Thomson Reuters Corp. third-quarter earnings beat analyst expectations on Tuesday and the company said it would cut jobs worldwide, taking a fourth-quarter charge of $200 million to $250 million to streamline its business.
Thomson Reuters shares gained more than 4 percent in both New York and Toronto.
The restructuring, affecting about 2,000 jobs or 4 percent of its workforce, will take place across 39 countries and 150 locations and would mainly affect the Financial & Risk business and the Enterprise, Technology & Operations Group, the news and information company said.
The company employs about 48,000 people globally and about 7,000 in the Twin Cities. It was unclear how the restructuring would affect its local operations, chiefly in Eagan.
The changes come as part of its multiyear effort to streamline its businesses, chief executive Jim Smith said in an interview.
"It's about simplification and taking out bureaucracy and taking out layers all of which have added complexity and slowed us down," he said. "These actions are not driven by any reaction to market conditions or in any way coming on the back of underperformance."
Thomson Reuters is the parent of Reuters News, which competes for financial customers with Bloomberg LP as well as News Corp.'s Dow Jones unit. There will be no decline in head count in the Reuters newsroom, according to a memo from Smith to employees on Tuesday.
The company reported slightly lower third-quarter net earnings. Net income was $286 million or 36 cents per share, compared with $293 million or 36 cents per share, a year earlier.