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3M Tumbles Most Since April After Revealing Subpoena, Job Cuts

3M anticipates pretax savings of as much as $120 million a year from the changes.

3M Tumbles Most Since April After Revealing Subpoena, Job Cuts
3M Co. headquarters stands in St. Paul, Minnesota, U.S. (Photographer: Mike Bradley/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- 3M Co. dropped the most in nine months after revealing it had received a grand jury subpoena in an environmental probe and saying it would cut 1,500 jobs amid slumping markets from car parts to electronics.

The pared workforce is part of a restructuring -- affecting “all business groups, functions and geographies” -- starting this month that will recast reporting lines and consolidate manufacturing oversight, 3M said Tuesday as it reported earnings. The company anticipates pretax savings of as much as $120 million a year from the changes.

The cuts, on top of 2,000 layoffs announced in April, cap a rough year for the maker of everything from Post-it notes to touchscreen displays. 3M trimmed its forecasts multiple times in 2019 because of trade disputes, headwinds in China and flagging demand in the automotive and electronics markets.

3M is positioning itself to capitalize on an eventual rebound, Chief Executive Officer Mike Roman said in an interview. While he acknowledged recent challenges in several markets, “they are stabilizing as we come into the year,” he said.

3M Tumbles Most Since April After Revealing Subpoena, Job Cuts

The shares fell 5.7% to $165.59 at 11:45 a.m. New York after skidding as much as 6%, the most intraday since April 25. 3M fell 7.4% in 2019, the third-worst performance in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

The company received a federal grand jury subpoena last month regarding discharges at an Alabama facility that may not have complied with relevant permits, Roman said in a call with analysts. 3M is cooperating with the investigation, which followed a previously reported company disclosure to authorities, he said.

3M Tumbles Most Since April After Revealing Subpoena, Job Cuts

The St. Paul, Minnesota-based company took a pretax fourth-quarter writedown of $214 million for litigation related to PFAS chemicals. The company, along with chemicals- and materials-making peers such as Chemours Co., faces potentially substantial liability from lawsuits over the harmful effects of the so-called “forever chemicals.”

As part of the latest restructuring, non-U.S. employees will now report to their business groups rather than the international operations organization, which is being eliminated. Julie Bushman, who oversees international operations, will step down April 1, 3M said.

The job cuts, representing about 1.5% of the company’s workforce, prompted a fourth-quarter pretax charge of $134 million, the company said. Total adjusted profit fell to $1.95 a share in the period, trailing the $2.10 average of analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales climbed 2.1% to $8.1 billion.

The quarter was “noisy,” with “unexpectedly large” charges, Deane Dray, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, said in a note to clients.

The transportation and electronics unit continued to weigh on results, with revenue dropping 6.2%. The strain was countered somewhat by the health-care division, a recent bright spot, which boosted sales 25% in the quarter.

China Virus

International corporations are now grappling with a new challenge from the deadly coronavirus that has killed more than 100 people in China and is spreading around the globe. Many companies have restricted employee travel and taken other steps in response.

3M has a particularly direct relationship to the crisis as a top maker of protective face masks. The company is “ramping up production to meet the demand” for respiratory protection and other health-care products needed to combat the virus, Roman said.

3M gave the first peek at its expectations for 2020, saying adjusted profit will be $9.30 to $9.75 a share. The midpoint of the range trailed the $9.60 average of analyst estimates. Organic sales, excluding the impact of currency conversions, will rise no more than 2% this year.

To contact the reporter on this story: Richard Clough in New York at rclough9@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Brendan Case at bcase4@bloomberg.net, Tony Robinson

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