DOW JONES NEWSWIRES 
 

Cooper Industries Ltd.'s (CBE) fourth-quarter net income dropped 38% on restructuring charges as the electrical products and tool manufacturer expanded planned job cuts and projected 2009 results below analysts expectations.

For 2009, the company sees earnings from continuing operations of $2.45 to $2.80 a share on a 10% to 15% decline in revenue. Analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters projected earnings of $2.87 a share on a 7% revenue drop to $6.1 billion. Cooper also projected first-quarter earnings of 45 cents to 65 cents on a revenue decline of 10% to 15%; analysts expected 68 cents and a 6% sales drop to $1.45 billion.

The company now expects to shed 2,200 jobs, not the 1,000 announced during the fourth quarter. Cooper has some 31,000 employees.

Meanwhile, Cooper reported net income of $111.1 million, or 65 cents a share, down from $179.3 million, or 98 cents, a year earlier.

Excluding restructuring charges and write-downs in the latest quarter and gains in the prior-year period, earnings rose to 84 cents from 83 cents. Cooper last month cut its earnings guidance to70 cents to 80 cents a share.

Revenue fell 1% to $1.52 billion, in line with analysts' estimate.

Revenue in the company's electrical products segment, its largest business, climbed 3%, helped by acquisitions, as profits slid 9% amid the restructuring.

But Cooper should benefit from long-term trends, such as the need for utilities to provide better reliability and productivity through energy-demand management, the increasing need for electrical products to become more energy efficient and an expected increase in infrastructure projects.

Cooper's shares, which are down about 45% in the past five months, closed Monday at $27.14. Shares were not active premarket.

-By Katherine Wegert and Kathy Shwiff, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5975; Kathy.Shwiff@dowjones.com

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