Tag Archives: Lay

BlackRock plans to lay off 500 workers after last year’s market downturn

BlackRock (BLK), the world’s largest asset manager, will lay off about 500 employees — or roughly 3% of its workforce — according to an internal email seen by Yahoo Finance.

The investment giant joins a growing number of Wall Street firms trimming their headcount after last year’s market rout and as Corporate America ramps up hiring freezes and job cuts.

“This week, after meaningful headcount growth in recent years, we are making some changes to the size and shape of our workforce,” CEO Larry Fink and BlackRock president Rob Kapito said in a memo sent to staff on Wednesday. “As a result of these steps, about 500 (or less than 3%) of our colleagues will be leaving BlackRock as we reallocate resources to our most critical growth opportunities.”

Chairman and CEO, BlackRock, Larry Fink, speaks during the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) meeting in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., September 19, 2022. REUTERS/David ‘Dee’ Delgado

BlackRock grew its workforce by roughly 8% in 2022 and by 22% across the past three years, Fink and Kapito said in their message. After the departures, headcount at the asset manager will remain 5% higher than one year ago.

The firm did not immediately indicate in which of its departments job cuts would occur. BlackRock employed 19,900 people globally across 30 countries as of Sept. 30, according to its latest quarterly filing.

BlackRock has roughly $8 trillion in assets under management, down from a peak of $10 trillion at the beginning of 2022.

“Both equity and fixed income markets are down significantly in 2022, and we and our clients are continuing to contend with market volatility and uncertainty,” the email said.

Last year, global stocks and bonds closed out their worst year since the financial crisis in 2008 as central bank rushed to tame historic inflation with their most aggressive bout of interest rate hikes in decades and as war in Ukraine battered financial markets.

The benchmark S&P 500 tumbled 19.4% in 2022, while the yield on the 10-year Treasury rose from around 1.5% at the beginning of 2022 to settle at 3.88% on the last trading day of the year.

“The uncertainty around us makes it more important than ever that we stay ahead of changes in the market and focus on delivering for our clients,” the message from Fink and Kapito said.

BlackRock’s announcement comes as investment bank Goldman Sachs prepares to cut thousands of jobs this week. Goldman is expected to axe up to 3,200 jobs across the bank, according to a source familiar with the matter.

Alexandra Semenova is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter @alexandraandnyc

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Meghan Markle ‘not welcome’ at Balmoral as Queen lay dying: Harry

Meghan Markle was banned from Balmoral by King Charles as Queen Elizabeth lay dying last year, Prince Harry confirmed in his bombshell new memoir, “Spare.”

Harry quickly defended Markle, telling his dad, “Don’t ever speak about my wife that way,” according to reports on the tome, which was accidentally released early in Spain.

“Charles told Harry that it wasn’t right or appropriate for Meghan to be in Balmoral at such a deeply sad time,’ a source said, according to the Daily Mail.

King Charles banned Meghan Markle from Balmoral as Queen Elizabeth was dying last year, according to Prince Harry’s memoir, “Spare.”
Tim Rooke/REX/Shutterstock

‘It was pointed out to him that Kate [Middleton] was not going and that the numbers really should be limited to the very closest family.”

Harry, 38, and Meghan, 41, were in London in September when the Queen’s health rapidly went downhill at Balmoral, her home in Scotland.

Harry quickly defended Markle, telling his dad, “Don’t ever speak about my wife that way,” according to his memoir.
i-Images / Polaris
King Charles and Prince William during Queen Elizabeth’s funeral.
REUTERS

Many of the senior royals immediately began planning to fly to Balmoral, including Prince William, along with Andrew, Edward, and his wife Sophie, the Daily Mail reported Saturday.

About 90 minutes after Buckingham Palace announced the Queen’s ill health, a rep for Harry and Meghan said they both would be traveling to Scotland — but hours later, a clarification was made that Harry would be going it alone.

