Ericsson Books $1.8 Billion In Charges Under Restructuring

 | Jan 17, 2018 04:28AM ET

In the name of turning its business around, Ericsson (BS:ERICAs) (NASDAQ:ERIC) is undertaking another colossal writedown by booking charges roughly amounting to a whopping $1.8 billion. This round of charges is the latest in a series of writedowns that Ericsson has undertaken over the past couple of years, amounting to more than $5 billion.

After an impairment testing, this Swedish telecommunications-equipment maker has decided to write off assets worth SEK 14.2 billion ($1.77 billion), as it struggles to rebuild itself amid tepid sales and vicious competition from Chinese rivals. Another SEK 1 billion ($125 million) non-cash charge will be booked due to the recent U.S. tax reform. Ericsson said that the charges would not impact cash flow, but would affect operating profit in the upcoming fourth-quarter results.

The writedowns primarily affect two of its businesses — digital services and the cloud computing and media unit.

In recent years, the company has had a dramatic fall from grace, marked with repeated earnings misses, eroding profitability and precipitous revenue decline. The year 2016 was a particularly harrowing year for Ericsson, a year in which the company ousted CEO Hans Vestberg, and stunned investors with a massive profit warning.

Tough market conditions, a sustained slump in its core networks business and soft mobile broadband demand have significantly dented Ericsson’s performance in the past couple of years. The beleaguered infrastructure giant’s eroding revenues and multiple profits warnings have left investors high and dry. The stock has plunged 20.1% in the past couple of years, in contrast to the industry ’s gain of 7.6%.

However, the company’s shares have recovered somewhat in the recent months, offering the first tentative signs of recovery. In the past six months, Ericsson has gone up 14.4%, higher than the industry’s ascent of 10.4%.