

Around 40 percent of all hard disk drives worldwide are produced in Thailand, making it the second-largest exporter of HDDs after China.

John Rydning, research vice president for hard disk drives at technology consultant IDC, estimated that factories in Thailand currently affected by flooding account for some 25 percent of worldwide HDD production.

"There's definitely going to be an impact on HDD customers this quarter and next quarter," Rydning told AFP on Friday. "It's going to take several months for the HDD industry to recover."

Apple chief executive Tim Cook told financial analysts last week he was "virtually certain" that the flooding in Thailand would lead to an overall industry shortage of hard disk drives.

"Like many others, we source many components from Thailand," Cook said during the quarterly earnings call for the manufacturer of the Macintosh computer line.

"There are several factories that are currently not operable and the recovery timeline for these factories is not known at this point," he said.

"It is something that I'm concerned about," Cook said. "How it affects Apple, I'm not sure."

Fang Zhang, an analyst for storage systems at market intelligence and technology consultant IHS iSuppli Corp., said the flooding could cause a 30 percent drop in HDD production in the fourth quarter of the year.

Fang said in a statement that the floods could potentially lead to an HDD supply shortage this quarter that may last into the first quarter of next year.

Before the disaster, IHS iSuppli had forecast production of 176.2 million hard drives during the fourth quarter.

IDC's Rydning stressed that not all of the HDD production in Thailand is being affected by the flooding and said the impact "is mitigated somewhat by HDD inventory that existed entering the flood period.

"Those inventories will help to satisfy some of the HDD requirements of major customers," he said. "But we expect that any inventory available will be depleted, probably in the month of November."

The three-month crisis triggered by unusually heavy monsoon rains has left at least 377 people dead and damaged millions of homes and livelihoods, mostly in northern and central Thailand. Floodwaters are now approaching Bangkok.

Rydning noted that the flooding in Thailand was the second major natural disaster to hit the HDD industry this year, coming on the heels of the earthquake and tsunami in Japan in March.

"But it's a very resilient industry," he said. "It really came out of the third quarter in pretty good shape, not only in terms of meeting demand but having inventories back at levels they were at prior to the earthquake and tsunami."

Apple is just one of the world's computer manufacturers expected to be affected by the tightening of supply of hard drives.

"Amongst all of the PC vendors the pain is going to be felt by everyone -- more so by some of the smaller PC vendors than the bigger ones," Rydning said.

Major PC manufacturers will be better able to weather the crisis because of their access to inventory and their ability to negotiate more strategic supply agreements, he said.

Rydning said the two HDD assembly companies the most heavily impacted by the flooding are Western Digital and Toshiba.

"They're the two companies that have assembly factories in the flood zone," he said.

More than a dozen HDD component suppliers were also affected because "they're congregated and clustered in that same region," he said.

"But it's important to realize that these component suppliers are extremely nimble," he said. "They have factories in other countries as well, in China and the Philippines and Malaysia.

"As quickly as they can they'll transfer production to those factories and try to make up any capacity that's lost due to flooding in Thailand," he said. "They will be very helpful to the HDD vendors to help them recover."

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US tech firms lead list of best multinational workplaces
Washington (AFP) Oct 28, 2011 - US technology companies, led by Microsoft, topped a league table of the world's 25 best multinational workplaces released Thursday by a human resources consultancy.

"Microsoft is at the top of the list because it believes that spreading a trust-based culture is the right way to do business, independent of size, national culture or industry," said Jose Tolovi of Great Place to Work.

Software developer SAS, network storage provider NetApp and search engine Google held down second, third and fourth place, followed by courier FedEx, networking specialist Cisco, Marriott hotels and McDonald's restaurants.

Top among European companies were British drinks group Diageo at 11, Liechtenstein-based building equipment manufacturer Hilti at 15, and Spanish telecoms operator Telefonica at 17.

No Asian companies made the list. "Asia is still a relatively new area for us," Tolovi told AFP by email. "We expect that Asia-based multinationals will show up on future Great Place to Work world's best lists."

American Express, in 12th spot, was the only financial institution to make the grade, at a time when big banks are coming under fire from the Occupy Wall Street movement and its global offshoots.

The rankings were based on opinion surveys of employees in 45 countries about their workplace culture and on questionnaires to human resources departments about their policies and practices.

"These companies are very good examples of profitable businesses built in conjunction with their employees and not in spite of them," said Tolovi, who is global chief executive of Great Place to Work.

While Great Place to Work, based in San Francisco, advises corporations on how to become better workplaces, Tolovi said its rankings are not limited to its clients.



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TRADE WARS
US tech firms lead list of best multinational workplaces
Washington (AFP) Oct 27, 2011
US technology companies, led by Microsoft, topped a league table of the world's 25 best multinational workplaces released Thursday by a New York-based human resources consultancy. "Microsoft is at the top of the list because it believes that spreading a trust-based culture is the right way to do business, independent of size, national culture or industry," said Jose Tolovi of Great Place to ... read more


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