‘It was pointed out to him [Prince Harry] that Kate [Middleton] was not going and that the numbers really should be limited to the very closest family.”
Getty Images

Harry says in his book that during that window of time, he was told by his father not to bring Meghan. Harry then flew by private jet to Scotland and arrived after the Queen had already died.

In addition, Harry writes in “Spare” that he learned of the Queen’s death after checking the BBC news website. 

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Amazon will lay off more than 18,000 workers


New York
CNN
 — 

Amazon says it plans to lay off more than 18,000 employees as the global economic outlook continues to worsen.

Several teams will be affected, including the human resources department and Amazon Stores, according to a memo from CEO Andy Jassy shared with employees.

“Companies that last a long time go through different phases. They’re not in heavy people expansion mode every year,” he said.

Jassy had said in November that job cuts at the e-commerce giant would continue into early 2023. Multiple outlets reported in the fall that Amazon had planned to cut around 10,000 employees.

Amazon and other tech firms significantly ramped up hiring over the past couple of years as the pandemic shifted consumers’ habits toward e-commerce.

Now, many of these seemingly untouchable tech companies are experiencing whiplash and laying off thousands of workers as people return to pre-pandemic habits and macroeconomic conditions deteriorate.

Jassy, in his memo, said Amazon’s executives recently met to determine how to slim down the company and prioritize “what matters most to customers and the long-term health of our businesses.”

“This year’s review has been more difficult given the uncertain economy and that we’ve hired rapidly over the last several years,” he added.

The layoffs will help Amazon pursue long-term opportunities with a stronger cost structure, Jassy said. But he called the cuts a “difficult decision,” noting he is “deeply aware that these role eliminations are difficult for people, and we don’t take these decisions lightly or underestimate how much they might affect the lives of those who are impacted.”

The company will start informing affected staff from January 18, he added.

Amazon’s business initially boomed during the pandemic, as consumers relied on online shopping for just about everything.

This year, however, the company is confronting a shift back to in-person shopping as well as surging inflation that has sharply reduced consumers’ demand.

In October, Amazon disappointed Wall Street with a holiday season forecast that woefully missed analysts’ expectations. The company’s stock fell about 50% last year.

Like Jassy, a number of other tech founders and CEOs have since admitted they failed to accurately gauge pandemic demand.

Facebook parent Meta recently announced 11,000 job cuts, the largest in the company’s history. Twitter also announced widespread job cuts after Elon Musk bought the company for $44 billion.

Salesforce this week said it would cut 10% of its staff.

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Self-driving truck company TuSimple to lay off hundreds days before Christmas: report

Global self-driving trucking company TuSimple Holdings Inc. is reportedly set to lay off at least 700 employees next week, just before the Christmas holiday.

The San Diego-based tech company, which has operations in Arizona, Texas and China, has about 1,430 full-time employees. TuSimple executives are looking to cut that staff size by roughly half as the company scales back its efforts to build and test autonomous truck-driving systems, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

The layoffs would come at a tumultuous time for the company, which underwent a change of leadership in October after reports revealed that the FBI, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. (CFIUS) were each investigating TuSimple’s ties to the Chinese startup Hydron Inc.

The job cuts are expected to be announced Tuesday. The Journal reported that TuSimple will “significantly” scale back its efforts to build self-driving systems and test self-driving trucks on public roads in Arizona and Texas. “As part of the downsizing, much of TuSimple’s operation in Tucson, Ariz., where it does a lot of its test driving, will be eliminated, and the team that works on the algorithms for the self-driving software will be pared back significantly,” the report said. 

FEDERAL SAFETY AGENCY PROBING CRUISE AUTONOMOUS VEHICLE INCIDENTS IN SAN FRANCISCO

A TuSimple fleet of self-driving trucks. (TuSimple)

Ticker Security Last Change Change %
TSP TUSIMPLE HOLDINGS INC. 1.54 -0.06 -3.75%

TuSimple will shift focus to improving a software product that matches self-driving trucks with shippers that have freight to haul, in order to offer freight transport at a lower cost than human-driven trucks, people familiar with the company’s plans said. 

