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Stock Rally Lifts Alphabet, Meta, Salesforce, Microsoft & cryptocurrency

Tech layoffs increased significantly this January as Alphabet, Microsoft, Salesforce and cryptocurrency platform Coinbase announced extensive downsizing rounds. Wayfair also laid off workers during this month.

Rightsizing efforts have been driven by profitability concerns, the pandemic hiring hangover and slowing inflation – factors which all contributed to its implementation. With an tight labor market in place however, laid-off employees should find new positions.

Alphabet

Alphabet Inc, parent of Google, announced layoffs of 12,000 staff this month as part of its latest round of cost cutting measures. According to Alphabet, this decision aimed at streamlining its hardware, voice-assistance and engineering operations in order to focus on more ambitious projects like artificial intelligence.

After years of rapid expansion, several tech companies reduced their staff in 2023 due to rapid attrition. CEOs including Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg and Salesforce’s Marc Benioff blamed themselves for overhiring early in the pandemic due to misreading how Covid-19 restrictions would ease.

While cost cuts may help boost stocks, it remains uncertain whether their effects will be sufficient to prevent another steep selloff next year. Investors remain wary about inflation, interest rate hikes, and recession fears as potential obstacles.

Meta

Tech stocks are flourishing as the market recovers from 2022’s disappointing performance, thanks to artificial intelligence advancement, cost cutting efforts, and broad economic expansion with lower inflation and interest rates. Big-cap technology names in particular are seeing their fortunes improve thanks to these factors.

Meta’s investors were relieved to see its stock soar after its quarterly earnings report revealed unexpectedly strong sales and forecasting second-quarter revenue that exceeded market expectations. Digital advertising rebounded and CEO Mark Zuckerberg expressed optimism that Meta is moving in the right direction after 2022’s disappointing failure of Horizon Worlds, Quest Pro and Reality Labs to take off.

This week’s onslaught of quarterly earnings reports from the Magnificent Five and other mega-cap technology companies will provide us with a better indication as to whether the industry has rebounded from its recent downturn. Of particular note are reports from Nvidia and Microsoft — leaders in cloud computing — which should give us more clarity.

Microsoft

Major tech stock markets have rebounded since their low points of 2022, driven by hopes that AI technology can produce efficiency gains across industries. Alphabet, Amazon and Meta all reached new highs amid this prospect. Furthermore, lower interest rates and less inflation were all projected as potential benefits from such investment growth.

But despite big-cap technology companies’ burgeoning profits, they continue to shed employees at an increasing rate due to an unprecedented hiring spree in previous years.

Once the economy began to stabilize and the pandemic subsided, they started laying off more employees.

Amazon

Tech stocks have gained since their post-pandemic lows, yet the stock rally remains more unpredictable for certain major tech giants like Google, Amazon and others. To become more efficient they recently let go of workers as part of ongoing initiatives to become more cost-efficient.

Tech companies haven’t experienced as many layoffs compared to 2021, yet large companies are continuing to reduce staff numbers. This trend may be partially attributed to falling inflation which makes it harder for companies to increase prices or pay employees more.

Microsoft laid off 1,900 video gaming staff members – accounting for 9 percent of its division’s workforce – this week and reduced e-commerce, cloud, and work management teams as a result. China-based virtual reality (VR) producer ByteDance reduced staff at Pico to fold them back into its product development team; ByteDance has struggled to meet demand for its headsets. Indian mobile wallet and payments company Paytm also reduced employee numbers this week; around 1,000 workers or 10 percent of its staff accounted for.


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