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The city’s transportation officials sent letters this week to California regulators asking them to halt or scale back the expansion plans of two companies, Cruise and Waymo, which are competing head-to-head to be the first to offer 24-hour robotaxi service in the country’s best-known tech hub.
The transportation official's will lose this round..........
The entire upper level of California's government has been "bought and paid for"....... Special Interest own California.
 
I've owned Tesla for a while, in my own account, and my Mom's account that I manage. Bought years ago and even at the 52 week low, up quite a bit. It is however, one of the more "emotionally" driven stocks. Other things affect it's price more than basic fundamentals. I've learned to pay attention to those. I told a friend at the end of December, who asked, to buy some Tesla. From the low in Jan to the high in Jan, up 57%. I had sold in March of 2022 a good portion and then bought back in Jan 3. Wish I had taken a little bigger swing because I was pretty sure I knew it was going to go up.

Not an EV fan, but I am a Musk fan and Tesla stock has been good for me. :)
 
I've owned Tesla for a while, in my own account, and my Mom's account that I manage. Bought years ago and even at the 52 week low, up quite a bit. It is however, one of the more "emotionally" driven stocks. Other things affect it's price more than basic fundamentals. I've learned to pay attention to those. I told a friend at the end of December, who asked, to buy some Tesla. From the low in Jan to the high in Jan, up 57%. I had sold in March of 2022 a good portion and then bought back in Jan 3. Wish I had taken a little bigger swing because I was pretty sure I knew it was going to go up.

Not an EV fan, but I am a Musk fan and Tesla stock has been good for me. :)
I like Elon. But with that said, he has a "gift". He can connect with smart, free thinking, mechanical people and they will work faithfully to build his companies. All the way back to Biblical time there have been "King Maker's".... Elon is a modern day King, made by "other's"... Many will worship him and ride on his gold plated chariot. Some will glean some of that gold. This past year he dabbled outside of his area of talent. Maybe he learned a lesson, maybe not. There is a large segment that is betting against him. Watching TSLA bounce to the top last week made me think of it as more of a casino than a business. If it holds / increases in share price that shows stability. If that was the peak of a Dead Cat Bounce then it was nothing more than a high stakes poker game that flushed out many holding short positions. Time will tell.
Both cars and batteries have been around a long time. Something to think about.
 
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'Tesla Offers New $3,000 Discount Or Free Supercharging With Trade-ins, Slashing Prices Further' - Teslarati​

12:39 pm ET January 30, 2023 (Benzinga) Print
https://www.teslarati.com/tesla-tsla-discount-trade-in-cars-free-supercharging-sales-demand/

Tesla is now offering additional discounts or free Supercharging incentives with the purchase of new vehicles, but the automaker is requiring owners to trade in an existing car.

Tesla has gotten off to a fast start in 2023 with substantial price cuts that, when coupled with government incentives, can discount vehicles by roughly $20,000 on qualifying vehicles. As we reported yesterday, Tesla seems focused on pushing sales figures up earlier in the quarter, opting for an earlier strategy as opposed to the end-of-quarter pushes that it has utilized in the past.

Now Tesla is taking it a step further, as the company is reaching out to current owners, attempting to woo them to purchase a new vehicle with a $3,000 discount or three years of free Supercharging, as long as they trade in their Tesla.

Several owners who recently inquired with Tesla to purchase new vehicles through trade-in value requests or test drives have received follow-up phone calls from an Ownership Loyalty Team member offering either a discount or free Supercharging.

These discounts are being offered on top of the recent price cuts, which have decreased prices by as much as $13,000. In an email to a customer, Tesla reps said, “the options of $3k credit of a new Tesla or 3 years of free supercharger miles (whichever you prefer)” are available on trade-ins as long as the order is placed soon. It expires “in February,” but Tesla didn’t specify the exact date.

The rep also stated it was an opportunity to upgrade to a new vehicle while renewing its warranty. Owners offered the promotion were told they were required to trade in an existing vehicle.
 