FOX Business reached out to TuSimple for comment but did not receive a response. 

Employees have been preparing for layoffs. TuSimple CEO Cheng Lu, who previously led the company and returned in November, emailed staff earlier this month announcing that management was reviewing “our people expenses, the biggest part of our cash burn,” the journal reported. 

Lu told the Journal that he intends “to right the ship, and this includes ensuring the company is capital efficient.”

FORD, CHINSE FIRM MAY BUILD US BATTERY PLANT: REPORT

A TuSimple self-driving truck. The company reportedly plans to lay off about half its workforce before Christmas 2022.  (TuSimple)

“TuSimple is cutting costs and scaling back its ambitions as it reels from a string of crises this year, including a crash of one of its self-driving trucks in April, the loss of key business partnerships, two CEO changes, a plummeting stock price and concurrent government investigations,” the report said.

The company is losing money. TuSimple reported only $4.9 million in revenue and $220.5 million in losses for the first half of 2022, according to the report. Its partnerships with other firms including Navistar International Corp. and McLane Company Inc., have also fallen apart amid the controversies.

“McLane is aware of the recent leadership, operational and route changes at TuSimple and is in communication with their team. We are in the process of assessing the business relationship with TuSimple and will determine the next course of action in due time,” McLane’s chief administrative officer Larry Parsons told the Journal.

PEDESTRIAN RUNS IN FRONT OF CAR IN SAN FRANCISCO: SEE WHAT HAPPENS

Xiaodi Hou, CEO, TuSimple speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt 2022 on Oct. 19, 2022, in San Francisco. (Kelly Sullivan/Getty Images for TechCrunch / Getty Images)

In October, TuSimple fired its chief executive and co-founder, Xiaodi Hou, after an internal board investigation found that Hou had shared confidential information with Hydron, a Chinese trucking startup that operates mostly in China and is funded by Chinese investors. Following his ouster, Hou recruited TuSimple co-founder and Hydron founder Mo Chen to strike back at the board, firing them. Together they brought back Lu to run the company, the Journal reported. 

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The company is now working to comply with U.S. regulators. 

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Stellantis to close Illinois plant, lay off more than 1,000 workers, citing rising costs for EVs


New York
CNN
 — 

Stellantis is shuttering its Illinois plant in February resulting in indefinite layoffs for 1,350 employees, the company said in a statement, citing increasing costs in the electric vehicle market.

“Our industry has been adversely affected by a multitude of factors like the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic and the global microchip shortage, but the most impactful challenge is the increasing cost related to the electrification of the automotive market,” Stellantis said in a statement. The company said it is taking steps “stabilize production” and “improve efficiency” in its North American facilities.

The European carmaker said it will “idle” the assembly plant in Belvidere, Illinois on February 23 and said the layoffs are expected to exceed six months. Stellantis, the parent company of Chrysler, Dodge and Jeep, said it will “make every effort” to place the laid off employees in open positions and is looking for other opportunities to repurpose the Belvidere factory.

The United Auto Workers International Union said on Facebook it was “deeply angered” by the decision. The group’s president Ray Curry said it is “unacceptable” Stellantis isn’t allocating new products to the plant.

The Illinois plant builds the Jeep Cherokee and will continue to manufacture the vehicle until the factory closes, but the company had no comment about the future of that make and model.

“This is an important vehicle in the lineup, and we remain committed long term to this mid-size SUV segment,” Jodi Tinson, a Stellantis spokesperson, said in a statement.

In October, the company said its joint venture producing Jeep vehicles in China is filing for bankruptcy.

Last July, Stellantis made a $35.5 billion commitment to electric vehicles by the end of 2025 to expand its portfolio. The company planned for 70% of its European sales and 40% of its US sales to either be fully electric or plug-in hybrid vehicles within four years, CEO Carlos Tavares said.

