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Wall Street Shocked as Tech Giant Axes 10,000 Jobs

At a Glance

  • Major technology company announces 10,000 layoffs despite posting record quarterly revenue
  • Workforce reduction affects 8% of global staff across all divisions
  • Stock surged 12% in after-hours trading following cost-cutting announcement
  • Why it matters: Massive job cuts signal broader tech industry shift from growth-at-any-cost to profit-focused strategies

The technology sector delivered another jolt to markets as a dominant firm revealed plans to slash 10,000 positions in the coming months. The announcement came just hours after the company reported $45.2 billion in quarterly revenue, beating analyst expectations by $2.1 billion.

Record Revenue, Record Layoffs

Executives told investors the job reductions would generate $3.5 billion in annual cost savings. The company expects to complete most layoffs by March 31, 2025, with severance packages averaging 16 weeks of pay plus extended healthcare benefits.

“We are making difficult but necessary decisions to position ourselves for sustainable growth,” said Sarah Chen, the company’s Chief Executive Officer. “These actions will allow us to invest more aggressively in artificial intelligence and cloud infrastructure.”

The workforce reduction represents the largest in the company’s 47-year history. Previous layoffs in 2009 and 2020 each affected fewer than 3,000 employees.

Market Reaction Defies Logic

Investors cheered the cost-cutting move, driving shares up 12% in extended trading. The stock had already gained 34% year-to-date prior to the announcement.

Michael Rodriguez, portfolio manager at a major investment firm, explained the paradox: “Markets reward efficiency over expansion in the current environment. Every dollar saved on payroll is viewed as a dollar available for shareholder returns.”

The company’s market capitalization increased by $85 billion within two hours of the announcement.

Impact Across Divisions

Layoffs will hit every division proportionally:

  • Cloud services: 3,200 positions
  • Consumer products: 2,800 positions
  • Enterprise software: 2,400 positions
  • Research & development: 1,600 positions

The company’s Seattle headquarters will lose approximately 4,000 jobs, while international offices account for the remaining 6,000.

Severance Details Revealed

Affected employees receive:

  • 16 weeks base salary minimum
  • 2 weeks additional pay per year of service
  • Healthcare coverage through December 2025
  • Accelerated stock vesting
  • Outplacement services for 6 months

The total cost of severance and related charges will reach $2.8 billion, the company disclosed.

Industry-Wide Trend Accelerates

This marks the third major tech layoff announcement in two weeks. Combined, technology companies have announced 45,000 job cuts since January 1.

“The era of unlimited growth and hiring is definitively over,” stated Jennifer Liu, technology analyst at a research firm. “These companies optimized for expansion during the pandemic and are now rightsizing for economic reality.”

Financial Projections Raised

Company executives increased full-year profit forecasts by 18% following the announcement. Operating margins are expected to expand from 28% to 35% within two quarters.

David Park, Chief Financial Officer, told analysts: “We can maintain all key initiatives while operating more efficiently. The savings will fall directly to our bottom line.”

Employee Morale Concerns

Current employees expressed anxiety about future cuts. An internal survey conducted last week showed 67% of remaining staff are actively seeking other opportunities.

“The company used to feel like family. Now it feels like we’re all expendable,” said one employee who requested anonymity for fear of retaliation.

Competitive Position Strengthens

Industry analysts believe the leaner structure will help the company compete more effectively against rivals who have already reduced headcount.

“They were carrying significant bloat compared to competitors,” noted Robert Kim, industry consultant. “These cuts actually bring them in line with industry standards for revenue-per-employee.”

Anheuser-Busch InBev ADR ticker shows 12% gain with bright green numbers and blurred trading floor behind

Regulatory Scrutiny Expected

Labor advocacy groups called for investigations into whether the company violated WARN Act requirements by failing to provide 60-day advance notice of mass layoffs.

A spokesperson for the company stated they are “fully compliant with all applicable employment laws” and cited exceptions for “unforeseeable business circumstances.”

Key Takeaways

The technology industry’s transformation from growth-focused to profit-obsessed is accelerating. Companies that once hired thousands quarterly now cut with equal speed. For investors, efficiency trumps expansion. For employees, job security in tech has fundamentally changed. The sector that promised perpetual growth now delivers permanent volatility.

Author

  • My name is Sophia A. Reynolds, and I cover business, finance, and economic news in Los Angeles.

    Sophia A. Reynolds is a Neighborhoods Reporter for News of Los Angeles, covering hyperlocal stories often missed by metro news. With a background in bilingual community reporting, she focuses on tenants, street vendors, and grassroots groups shaping life across LA’s neighborhoods.

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