Microsoft is cutting thousands of employees across the company
[NEW YORK] Microsoft said it will cut 6,000 workers across the company in an effort to reduce management layers.
The planned terminations will amount to less than 3 per cent of the total headcount and occur across geographies, employee levels and include LinkedIn, a spokesperson said.
'We continue to implement organisational changes necessary to best position the company for success in a dynamic marketplace,' the spokesperson said.
Microsoft, which employed 228,000 people in June 2024, deploys periodic layoffs, often to reorient its headcount towards priority areas. The company laid off 10,000 people in January 2023, including personnel at the HoloLens augmented reality headset unit and other hardware projects.
About 2,000 workers will be impacted at Microsoft's headquarters in Redmond, Washington, according to a state filing on Tuesday (May 13). The terminations are expected to commence on Jul 13.
The company has been under pressure in recent years to keep a lid on costs amid massive spending on the data centres that power artificial intelligence (AI) services and the Azure cloud-computing unit. Microsoft has said it's on track to spend about US$80 billion this fiscal year on the server farms.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
CNBC reported the layoffs earlier.
Last year, chief executive officer Satya Nadella said AI was helping the company save on labour costs. The theme came up again on Tuesday during a JP Morgan conference, when Microsoft finance executive Bill Duff said the company is 'saving hundreds of millions of US dollars a year' by using AI for customer support and reducing the need for human interaction.
Duff said Microsoft is deploying AI across multiple divisions to help personnel analyse deals for compliance issues, write marketing materials and other tasks. The company routinely reorients its workforce away from legacy products and towards growth initiatives, Duff said.
Late last month, Microsoft told workers it's planning to use third-party firms to handle more sales of software to small and midsize customers. It also restructured some technical teams earlier last month.
Several other tech companies have also announced layoffs this year. Meta Platforms said in January that it planned to ax about 5 per cent of staff via performance-based terminations and would hire new people to fill those roles. The following month, Bloomberg reported that Salesforce was cutting more than 1,000 positions, in large part to make room for new AI-focused positions. BLOOMBERG

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
an hour ago
- Business Times
Global demand jumps for emerging Asia bonds on rate-cut bets, FX
[HONG KONG] Global investors are extending their purchases of sovereign bonds in emerging Asia on rate-cut wagers and stronger local currencies. Foreign funds bought US$2.9 billion in Malaysia conventional government bonds in May, according to Bank Negara Malaysia's latest data, the largest monthly inflow since October 2013. Their purchase of a net US$652 million of listed bonds in South Korea on Jun 5, marked the longest buying streak in more than two years, according to Financial Supervisory Service data. The inflows came as most emerging-Asian currencies strengthened this quarter, buoyed by an extended decline in the US dollar due to waning US exceptionalism and de-US dollarisation concerns. Growing expectations of lower borrowing costs in the region are also aiding bond sales, with issuers racing to secure financing ahead of any further wobbles in global markets. Traders are increasingly betting that Malaysia, South-east Asia's last holdout against interest rate cuts, will finally pivot to boost its economic growth amid trade uncertainties. The Bank of Korea cut benchmark rates by 25 basis points at May-end, while signalling more policy easing as US trade tariffs hit growth. Global investors have also poured US$1.7 billion and US$2.1 billion, respectively, into Thailand and Indonesian bonds since April, putting them on track for their largest inflows in at least three quarters. The demand has driven sovereign yields lower, with Thailand's 10-year benchmark falling to the lowest in nearly four years, while the similar Indonesia note is hovering close to a low in November. In South Korea, clarity over the political landscape is also lifting the prospect for the country's assets after months of leadership vacuum. This, in tandem with the forthcoming addition into FTSE Russell's World government Bond Index are buoying demand despite lingering concerns over additional debt supply to fund President Lee Jae-myung's fiscal spending plans. The benchmark Kospi Index climbed almost 2 per cent on Monday (Jun 9), leading gains in Asia, while Malaysia's main stock index rose by as much as 0.3 per cent. Global trade optimism was buoyed on Monday as top trade officials from US and China are set to hold fresh talks in London. BLOOMBERG