The city’s transportation officials sent letters this week to California regulators asking them to halt or scale back the expansion plans of two companies, Cruise and Waymo, which are competing head-to-head to be the first to offer 24-hour robotaxi service in the country’s best-known tech hub.

Economics will likely hinder these companies more than some provide that are making noise in hopes of getting paid off. There's a reason that neither GM nor Google IPO'd these companies in 2021 despite significant investor pressure.

Ford cuts pricing to compete with Tesla. Let the pricing war beginning, I know who wins this.

I'm not so sure, considering one of those companies has a single product line that would be large enough to make the Fortune 100 if it was a separate company.
 
If I was a betting man...

1675127512981.png
1675127484034.png
 
Take the money and run:

Three top executives expect to sell at least 2 million shares apiece as options approach expiration date, company discloses
DoorDash Inc.'s three co-founders will sell millions of shares in the company beginning next month, the company disclosed Monday.
DoorDash (DASH) Chief Executive Tony Xu, Chief Technology Officer Andy Fang and Chief Product Officer Stanley Tang have unexercised stock options that expire on June 25, 2024, so they will sell up to 6.6 million shares among them.
The executives adopted trading plans in compliance with federal rules designed to avoid accusations of insider trading; because rules limit the number of shares that they can sell in any three-month period, the three executives will spread out their stock sales from February 2023 to June 2024.
Xu intends to sell up to 2.2 million shares of Class A common stock, while Fang and Tang intend to sell up to 2 million and 2.4 million shares each, respectively.
1675138425186.png


 
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"Soft Landing"..... LOL
___________
As of December, 64% of Americans were living paycheck to paycheck, according to a recent LendingClub report — up from 61% a year earlier and in line with the historic high first hit in March 2020.
For the first time, more than half of all six-figure earners also said they were stretched too thin, a jump from 42% a year ago.


https://www.cnbc.com/2023/01/31/share-of-americans-living-paycheck-to-paycheck-jumped-in-2022.html
The American way. I’m a six-figure earner and I am feeling stretched too thin; went over grocery budget by $200 this month (mostly driven by deer processing lol). I hold this mindset with the knowledge that I am saving and investing several thousand dollars a month. Curious if those who said they are too thin also share my mindset.
 
The American way. I’m a six-figure earner and I am feeling stretched too thin; went over grocery budget by $200 this month (mostly driven by deer processing lol). I hold this mindset with the knowledge that I am saving and investing several thousand dollars a month. Curious if those who said they are too thin also share my mindset.
I like that......... Mind over matter..... Mentally you are one of the "Poor's".......
Just wait until you have two teenagers at home and two more in college.... All girl's...
 
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I like that......... Mind over matter..... Mentally you are one of the "Poor's".......
Just wait until you have two teenagers at home and two more in college.... All girl's...
Funny you mention that, I want a Lucy.
 
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There is a ton of money sitting on the side lines. The run up is going to be huge once it all goes to work in a short period of time.

All part of the plan............ Impatience and greed sets one more "Bear Trap" .... This slump will go on until there is very little money in savings accounts or money on the side line evaporates. A lot of "False Idol's" being advertised in the financial reporting world.
Nothing new is being invented or promoted.
Cars, batteries, oil, solar panels, clothes washers, refrigerators, tires, toilet paper and every other consumable has been around a long, long time.
We are seeing snake oil salesmen and engineers re-inventing the wheel.... Best keep your old stuff going. Any replacements will be Chinese junk.....
How does the phrase "Just do without it" strike the average American.... Running on Bread and Circus (Delivered pizza and streaming video) for 2023.

Sun Tzu - “Never Interrupt Your Enemy When He Is Making A Mistake”
 
There is a ton of money sitting on the side lines. The run up is going to be huge once it all goes to work in a short period of time.

Peloton is up 20% today after announcing that it's bleeding less money than previous quarters, so apparently this is already underway.

If indeed your hypothesis is correct, presumably we throw out any concept of investing based upon fundamentals, and just hit refresh on subreddits instead. Really looking forward to that.
 


There is a ton of money sitting on the side lines. The run up is going to be huge once it all goes to work in a short period of time.

