Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Why eBay, American Express, Baker Hughes Are Laying Off Workers
Why eBay, American Express, Baker Hughes Are Laying Off Workers Hereâs some explanationâ"note we used the word âexplanationâ not âjustificationââ"for why a handful of companies are laying off large chunks of their workforces even as the economy is on the upswing and unemployment is falling month after month. eBay: 2,400 jobs On Wednesday, eBay announced it would be cutting 2,400 jobs in the first quarter of 2015. The company says that the layoff figure includes positions that are unfilled, so the actual number of people losing their jobs will be less than 2,400. Whatâs more, eBay points out that the figure represents only 7% of the companyâs total workforce. (Are we the only ones surprised to hear that eBay currently employs 34,600 people?) Among the factors influencing the layoff decision: âWeak holiday salesâ and revenues that have been lower than analysts expected, as well as a company restructuring in anticipation of the spinoff of eBayâs online payment service PayPal. The company said it may also spin off a third division, eBay Enterprises, which runs e-commerce operations for other companies, explaining in a statement: âIt has become clear that [eBay Enterprise] has limited synergies with either business, and a separation will allow both to focus exclusively on their core markets.â As for weak sales, one reason eBay is suffering is that, unlike Amazonâ"which effectively uses its Amazon Prime membership program to create legions of shoppers who make the vast majority of their purchases at its siteâ"many eBay customers use the site randomly and haphazardly rather than habitually. âItâs the infrequent shopper that comes two, three, four times a year,â eBay CEO Donahoe told USA Today. âThey didnât come back at the rate we thought.â American Express: 4,000 jobs During the course of 2015, AmEx plans on cutting costs by trimming 4,000 jobs after failing to meet long-term revenue growth target of 8%. The Wall Street Journal pointed to âa stronger dollar, a weak December for retail sales and the sharp drop in gas pricesâ as forces that hurt the companyâs fourth quarter resultsâ"which actually showed revenue and profits increasing, just not enough to satisfy investors. The 4,000 layoffs represent 6% of AmExâs total workforce of roughly 63,000. Baker Hughes Halliburton: 8,000 jobs The two energy companies agreed to merge last autumn, and both ended the year strongly, with Halliburton posting revenues up nearly 15% and Baker Hughes achieving record revenues for the quarter. Nonetheless, in light of plunging crude oil and gas prices, oilfield services provider Baker Hughes announced plans for layoffs of 11% of its workforce, roughly 7,000 employees, while Halliburton plans for about 1,000 job cuts of its own. âThis is really the crappy part of the job, and this is what I hate about this industry frankly,â Baker Hughes CEO Martin Craighead said this week in a conference call with analysts. âThis is the industry, and itâs throwing us another one of these downturns, and weâre going to be good stewards of our business and do the right thing. But these are never decisions that are done mechanically.â Schlumberger: 9,000 jobs Another oilfield services company, Schlumberger also reported surprisingly strong fourth quarter results despite the steep drop in oil and gas pricesâ"and it too recently announced big-time layoffs. Last week, the company said it had laid off 9,000 employees worldwide in late 2014 as profits fell and demand for oil retreated. 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