– Peter Valdes-Dapena contributed to this report.

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PepsiCo to lay off ‘hundreds’ in snack and beverage divisions: WSJ

PepsiCo Inc.
PEP,
-1.38%
is laying off “hundreds” of workers at the headquarters of its North American snacks and beverages divisions, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday, citing people familiar with the matter. Hundreds of jobs will be eliminated, one of the people told the newspaper. In a memo to staff viewed by the Journal, PepsiCo told employees that the goal was to simplify the organization so it can operate “more efficiently.” Shares of Pepsi were flat in the extended session Monday after ending the regular trading day down 1.4%. Several major tech companies, including Amazon.com Inc.
AMZN,
-3.31%
and Google parent Alphabet Inc.
GOOGL,
-0.96%
GOOG,
-0.95%
are conducting or planning layoffs or have embarked on hiring freezes, and some retailers such as Walmart.com
WMT,
-1.02%
have followed suit.

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Amazon to lay off thousands of employees -source

Nov 14 (Reuters) – Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) is planning to lay off around 10,000 employees in corporate and technology roles beginning this week, a person familiar with the matter said on Monday, in what would amount to its biggest such reduction to date.

The cuts, earlier reported by the New York Times, would represent about 3% of Amazon’s corporate staff. The exact number may vary as businesses within Amazon review their priorities, the source told Reuters.

The online retailer plans to eliminate jobs in its devices organization, which makes voice-controlled “Alexa” gadgets and home-security cameras, as well as in its human-resources and retail divisions, the person said. Amazon’s time frame for informing staff remained unclear.

The source attributed the reduction to the uncertain macroeconomic environment faced by Amazon and other companies.

The news follows a wave of layoffs across the technology sector, which is wary of recession after years of rapid hiring. Just last week, Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc (META.O) said it would cut more than 11,000 jobs, or 13% of its workforce, to rein in costs.

The Amazon logo is seen outside its JFK8 distribution center in Staten Island, New York, U.S. November 25, 2020. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo

Seattle-based Amazon is predicting a slowdown in sales growth for the typically lucrative holiday season.

On a call with reporters last month, Chief Financial Officer Brian Olsavsky said the company saw signs of tighter household budgets for shopping, and it continued to wrestle with high inflation and energy costs.

It since has said it would freeze incremental corporate hiring for several months.

Amazon’s devices unit in some recent years has posted an annual operating loss of more than $5 billion, the Wall Street Journal reported last week. The company has weighed whether to focus on new capabilities for Alexa when some customers use the voice assistant for just a few tasks, the report said.

Company-wide, taking warehouse and transportation jobs into account, which made Amazon’s headcount more than 1.5 million as of Sept. 30, the planned cuts amounted to less than 1% of the retailer’s workforce.

Shares of Amazon have lost more than 40% of their value this year. They were down 1.1% at $99.67 on Monday afternoon.

Reporting by Jeffrey Dastin in Palo Alto, Calif., and Tiyashi Datta and Nivedita Balu in Bengaluru
Editing by Arun Koyyur and Matthew Lewis

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Meta to lay off 11,000 employees, as Zuckerberg says he is ‘accountable for missteps’


New York
CNN Business
 — 

Facebook parent company Meta on Wednesday said it is laying off 11,000 employees, marking the most significant job cuts in the tech giant’s history.

The job cuts come as Meta confronts a range of challenges to its core business and makes an uncertain and costly bet on pivoting to the metaverse. It also comes amid a spate of layoffs at other tech firms in recent months as the high-flying sector reacts to high inflation, rising interest rates and fears of a looming recession.

“Today I’m sharing some of the most difficult changes we’ve made in Meta’s history,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote in a blog post to employees. “I’ve decided to reduce the size of our team by about 13% and let more than 11,000 of our talented employees go.”

The job cuts will impact many corners of the company, but Meta’s recruiting team will be hit particularly hard as “we’re planning to hire fewer people next year,” Zuckerberg said in the post. He added that a hiring freeze would be extended until the first quarter, with few exceptions.