CNA
2 hours ago
- CNA
UK financial regulator partners with Nvidia in AI 'sandbox'
LONDON -Financial firms in Britain will be able to test artificial intelligence tools later this year in a regulatory "sandbox" launched on Monday by the country's financial watchdog, part of a broader government strategy to support innovation and economic growth. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has partnered with U.S. chipmaker Nvidia to provide access to advanced computing power and bespoke AI software through what it calls a "Supercharged Sandbox." A sandbox refers to a controlled environment where companies can test new ideas such as products, services or technologies. The programme is intended to help firms in the early stages of exploring AI, offering access to technical expertise, better datasets and regulatory support, the FCA said. It is open to all financial services companies experimenting with AI. "This collaboration will help those that want to test AI ideas but who lack the capabilities to do so," Jessica Rusu, the FCA's chief data, information and intelligence officer, said. "We'll help firms harness AI to benefit our markets and consumers, while supporting economic growth." Finance minister Rachel Reeves has urged Britain's regulators to remove barriers to economic growth, describing it as an "absolute top priority" for the government. In April, she said she was pleased with how the FCA and the Prudential Regulation Authority, part of the Bank of England, were responding to her call to cut red tape. Nvidia said the initiative would allow firms to explore AI-powered innovations in a secure environment, using its accelerated computing platform. "AI is fundamentally reshaping the financial sector," said Jochen Papenbrock, EMEA head of financial technology at Nvidia, citing improvements in data analysis, automation and risk management. He added that the sandbox will provide firms with a "secure environment to explore AI innovations using Nvidia's full-stack accelerated computing platform, supporting industry-wide growth and efficiency." The testing is set to begin in October.


CNA
2 hours ago
- CNA
CCIC Singapore says it laid off staff as US sanctions over Iran oil shipments hit harder than expected
SINGAPORE: Cargo inspection company CCIC Singapore, which recently laid off hundreds of workers, said on Monday (Jun 9) that it had to do so as the impact of sanctions from the United States turned out to be far greater than expected, and that it has ceased operations in Singapore. The China-linked, Singapore-based firm was among 15 companies blacklisted by the US on May 13 for helping to conceal the origins of Iranian oil being shipped to China. "Due to the direct impact of US sanctions, the company's bank accounts have been frozen, resulting in an inability to repatriate revenue or cover expenses. This has led to a breakdown in cash flow, loss of clients and severe disruption to overall operations," the company told CNA in a statement in Chinese. "Against this backdrop, the company has been forced to initiate business liquidation and staff reductions. The primary reason is that the impact of the sanctions has far exceeded expectations - banks have ceased providing services, and salaries and operational costs can no longer be paid." CCIC Singapore said that it will disburse salaries for the month of May and part of the severance payments to each affected employee within three days. Retrenchment notices sent to employees had said that retrenchment benefits would only be fully paid after the liquidation process was complete, with an estimated date of Jun 30, 2026. Two employees earlier told CNA that CCIC Singapore has over 400 workers in Singapore and Malaysia, with the majority based in Singapore. Another employee said the firm has more than 300 workers in Singapore alone. The company added on Monday that it has made the "difficult" decision to terminate its Singapore operations after "thorough deliberation". "This decision was extremely challenging for the management team, but it is a rational choice that had to be made under the current circumstances," it said. CCIC Singapore is a wholly owned subsidiary of China Certification & Inspection Group (CCIC), a Chinese state-owned enterprise headquartered in Beijing. Asked for its comments on the US accusations and whether it intends to appeal, the company said it has "consistently required its subsidiaries to comply with the applicable laws and regulations of their host countries and other relevant jurisdictions". It added that it will continue to "manage all related matters in accordance with the law and maintain ongoing communication with all relevant parties". LAYOFFS AFTER US SANCTIONS Three affected employees had told CNA last Friday that staff across all departments of CCIC Singapore were notified of their retrenchments on May 30, with the terminations effective from the next day. The employees, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the company had delayed the payment of salaries owed for May, with retrenchment notices attributing this to the firm's "pending liquidation". CCIC Singapore was set up in 1989 and has its registered address at Singapore Science Park. Its customers include Shell, BP, Total, Exxon Mobil and major Chinese petrochemical corporations, according to CCIC's website. Parent company CCIC was established in 1980 and is part of China's State-Owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council. The US has blacklisted CCIC Singapore for helping to obscure the origins of Iranian oil, which is typically done through numerous ship-to-ship transfers, oil blending and false documentation. Sepehr Energy, which is a front company of the Iranian military, "consistently relied" on CCIC Singapore for cargo inspections of oil being delivered to China, according to the US Treasury Department. In 2024, CCIC Singapore provided inspection services during a ship-to-ship transfer of about 2 million barrels of Iranian oil from a sanctioned vessel. That same year, the firm also "likely provided" falsified documents to conceal the identity of another sanctioned vessel and certify its cargo of Iranian oil as Malaysian crude. According to the US Treasury Department, Iran's illicit oil trade funds the development of ballistic missiles and drones as well as regional terrorist groups. The sanctions freeze all US-linked assets of the blacklisted companies and individuals. In addition, any company that is at least half-owned by those sanctioned is also blocked from transactions engaging US businesses or the US financial system.