
What are layoffs, exactly?
Layoffs are a shorthand term to refer to corporate job terminations. They are typically mass firings, cutting hundreds or thousands of jobs and, unlike individual firings or terminations, done with little regard for an individual employee's performance. Companies need to cut costs, and layoffs are often the easiest way to do so.
Corporations will refer to layoffs as employment terminations, separations, workforce reductions, or even job cuts, but those terms all mean the same thing.
It means that employees are losing their jobs, and companies are cutting them, typically because the business is underperforming and it needs to shift its strategy in a new direction.
Are layoffs good for investors?
If you haven't previously observed the impact of layoffs on an individual company's stock, you might be surprised to learn that the outcome is typically counterintuitive.
Often, when a company announces layoffs, the stock goes up rather than down. That's because Wall Street generally interprets the news as good for investors because layoffs equal cost cuts, which help boost profits.
However, it's risky to interpret layoffs as a bullish signal for a stock, especially because layoffs occur for a variety of reasons. Although they might reflect a smart decision to improve profits at one company, they could be more representative of a business in decline at another company, in which case the news should be a signal to avoid a stock.
For example, a number of cryptocurrency companies, including Coinbase (COIN +0.30%), issued layoffs in 2022 and 2023 as cryptocurrency prices fell, and interest in trading digital currencies plunged. However, a recovery in crypto prices in 2024 lifted Coinbase stock.
Many of the tech companies that issued layoffs in 2022-24 did so from a position of strength, padding already wide profit margins in response to investor comments that their payrolls have become too bloated.
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One recent example of layoffs
Among the tech companies that have announced layoffs is Alphabet, the parent of Google.
In January 2023, the company reported it was laying off 12,000 employees. The move came after some of its closest competitors, like Meta Platforms and Microsoft, announced similar layoffs and also followed calls from activist investor TCI Fund Management to cut headcount and salary. The news also came after the launch of ChatGPT, signaling a new race in artificial intelligence.
In a blog post announcing the move, CEO Sundar Pichai said the company "hired for a different economic reality than the one we face today," an acknowledgment that growth had slowed down and that AI was becoming preeminent.
Pichai also said the company was focused on ensuring its "people and roles are aligned with our highest priorities as a company. The roles we're eliminating reflect the outcome of that review."
In other words, the layoffs reflected a shift in strategy to focus on AI.
That shows that it's important to go beneath the surface to find the motive behind the layoffs because they are often specific to each case.
