All of the IPhone control features may be convenient.... When you release your vehicle to the "ICloud Hackers"... What do you think will happen ?
Vehicles are getting easier and easier to steal... Thieves are getting lazier... Used to take a wrecker to steal a car..... Now a tablet is all that is needed.
A set of keys in my pocket and a 1/4 turn fuel shut off switch is my anti theft device.
JMHO
 
All of the IPhone control features may be convenient.... When you release your vehicle to the "ICloud Hackers"... What do you think will happen ?
Vehicles are getting easier and easier to steal... Thieves are getting lazier... Used to take a wrecker to steal a car..... Now a tablet is all that is needed.
A set of keys in my pocket and a 1/4 turn fuel shut off switch is my anti theft device.
JMHO
My antitheft device is living in some remote area in the US known as "We don't give a Shitstan as to what goes on in the big cities".
 
Ok, which one of you so-called geniuses is to blame for this one?

Screenshot_20230201-165844.png


It's like everyone is determined to teach me that this is nothing like the 2000 tech crash but only because it's so much dumber.
 
Peloton is up 20% today after announcing that it's bleeding less money than previous quarters, so apparently this is already underway.

If indeed your hypothesis is correct, presumably we throw out any concept of investing based upon fundamentals, and just hit refresh on subreddits instead. Really looking forward to that.
The idea is that there will be many knee jerk reactions due to the liquidity sitting along the side line.
 
Oh, here's a big-brain move:

Screenshot_20230201-171332.png


This would be hilarious if all these dumb fucks could get hurt without taking down the rest of us.
 
Busy January:

Timeline​


February 1FedEx announced it will slash 10% of its officer and director team and “consolidate some teams and functions”—four months after the delivery giant unveiled plans for a hiring freeze and that it would close 90 office FedEx Office locations—in a move CEO Raj Subramaniam said was necessary to make the company a “more efficient” and “agile organization” (FedEx employs roughly 547,000 people, according to PitchBook).



January 31In a statement on Tuesday, online payment company PayPal announced it would cut 7% of its global workforce (2,000 full-time positions) amid a “competitive landscape” and a “challenging macro-economic environment,” CEO Dan Schulman said.



January 31Publishing giant HarperCollins announced it would slash 5% of its staff in the U.S. and Canada as the publisher struggles with declining sales and “unprecedented supply chain and inflationary pressures;” HarperCollins is estimated to have roughly 4,000 employees worldwide, with more than half of them working in the U.S., the Associated Press reported.



January 31HubSpot, a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based software company, said it would cut 7% of its workforce by the end of the first quarter of 2023 in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, as part of a restructuring plan, with CEO Yamini Rangan telling staff it follows a “downward trend” after the company “bloomed” in the Covid-19 pandemic, with HubSpot facing a “faster deceleration than we expected.”

January 30Philips said it would cut 3,000 jobs worldwide in 2023 and 6,000 total by 2025 after the Dutch electronics and medical equipment maker announced $1.7 billion in losses for 2022, as CEO Roy Jakobs added the company will now focus on “strengthening our patient safety and quality management.”



January 26Hasbro said it would cut 15% of its global workforce this year (affecting roughly 1,000 full-time employees), as the toymaker’s revenue fell 17% over the past year “against the backdrop of a challenging holiday consumer environment,” CEO Chris Cocks said in a statement.

January 26Michigan-based chemical company Dow announced it would cut 2,000 positions globally in a cost-reducing plan aimed at saving $1 billion, as CEO Jim Fitterling said the company navigates “macro uncertainties and challenging energy markets, particularly in Europe.”

January 26Software company IBM announced it would slash 1.5% of its global workforce, estimated to affect roughly 3,900 employees, according to CFO James Kavanaugh, multiple outlets reported, as the company expects $10.5 billion in free cash flow in fiscal year 2023.

January 26SAP, said it will lay off 3,000 workers—around 2.5% of its global workforce—in its earnings call announcing its fourth quarter 2022 results on Thursday, but did not specify where those cuts would be made. The German enterprise software firm—whose U.S. headquarters are in Pennsylvania—said the layoffs were part of an effort to cut costs and strengthen focus on its core cloud computing business.

