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February 5, 2009 5:26 AM PST

Lenovo CEO steps down

by Eileen Yu
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Lenovo President and CEO William Amelio resigned Thursday after the Chinese PC maker reported a nearly $97 million loss for its fiscal third quarter.

Yang Yuanqing has relinquished his role as chairman to replace Amelio as CEO, effective Thursday, the company said in a statement filed with Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing. Yang will remain as an executive director and had served as the company's CEO until April 2005 when he was appointed board chairman.

William Amelio

(Credit: Lenovo)

The announcement comes at the end of Amelio's three-year contract with the company, Lenovo said, adding that Amelio will serve as a special adviser until September 30.

In a separate filing with the Hong Kong exchange, Lenovo reported losses of $96.7 million in its fiscal third quarter that ended December 31. That compares with $172.6 million profit in the same quarter a year earlier.

The PC maker said a market shift toward entry-level PCs, aggressive pricing, and currency fluctuations had affected Lenovo's gross margin, which dipped to 9.8 percent year over year. Its gross profit fell 48 percent to $354 million.

Coupled with a decline in sales, the pressure on margins resulted in the quarter's loss, the company said.

According to figures from IDC, the Asia-Pacific PC market registered its first year-over-year decline in a decade, when unit shipments in the final quarter of 2008 dipped by 5 percent to 17.2 million.

A former Dell Computer executive, Amelio had replaced previous Lenovo CEO Stephen Ward in December 2005--a year after the Chinese company purchased IBM's PC group.

Amelio's resignation follows Lenovo's announcement last month of 11 percent layoffs, or 2,500 jobs, encompassing positions in management and support functions. Under the restructuring, Lenovo said its Greater China, Asia-Pacific, and Russia operations will be consolidated into a single business unit.

The cost-cutting exercise is expected to help the company achieve savings of $300 million annually, with cost reductions across "nearly every business unit," a company representative said in an earlier interview with ZDNet Asia.

In the filing with the Hong Kong stock exchange, Lenovo said it will "continue to adjust its business model" in line with the market trend toward entry-level PCs. The company also said the next several quarters will remain "very challenging" for Lenovo and the overall PC industry.

Eileen Yu of ZDNet Asia reports from Singapore.

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by globalist_agenda February 5, 2009 9:31 AM PST
Horrible dated 20 year old styling. Walk into a computer store like Stanford where you see Lenovo computers side by side with Appples. It's like looking at a Model-T next to a Ferrari. The styling alone has got to be losing Lenovo sales. Dell has had similarly boring styles for too long. Maybe that's the Amelio connection.
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by Commander_Spock February 5, 2009 10:40 AM PST
Perhaps, if they had thrown in a few "IBM's OS/2 Warp Operating Systems" on dem ("20 year old styling" BM PCs) on some of their machines things might have been better for Lenovo.
by sanenazok February 5, 2009 2:54 PM PST
@globalist: Yeah, it's just like a Model T and a Ferarri, until you realize that the Model-T uses exactly the same parts except has a different look. Lenovo isn't selling as many machines because they sell to businesses which are in a downturn. Most businesses want the sturdy conservative look of Lenovo. Also, I agree completely with Spock, OS/2 is exactly what the doctor ordered. Maybe the redspine edition so that it's fully compatible with top of the line 16-bit Windows 3.1 apps that don't require hardware access.
by gggg sssss February 5, 2009 3:09 PM PST
The fact is that every body would rather have a Dell than something owned by the govt of China. Hope they sink into the sea.
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by Fisherlin July 27, 2009 5:57 PM PDT
Hi,

what is your meaning for "they"? The government of China, the people of China, or Lenovo corporation. It is obvious that your hope will be not realized.

As an american, you lost your beliefe, which is for freedom, respect, human right.

we can forget u due to your poor eduction level, and your humble spirit.
by Fisherlin July 27, 2009 6:02 PM PDT
The "forget" should be "forgive".
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