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Bumble to lay off 30% of global workforce as dating apps struggle

Bumble to lay off 30% of global workforce as dating apps struggle

Business Times13 hours ago

[BENGALURU] Bumble said on Wednesday (Jun 25) it would lay off nearly a third of its workforce, the latest cuts in a dating app industry striving to develop features that will keep users spending amid economic uncertainty.
The company also raised its second-quarter revenue forecast, as a broader effort to revamp the platform starts to take hold.
The job cuts will affect 240 roles, or 30 per cent of Bumble's staff. Rival Match also announced a 13 per cent workforce reduction last month.
Bumble shares rose 19 per cent on the news, but their market value has shrunk by about a fifth this year to a little over US$500 million. Its peak was around US$15 billion, when the company went public in 2021, LSEG data shows.
The 'layoffs reflect Bumble's new strategy of optimising for user experience rather than revenue or user growth in the short term', and underscores new CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd's desire for a more agile startup structure, said M Science analyst Chandler Willison.
Online dating firms have struggled in recent years to retain audiences, especially Gen Z users, leading to management overhauls at Match and Bumble as well as pressure from activist investors.
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Bumble's Herd returned as CEO earlier this year with the promise of boosting the company's performance by focusing on match-making quality.
The company raised its second-quarter revenue forecast to a range of US$244 million to US$249 million, up from the prior view of US$235 million to US$243 million.
It had also met Wall Street expectations for first-quarter revenue in May, even as it posted a 7 per cent decline.
Bumble said it will incur about US$13 million to US$18 million in layoff-related charges, primarily in the third and fourth quarters of 2025.
It expects to save about US$40 million of annual costs, which it plans to reinvest in initiatives such as product and technology development. REUTERS

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China-led AIIB could play a role in Asean power grid, says bank president
China-led AIIB could play a role in Asean power grid, says bank president

Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • Straits Times

China-led AIIB could play a role in Asean power grid, says bank president

A signing ceremony for a loan agreement for the U-Tapao airport expansion project between Thailand and AIIB in Beijing on June 25. ST PHOTO: LIM MIN ZHANG - China's answer to the World Bank marked its 10th year with a pledge to double its annual lending by 2030 and focus on green projects, including in South-east Asia. These projects could include the Asean power grid, a plan for an electricity network to connect all 10 Asean countries. The three-day annual meeting of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) in Beijing this week was attended by more than 3,500 people from about 100 countries, including Chinese Premier Li Qiang. The China-led bank, founded in 2015, has to date approved more than 320 projects in 38 countries, worth some US$60 billion (S$76.3 billion). Modelled after other multilateral development banks (MBDs) such as the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the AIIB has grown from 57 founding members – including Singapore, Kazakhstan and Saudi Arabia as well as United States allies the United Kingdom, Germany and France – to 110 members today, behind only the World Bank, with 189 . The US and Japan are not AIIB members. In his speech on June 26, Mr Li said the AIIB's successful operation has been a 'useful supplement' to traditional multilateral development institutions, and has brought about 'incremental reform' to global financial governance. 'Its unique shareholding formula and decision-making rules reflect the new changes in the international economic landscape and raise the voice and influence of emerging markets and developing countries,' he said. The bank has developing countries as its majority shareholders, with China being by far the largest shareholder at about 27 per cent. The bank markets itself as being based on multilateralism and international standards, and has rejected suggestions that it is controlled by Beijing. Mr Jin Liqun, who has served as president since the bank's founding, said in a speech that the AIIB approved US$8.4 billion in financing in 2024, with an aim to double the amount of total yearly loans to US$17 billion in 2030. The AIIB's latest strategy document, approved this week, states more than half of its financing approvals every year until 2030 will be climate-related. At a press conference later, he noted that the idea of an Asean power grid was a very important one, in response to a question on the region's infrastructure development. He added that the AIIB would have a role to play in this power grid, particularly 'to provide renewable energy and build the regional power grid to help sustain the growth of the Asean region'. On June 24, the bank also elected a new president, Ms Zou Jiayi, who will take office in January 2026. Like Mr Jin, she is a former Chinese vice-finance minister. MDBs like the AIIB lend billions of dollars a year to support social and economic aims of recipient countries such as poverty reduction and sustainable development. Asia, in particular, faces an estimated infrastructure financing gap of US$500 billion a year till 2030. At the Beijing event, a signing ceremony was held for Thailand's loan of US$423 million for a second runway at U-Tapao Airport in the coastal Rayong province – AIIB's first sovereign loan to Thailand. The AIIB is also considering a US$300 million loan to Indonesia for a fixed road crossing from Batam island to Bintan island, via the Tanjung Sauh islands. Dr Yu Hong, a senior research fellow at the East Asian Institute in Singapore, said that the AIIB has achieved a measure of international recognition, contrary to the prognosis of critics in its earlier years who worried about whether its projects will comply with environmental and labour standards. 'AIIB's success for the last 10 years in terms of its AAA credit rating and expansion of lending has boosted China's influence and given it confidence… This has also helped China project soft power,' he told The Straits Times. The AIIB received its first AAA credit ratings in 2017. But Dr Yu, who has done research on the AIIB, believes that the bank has yet to become a 'formidable competitor' to other major Western-dominated MDBs – the ADB, World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF ) – in terms of infrastructure financing, noting that the AIIB has mostly co-lent with other MDBs. The AIIB was proposed by Chinese President Xi Jinping in October 2013. Observers saw its creation as stemming from Chinese dissatisfaction with Western dominance of existing international financial institutions which wa s not reflective of China's economic heft. China's 27 per cent voting rights at the AIIB are far more than its 6 per cent at the World Bank. The AIIB has a multinational staff, including its senior management, which is led by a Chinese national. The AIIB , while boosting China's influence overseas, is largely seen as a multilateral organisation that does not warrant politicising by major powers such as the US. Professor Tamar Gutner of the American University in Washington, who wrote a 2025 book on the AIIB, said that given how deeply MDBs are networked, and that many MDBs have a powerful US role, 'I don't think countries will face pressure not to borrow or to borrow less from the AIIB'. 'The AIIB is clearly a multilateral organisation, not a Chinese organisation. All major donors... are members. However legitimacy can be fragile, so any move by the AIIB away from its multilateral character could raise questions,' she told ST. Mr Steward Paterson, a senior fellow at the Hinrich Foundation who has written a book on the trade relationship between the West and China, sees the AIIB's role as largely symbolic and one that brings prestige to China. The crucial overseas lending from China has been made by the Export-Import Bank of China and the China Development Bank, he noted. 'Their balance sheet dwarfs the AIIB's.' The two state-owned banks are crucial funders of China's Belt and Road Initiative, Beijing's infrastructure building programme in largely developing countries that is estimated to have funded US$1 trillion worth of projects since its inception in 2013, from roads and railways to ports and energy plants. Indonesia's Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati, in her speech on June 26, said the AIIB was no longer just an emerging bank but a 'global force for development', while urging it to improve the affordability of its financing. Indonesia is a founding member which has worked on 14 projects with the AIIB. 'Many of the member countries in need of infrastructure development are still facing severe fiscal constraints. In today's high interest rate environment, competitive pricing is critical,' she said. Lim Min Zhang is China correspondent at The Straits Times. He has an interest in Chinese politics, technology, defence and foreign policies. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Luxury sector pins hopes on Middle East despite clouds from conflict
Luxury sector pins hopes on Middle East despite clouds from conflict