January 25Vacasa, the Portland, Oregon-based vacation rental management company announced it would slash 1,300 positions (17% of its staff) in a SEC filing as it moves to reduce costs and “focus on being a profitable company,” three months after it announced it would cut another 6% of its staff.

January 243M, the maker of Post-it Notes and Scotch tape, announced it would cut roughly 2,500 global manufacturing positions in a financial report, as chairman and CEO Mike Roman said the company expects “macroeconomic challenges to persist in 2023.”

January 24Cryptocurrency exchange Gemini is planning to cut 10% of its workforce, according to an internal memo seen by CNBC and , with layoffs estimated to affect 100 of its roughly 1,000 employees—its latest round of cuts after it slashed 7% of its staff last July, and another 10% last May.

January 23Spotify will lay off 6% of its workforce (roughly 600 employees, based on the 9,800 full-time workers it had as of a September 30 filing) and shares of the firm rose more than 5% in early trading as investors continue to largely digest tech layoffs as positive news for bottom lines, while the company’s chief content officer Dawn Ostroff will depart the company as part of the reorganization.

January 20Google parent Alphabet plans to cut around 12,000 jobs worldwide, CEO Sundar Pichai said, citing the need for “tough choices” in order to “fully capture” the huge opportunities lying ahead.

January 20Boston-based furniture e-commerce company Wayfair announced it would cut 10% of its global workforce (1,750 employees), including 1,200 corporate positions, in a move to “eliminate management layers and reorganize to be more agile” amid reduced sales—the company’s latest round of job cuts following it’s decision to cut 870 employees last August.

January 19Capital One slashed 1,100 technology positions, a source familiar with the matter told Bloomberg—Capital One did not confirm the number of positions that would be cut, although a spokesperson told Forbes that affected employees were told they could apply for other roles in the company.

January 19Student loan servicer Nelnet announced it will let go of 350 associates hired over past next six months, while another 210 will be cut for “performance reasons,” telling Insider the cuts come as President Joe Biden’s student debt forgiveness program continues to stall after facing legal challenges from conservative groups opposed to the measure.

January 18Microsoft’s cuts, which affect 10,000 employees (less than 5% of its workforce), come three months after the Washington-based company conducted another round of layoffs affecting less than 1% of its roughly 180,000 employees, with CEO Satya Nadella saying in a message to employees that some workers will be notified starting Wednesday, and the layoffs will be conducted by the end of the third fiscal quarter in September.

January 18Amazon, one of the biggest companies in the country, had outlined a plan to eliminate more than 18,000 positions (including jobs that were cut in November) starting January 18 in a message to staff earlier this month from CEO Andy Jassy, who said the company is facing an “uncertain economy” after hiring “rapidly” over the past few years.

January 18Teladoc Health will cut 6% of its staff—not including clinicians—as part of a restructuring plan the company announced in a financial report on Wednesday, as the New York-based telemedicine company attempts to reduce its operating costs amid a “challenged economic environment.”

January 13LendingClub announced it would lay off 225 employees (roughly 14% of its workforce) in a SEC filing, amid a “challenging economic environment,” as the San Francisco-based company attempts to “align its operations to reduced marketplace revenue” following seven rounds of Federal Reserve interest rate hikes last year and as concerns persist of a potential recession.

January 13Crypto.com CEO Kris Marszalek announced the company, which had more than 2,500 employees as of October, according to PitchBook, will cut 20% of its staff in a message to employees, as the company faces “ongoing economic headwinds and unforeseeable industry events—including the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s cryptocurrency exchange FTX late last year, which “significantly damaged trust in the industry.”

January 12DirecTV’s cuts could affect hundreds of employees, primarily managers, who make up nearly half of the company’s 10,000 employees, sources told CNBC, as the company struggles with an increase in the cost to “secure and distribute programming,” and after the company lost nearly 3% of its subscribers (400,000) in the third quarter of 2022, according to the Leichtman Research Group.