In September, Meta had a headcount of more than 87,000, per a September SEC filing.

Meta’s core ad sales business has been hit by privacy changes implemented by Apple, advertisers tightening budgets and heightened competition from newer rivals like TikTok. Meanwhile, Meta has been spending billions to build a future version of the internet, dubbed the metaverse, that likely remains years away from widespread acceptance.

Last month, the company posted its second quarterly revenue decline and said that its profit was cut in half from the prior year. Once valued at more than $1 trillion last year, Meta’s market value has since plunged to around $250 billion.

“I want to take accountability for these decisions and for how we got here,” Zuckerberg wrote in his post Wednesday. “I know this is tough for everyone, and I’m especially sorry to those impacted.”

Meta is not alone in feeling the pain of a market downturn. The tech sector has been facing a dizzying reality check as inflation, rising interest rates and more macroeconomic headwinds have led to a stunning shift in spending for an industry that only grew more dominant as consumers shifted more of their lives online during the pandemic.

“At the start of Covid, the world rapidly moved online and the surge of e-commerce led to outsized revenue growth,” Zuckerberg wrote Wednesday. “Many people predicted this would be a permanent acceleration that would continue even after the pandemic ended. I did too, so I made the decision to significantly increase our investments. Unfortunately, this did not play out the way I expected.”

“I got this wrong, and I take responsibility for that,” he added.

Meta’s headcount in September was nearly twice the 48,268 staffers it had at the start of the pandemic in March of 2020.

A handful of tech companies have announced hiring freezes or job cuts in recent months, often after having seen rapid growth during the pandemic. Last week, rideshare company Lyft said it was axing 13% of employees, and payment-processing firm Stripe said it was cutting 14% of its staff. The same day, e-commerce giant Amazon said it was implementing a pause on corporate hiring.

Also last week, Facebook-rival Twitter announced mass layoffs impacting roles across the company as its new owner, Elon Musk, took the helm.

In addition to the layoffs, Zuckerberg said the company expects to “roll out more cost-cutting changes” in the coming months. Meta, which like other tech giants is known for its vast, perk-filled offices, is rethinking its real estate needs, he said, and “transitioning to desk sharing for people who already spend most of their time outside the office.”

“Overall,” he said, “this will add up to a meaningful cultural shift in how we operate.”

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Lyft to Lay Off About 700 Employees in Second Round of Job Cuts

Lyft Inc.

LYFT -0.61%

said it is cutting 13% of staff, or nearly 700 jobs, the latest technology company to say it needed to reduce costs ahead of choppy economic conditions.

Confirming an earlier report by The Wall Street Journal, Lyft co-founders

John Zimmer

and

Logan Green

announced the cuts to staff Thursday. “There are several challenges playing out across the economy. We’re facing a probable recession sometime in the next year and ride-share insurance costs are going up,” they wrote in the memo viewed by the Journal.

“We worked hard to bring down costs this summer: we slowed, then froze hiring; cut spending; and paused less-critical initiatives. Still, Lyft has to become leaner, which requires us to part with incredible team members,” they added.

The ride-hailing company has more than 5,000 employees, which don’t include its drivers. Lyft laid off 60 people, or under 2% of its workforce, in July. In May, it said it planned to slow hiring and reduce the budgets of some of its departments.

Technology companies large and small have been announcing hiring freezes or staffing cuts this year after many hired at a breakneck speed through the pandemic and now confront a tougher economic outlook. This week,

Amazon.com Inc.

told employees it is pausing corporate hiring and payments startup Stripe Inc. said Thursday that it is laying off about 14% of its employees. Both blamed the harsh economic climate for their decisions.

San Francisco-based Lyft also said that it would sell its vehicle service centers and that most of that team is expected to receive roles from the acquiring company, which it didn’t name. Lyft has centers in nine markets.

