Job cuts are rolling in. Here's who is feeling the most pain so far
The dominos are starting to fall in the
As the
A host of companies have announced job cuts or hiring freezes in just the last two weeks. They range from
Netflix last week announced a second round of job cuts for the year, this time eliminating around 300 positions. Earlier this year, the entertainment company announced it had lost subscribers for the first time in more than a decade. Since then, Netflix has eliminated roughly 450 positions.
A key question on the minds of many economists is whether this is the tip of the iceberg with a lot more job cuts coming, or whether it will stop here – a much-needed froth clearing from a sizzling economy.
Job market is 'unsustainably hot,' says Fed chief
Fed Chair
"You have two job vacancies essentially for every person actively seeking a job, and that has led to a real imbalance in wage negotiating," Powell said when answering questions at a press conference two weeks ago.
"We don't seek to put people out of work," he said. "But we also think that you really cannot have the kind of labor market we want without price stability."
So far, the job cuts have been mostly contained to a few industries, according to
"We haven't seen a huge amount of cuts yet," he says. "But we're seeing these large increases in layoffs in a handful of industries that seem to us to be potential bellwethers for the rest of the economy if things slow down significantly in the next few weeks and months."
Pandemic darlings are cutting the most
A lot of recent layoffs have come from what have been hot, high-growth parts of the economy that did especially well during the pandemic.
For instance, the exercise equipment company Peloton took off when gyms closed. Similarly, Netflix's popularity soared when people were stuck at home, binge-watching TV shows and movies.
But now, people are going out for entertainment, movie theaters and gyms are open, and fewer people need expensive exercise bikes. In February, Peloton's CEO stepped down, and the company cut almost 3,000 jobs.
Similarly, the trading app Robinhood attracted millions of investors, who opened new accounts during the pandemic. People were flush with money from big stimulus checks from the federal government. Others saw bank balances balloon from reduced travel and eating at home. The stock market was hot and many wanted to trade.
Robinhood hired aggressively to keep up with this growth, growing six-fold, from 700 people to around 3,800, CEO
Two months ago, Robinhood laid off 9 percent of its staff. Tenev said he is now scrutinizing the company's headcount growth targets.
"Doing so enables us to be more resilient in hard times, and stronger during the good," he said in a memo to Robinhood employees.
Tech, housing, crypto are other layoff hotspots
Several other tech companies, including Cameo, Carvana, and the payment business Bolt, have also reduced staff.
Perhaps no industry exemplifies the speculative exuberance of the last few years than crypto, which ballooned in size as the value of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies surged. But in June, during a sharp sell-off, a number of crypto companies scaled back.
Crypto.com reduced its staff by 5 percent, and Gemini, the cryptocurrency exchange run by Cameron and
"We grew too quickly," CEO
As mortgage rates rise at the fastest pace in history, heads roll at home lenders
Another part of the economy that went gangbusters during the pandemic was the housing market. As the
But this year, the housing landscape has changed dramatically. The average rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is approaching 6 percent, compared to just over 3 percent at the start of the year. There has been a decline in applications for mortgages, as a result, and there also have been industry job cuts.
Earlier this month, the real estate broker Compass cut 450 employees, or about 10 percent of its staff, and Redfin reduced its overall headcount by 8 percent.
"A layoff is always an awful shock, especially when I've said that we'd go through heck to avoid one," wrote Redfin CEO
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