January 11BlackRock officials reportedly told employees the New York-based company plans to reduce its headcount by 2.5%—the company did not immediately respond to a Forbes inquiry for further details, but in an internal memo obtained by Bloomberg, CEO Larry Fink and President Rob Kapito said the move comes amid “uncertainty around us” that necessitates staying “ahead of changes in the market.”

January 11In a memo to employees, Flexport CEOs Dave Clark and Ryan Petersen announced plans to slash 20% of the company’s global workforce (estimated to affect 662 of its more than 3,300 employees, according to data from PitchBook), saying the supply chain startup is “not immune” to a worldwide the “macroeconomic downturn.”

January 10Coinbase, one of the biggest crypto exchanges in the U.S. announced plans to lay off 25% of its workforce (950 employees) in a company blog post in order to “weather downturns in the crypto market,” after it laid off another 18% of its staff last June.

January 9Goldman Sachs could lay off as many as 3,200 employees in one of the biggest round of job cuts so far in 2023 as the investment banking giant prepares for a possible recession, multiple outlets reported, citing people familiar with the job cuts.

January 9Artificial intelligence startup Scale AI announced plans to cut one fifth of its staff, CEO Alexandr Wang announced in a blog post, saying the company grew “rapidly” over the past several years, but faces a macro environment that has “changed dramatically in recent quarters.”

January 5Online apparel company Stitch Fix will lay off 20% of its salaried staff and close a Salt Lake City distribution center, founder and interim CEO Katrina Lake announced in an internal memo, after laying off another 15% of its staff last June.

January 5Crypto lender Genesis Trading reportedly laid off 30% of its workforce, according to the Wall Street Journal, which spoke to unnamed sources—the company’s second round of cuts since August, lowering its staff to 145.

January 4San Francisco-based software giant Salesforce will reduce its headcount by 10%, or 7,900 employees, CEO Marc Benioff announced in an internal letter, amid a “challenging” economic climate and as customers take a “more measured approach to their purchasing decisions.”

January 4Online video platform Vimeo announced its second round of cuts in the past six months, which affect 11% of its workforce (roughly 150 of its 1,400 employees, according to data from PitchBook), with CEO Anjali Sud attributing the company’s decision to a “deterioration in economic conditions.”
 
Busy January:

Timeline​


February 1FedEx announced it will slash 10% of its officer and director team and “consolidate some teams and functions”—four months after the delivery giant unveiled plans for a hiring freeze and that it would close 90 office FedEx Office locations—in a move CEO Raj Subramaniam said was necessary to make the company a “more efficient” and “agile organization” (FedEx employs roughly 547,000 people, according to PitchBook).



January 31In a statement on Tuesday, online payment company PayPal announced it would cut 7% of its global workforce (2,000 full-time positions) amid a “competitive landscape” and a “challenging macro-economic environment,” CEO Dan Schulman said.



January 31Publishing giant HarperCollins announced it would slash 5% of its staff in the U.S. and Canada as the publisher struggles with declining sales and “unprecedented supply chain and inflationary pressures;” HarperCollins is estimated to have roughly 4,000 employees worldwide, with more than half of them working in the U.S., the Associated Press reported.



January 31HubSpot, a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based software company, said it would cut 7% of its workforce by the end of the first quarter of 2023 in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, as part of a restructuring plan, with CEO Yamini Rangan telling staff it follows a “downward trend” after the company “bloomed” in the Covid-19 pandemic, with HubSpot facing a “faster deceleration than we expected.”

January 30Philips said it would cut 3,000 jobs worldwide in 2023 and 6,000 total by 2025 after the Dutch electronics and medical equipment maker announced $1.7 billion in losses for 2022, as CEO Roy Jakobs added the company will now focus on “strengthening our patient safety and quality management.”



January 26Hasbro said it would cut 15% of its global workforce this year (affecting roughly 1,000 full-time employees), as the toymaker’s revenue fell 17% over the past year “against the backdrop of a challenging holiday consumer environment,” CEO Chris Cocks said in a statement.