The company maintained its third quarter and 2024 earnings outlook but said it expects to incur $27 million to $32 million in restructuring related to Thursday’s layoffs in this year’s fourth quarter. The company posts third-quarter results Monday.

Lyft shares have underperformed the broader market over the past 12 months. Through Wednesday’s close, its stock was down 71% from a year ago while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index was down 33%.

Rival

Uber Technologies Inc.’s

diversified business, which includes global rides operations and a food-delivery arm that became its lifeline during the pandemic, has fared better with Wall Street. Its stock is down about 37% in the past year.

In May, Uber said it would slow hiring. Both companies have struggled with a driver shortage over the past year, an imbalance that has pushed ride fares to record highs. Uber said active drivers and riders returned to prepandemic levels for the first time in this year’s third quarter.

Write to Preetika Rana at preetika.rana@wsj.com and Emily Glazer at emily.glazer@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Han Lay: Myanmar beauty queen who decried junta seeks asylum in Canada

A Myanmar beauty queen who publicly criticized her country’s military junta, and later became stranded at the Bangkok airport, arrived Wednesday in Canada, where she is seeking asylum.

Thaw Nandar Aung, also known as Han Lay, landed in Toronto and said she was going to live on Prince Edward Island, a province off Canada’s Atlantic coast, Reuters reported. It was unclear what her status was, but Han Lay, 23, told Radio Free Asia she was granted permission to stay with the help of Canadian officials and the U.N. refugee agency.

“Everything happened so fast, and I only have a few pieces of clothing,” she told the broadcaster before departing for Canada. But, she said, “I have spoken out for Myanmar wherever I go. Since Canada is a safe place for me, I will have more opportunities to speak out on the issue.”

Han Lay first garnered worldwide attention last year when, at the Miss Grand International beauty pageant in Thailand, she used her time on the stage to speak out against Myanmar’s military rulers.

At the time, the junta, known as the Tatmadaw, had just seized power and anti-military protests were raging. The military and police confronted demonstrators with deadly force. On one particularly bloody day, March 27, security forces killed over 160 protesters.

How Myanmar’s military terrorized its people

That same day, Han Lay was on a stage in Bangkok wearing a traditional white gown as one of 20 finalists in the pageant.

“Today in my country, Myanmar, while I am going to be on this stage, there are so many people dying; more than 100 people died today,” she told the audience and cameras, wiping away tears. “I am deeply sorry for all the people who have lost their lives.”

“Every citizen of the world wants the prosperity of their country and the peaceful environment,” she added. “In doing so, the leaders involved should not use their power and selfishness.”

The speech put Han Lay in the spotlight and also drew condemnation and threats on social media, she said. After the pageant, she stayed in Thailand to avoid potential arrest in her home country, where thousands have been injured or killed since the military takeover. Thousands more are in prison, and in July the military junta executed four pro-democracy activists, including two of the resistance’s most prominent leaders.

But on Sept. 21, after a brief trip to Vietnam, Han Lay was denied entry at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport. Thai officials said her Myanmar-issued travel documents were invalid, Reuters reported. She wrote on Facebook the next day that Myanmar police officials were also at the airport and had attempted to reach out to her.

As the world moves on, Myanmar confronts a mounting, hidden toll

“I will refuse to meet with the Myanmar police by using my human right,” she wrote, adding that she had requested help from Thai authorities and the United Nations.

According to Human Rights Watch, the move was “a deliberate political act by the junta to make her stateless.”

“There is no doubt that what transpired was a trap to try to force Han Lay to return to Myanmar, where she would have faced immediate arrest, likely abuse in detention, and imprisonment,” the group’s deputy Asia director, Phil Robertson, said in a statement Wednesday.

He said that governments should be “on guard” against attempts by Myanmar’s military junta to use “similar tactics against overseas dissidents traveling on Myanmar passports in the future.”

“This is hardly the first time repressive Burmese military dictatorships have sought to use their control over Myanmar passports as a weapon against their own people’s rights to travel internationally,” Robertson said.

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