Business Times

time3 hours ago

  • Business Times

Luxury sector pins hopes on Middle East despite clouds from conflict

[PARIS] With Middle East airspace reopening and the US-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Iran appearing to hold, the luxury sector is still counting on the region's wealthy shoppers to help offset weakness in its main US and Chinese markets – for now. The Middle East, helped by strong tourist flows and local wealth, has bucked a recent global slowdown in luxury sales that is expected to deepen this year, with some brands growing sales there at double-digit rates. Luxury sales in Gulf countries were up 6 per cent to US$12.8 billion of the nearly US$400 billion market last year, outpacing a global drop of 2 per cent, with strong appetite for high-end fashion, jewellery and beauty products, retail consultant Chalhoub Group said. However, that trade is heavily dependant on the region's burgeoning tourist trade, with consulting firm Bain estimating that some 50 to 60 per cent of the Middle East's luxury sales come from tourists. This month's outbreak of an air war between Israel and Iran emphasised the ongoing risks in a region in which unrest was already simmering, with airlines cancelling flights and rerouting planes following Israel's strikes against Iran on Jun 13 – measures that are now being unwound. 'At this point, we have not adjusted our long-term growth forecast, as we continue to see considerable potential in the region,' said Federica Lovato, senior partner at Bain. A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU Friday, 2 pm Lifestyle Our picks of the latest dining, travel and leisure options to treat yourself. Sign Up Sign Up 'However, short-term volatility has increased in the last few weeks and may continue, depending on how the situation develops.' The region is an important hub for travel spending, favoured by Russian oligarchs but also wealthy Asians, and has increased in importance since Russia's invasion of Ukraine triggered sanctions and the rerouting of flights between Europe and Asia from more northerly routes to the Middle East. It also serves as a gateway for high-end brands to reach wealthy shoppers from India, where high tariffs have kept companies like LVMH from expanding store networks. Max Heinemann, co-CEO of travel retail group Gebr Heinemann, which recently expanded into Saudi Arabia and operates airport fashion retail stores carrying luxury brands in Jeddah, said the region's travel market has shown long-term resilience despite unrest. He remains optimistic. 'Dips may be witnessed, but growth will remain,' he said. At Prada, first-quarter sales in the region rose 26 per cent year on year, while Hermes' sales there were up 14 per cent. High-end fashion and jewellery brands have been opening new stores and hosting splashy events. Milan-based menswear label Zegna this month took its spring collection to the opera house in Dubai, the region's leading luxury hub, for a catwalk show in an elaborate set evoking an Italian villa. Elie Saab held its 45th anniversary show in Riyadh last November, featuring a performance from Celine Dion. Dior, Saint Laurent and Valentino last year opened stores in Bahrain, while this year Louis Vuitton brought guests to the Dubai desert for a dawn meal and Chanel hosted a dinner in Abu Dhabi linked to a high jewellery launch. But maintaining visitor numbers to Middle Eastern destinations will be vital to bringing shoppers through the doors. Luxury travel agency Global Travel Moments says that for now, its long-term travel volumes to the Middle East have been unaffected by the latest unrest. However, given recent events, there is currently 'certainly more caution' before finalising trips to the broader Middle East, it said. REUTERS