January 26Michigan-based chemical company Dow announced it would cut 2,000 positions globally in a cost-reducing plan aimed at saving $1 billion, as CEO Jim Fitterling said the company navigates “macro uncertainties and challenging energy markets, particularly in Europe.”

January 26Software company IBM announced it would slash 1.5% of its global workforce, estimated to affect roughly 3,900 employees, according to CFO James Kavanaugh, multiple outlets reported, as the company expects $10.5 billion in free cash flow in fiscal year 2023.

January 26SAP, said it will lay off 3,000 workers—around 2.5% of its global workforce—in its earnings call announcing its fourth quarter 2022 results on Thursday, but did not specify where those cuts would be made. The German enterprise software firm—whose U.S. headquarters are in Pennsylvania—said the layoffs were part of an effort to cut costs and strengthen focus on its core cloud computing business.

January 25Vacasa, the Portland, Oregon-based vacation rental management company announced it would slash 1,300 positions (17% of its staff) in a SEC filing as it moves to reduce costs and “focus on being a profitable company,” three months after it announced it would cut another 6% of its staff.

January 243M, the maker of Post-it Notes and Scotch tape, announced it would cut roughly 2,500 global manufacturing positions in a financial report, as chairman and CEO Mike Roman said the company expects “macroeconomic challenges to persist in 2023.”

January 24Cryptocurrency exchange Gemini is planning to cut 10% of its workforce, according to an internal memo seen by CNBC and , with layoffs estimated to affect 100 of its roughly 1,000 employees—its latest round of cuts after it slashed 7% of its staff last July, and another 10% last May.

January 23Spotify will lay off 6% of its workforce (roughly 600 employees, based on the 9,800 full-time workers it had as of a September 30 filing) and shares of the firm rose more than 5% in early trading as investors continue to largely digest tech layoffs as positive news for bottom lines, while the company’s chief content officer Dawn Ostroff will depart the company as part of the reorganization.

January 20Google parent Alphabet plans to cut around 12,000 jobs worldwide, CEO Sundar Pichai said, citing the need for “tough choices” in order to “fully capture” the huge opportunities lying ahead.

January 20Boston-based furniture e-commerce company Wayfair announced it would cut 10% of its global workforce (1,750 employees), including 1,200 corporate positions, in a move to “eliminate management layers and reorganize to be more agile” amid reduced sales—the company’s latest round of job cuts following it’s decision to cut 870 employees last August.

January 19Capital One slashed 1,100 technology positions, a source familiar with the matter told Bloomberg—Capital One did not confirm the number of positions that would be cut, although a spokesperson told Forbes that affected employees were told they could apply for other roles in the company.

January 19Student loan servicer Nelnet announced it will let go of 350 associates hired over past next six months, while another 210 will be cut for “performance reasons,” telling Insider the cuts come as President Joe Biden’s student debt forgiveness program continues to stall after facing legal challenges from conservative groups opposed to the measure.

January 18Microsoft’s cuts, which affect 10,000 employees (less than 5% of its workforce), come three months after the Washington-based company conducted another round of layoffs affecting less than 1% of its roughly 180,000 employees, with CEO Satya Nadella saying in a message to employees that some workers will be notified starting Wednesday, and the layoffs will be conducted by the end of the third fiscal quarter in September.

January 18Amazon, one of the biggest companies in the country, had outlined a plan to eliminate more than 18,000 positions (including jobs that were cut in November) starting January 18 in a message to staff earlier this month from CEO Andy Jassy, who said the company is facing an “uncertain economy” after hiring “rapidly” over the past few years.

January 18Teladoc Health will cut 6% of its staff—not including clinicians—as part of a restructuring plan the company announced in a financial report on Wednesday, as the New York-based telemedicine company attempts to reduce its operating costs amid a “challenged economic environment.”

January 13LendingClub announced it would lay off 225 employees (roughly 14% of its workforce) in a SEC filing, amid a “challenging economic environment,” as the San Francisco-based company attempts to “align its operations to reduced marketplace revenue” following seven rounds of Federal Reserve interest rate hikes last year and as concerns persist of a potential recession.