Up to 300 S'pore firms stand to get cloud credits, grants to spur AI trials under new programme
Up to 300 S'pore firms stand to get cloud credits, grants to spur AI trials under new programme

Straits Times

time4 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Up to 300 S'pore firms stand to get cloud credits, grants to spur AI trials under new programme

(From left) Digital Industry Singapore assistant vice-president Mabel Seah, AWS Singapore country manager Priscilla Chong, Global Sales Asia Pacific & Japan VP Jaime Valles, Senior Minister of State Low Yen Ling, Digital Industry Singapore senior vice-president Philbert Gomez and Singapore country manager for Public Sector Elsie Tan at the launch of the new AWS Innovation Hub. PHOTO: AWS Up to 300 S'pore firms stand to get cloud credits, grants to spur AI trials under new programme SINGAPORE – As many as 300 local firms will each receive up to $600,000 in benefits under a new programme by Amazon's cloud arm to promote the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) solutions. Called AI Springboard, the initiative by Amazon Web Services (AWS) will provide a baseline of $350,000 in dedicated cloud credits and training resources, with the remaining value made up of additional cloud credits from existing AWS programmes. These credits allow firms to trial and potentially adopt cloud tools. The funding is in addition to a government grant of up to $105,000 per enterprise for consultancy services supported by Digital Industry Singapore (DISG) – the government arm driving the programme, which is the second to take wing under the $150 million Enterprise Compute Initiative (ECI) announced in the 2025 Budget. The ECI supports firms by pairing them with major cloud providers to access AI tools, computing power and expert consultancy. To tap AI Springboard, companies must be registered or incorporated in Singapore and meet ECI eligibility criteria, such as having experience developing a custom AI solution for a proof-of-concept. The programme was announced on June 26 at the launch of AWS's new 8,000 sq ft Innovation Hub in Shenton Way – its first such facility globally – where enterprises can explore AI tools and work with AWS experts to develop and deploy AI solutions. Among the tools on showcase include a mini bike manufacturing line by AWS that demonstrates how companies can use AI and sensors to solve common production issues, and an AI-powered tool by ST Engineering that helps detect deepfakes, false information and harmful online content. AWS declined to disclose the cost of the hub, but noted that it is a ' multimillion-dollar ' investment on top of its previously announced US$9 billion (S$11.5 billion) commitment to Singapore's cloud infrastructure by 2028. It also said that it plans to engage more than 1,000 C-suite leaders and business decision-makers at the hub, offer 200 tertiary students an exclusive AI learning experience and support the training of 2,000 professionals in high-demand jobs like AI and cloud computing every year. Speaking at the launch ceremony for AI Springboard and the new Innovation Hub, Senior Minister of State for Trade and Industry Low Yen Ling said the Government is aiming to accelerate the development and deployment of AI across Singapore's economy. 'Through the (AI Springboard) programme, we aim to support participating companies in developing future-ready AI solutions that will transform their businesses,' she said. 'Multiple cohorts of the AI Springboard Programme will be onboarded this year, and I encourage companies to seize this opportunity to partner with AWS and DISG on their AI journey.' According to AWS, the $600,000 cloud credits and training support may be disbursed either in tranches or as a lump sum, depending on the scope and scale of each company's project. The Government's grant of up to $105,000 will be awarded once the company and AWS successfully develop and pilot at least one minimum viable product for the firm's AI use case. AWS Singapore country manager Priscilla Chong said AI Springboard brings together the firm's cloud and AI tools, technical expertise and training support to help local enterprises turn their ideas into real-world applications. She added that the decision to base its first Innovation Hub in Singapore reflects the company's confidence in the Republic as a key centre for innovation and technological experimentation. 'From one highly connected city-state, we can reach more than three billion people across Asia-Pacific and Japan, tap a deep pool of world-class tech talent, work with a government that consistently backs digital growth, and enable customers across industries to move faster with the confidence that Singapore's ecosystem provides,' she said. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

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