January 13Crypto.com CEO Kris Marszalek announced the company, which had more than 2,500 employees as of October, according to PitchBook, will cut 20% of its staff in a message to employees, as the company faces “ongoing economic headwinds and unforeseeable industry events—including the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s cryptocurrency exchange FTX late last year, which “significantly damaged trust in the industry.”

January 12DirecTV’s cuts could affect hundreds of employees, primarily managers, who make up nearly half of the company’s 10,000 employees, sources told CNBC, as the company struggles with an increase in the cost to “secure and distribute programming,” and after the company lost nearly 3% of its subscribers (400,000) in the third quarter of 2022, according to the Leichtman Research Group.

January 11BlackRock officials reportedly told employees the New York-based company plans to reduce its headcount by 2.5%—the company did not immediately respond to a Forbes inquiry for further details, but in an internal memo obtained by Bloomberg, CEO Larry Fink and President Rob Kapito said the move comes amid “uncertainty around us” that necessitates staying “ahead of changes in the market.”

January 11In a memo to employees, Flexport CEOs Dave Clark and Ryan Petersen announced plans to slash 20% of the company’s global workforce (estimated to affect 662 of its more than 3,300 employees, according to data from PitchBook), saying the supply chain startup is “not immune” to a worldwide the “macroeconomic downturn.”

January 10Coinbase, one of the biggest crypto exchanges in the U.S. announced plans to lay off 25% of its workforce (950 employees) in a company blog post in order to “weather downturns in the crypto market,” after it laid off another 18% of its staff last June.

January 9Goldman Sachs could lay off as many as 3,200 employees in one of the biggest round of job cuts so far in 2023 as the investment banking giant prepares for a possible recession, multiple outlets reported, citing people familiar with the job cuts.

January 9Artificial intelligence startup Scale AI announced plans to cut one fifth of its staff, CEO Alexandr Wang announced in a blog post, saying the company grew “rapidly” over the past several years, but faces a macro environment that has “changed dramatically in recent quarters.”

January 5Online apparel company Stitch Fix will lay off 20% of its salaried staff and close a Salt Lake City distribution center, founder and interim CEO Katrina Lake announced in an internal memo, after laying off another 15% of its staff last June.

January 5Crypto lender Genesis Trading reportedly laid off 30% of its workforce, according to the Wall Street Journal, which spoke to unnamed sources—the company’s second round of cuts since August, lowering its staff to 145.

January 4San Francisco-based software giant Salesforce will reduce its headcount by 10%, or 7,900 employees, CEO Marc Benioff announced in an internal letter, amid a “challenging” economic climate and as customers take a “more measured approach to their purchasing decisions.”

January 4Online video platform Vimeo announced its second round of cuts in the past six months, which affect 11% of its workforce (roughly 150 of its 1,400 employees, according to data from PitchBook), with CEO Anjali Sud attributing the company’s decision to a “deterioration in economic conditions.”
Interesting that Intel did not come up on that radar... Big plans to build a Super Fab in Ohio have sure gotten quiet.
 
Busy January:

And with all those layoffs as a backdrop, we've got $CRM (Salesforce) up 33% from its December low, with a market cap of $171 billion, a PE of 660, and a WS 1yr target price of $190. Sure, that seems about right.
 
Interesting that Intel did not come up on that radar... Big plans to build a Super Fab in Ohio have sure gotten quiet.
Per their earnings release just the other day.

To help accelerate our IDM 2.0 strategy, we are investing in manufacturing capacity around the world. We broke ground on two new leading-edge chip factories in Ohio, initially announcing plans to invest more than $20.0 billion to establish the first advanced semiconductor campus in the “Silicon Heartland”.
 
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These dinosaurs will try everything but BEVs lol.

Japan's Honda Motor Co (7267.T) said it will start producing a new hydrogen fuel cell system jointly developed with General Motors Co (GM.N) this year and gradually step up sales this decade, in a bid to expand its hydrogen business.

Honda will target annual sales of around 2,000 units of the new system in the middle of this decade, the company said on Thursday, aiming to boost that to 60,000 units per year in 2030.
 
Per their earnings release just the other day.

To help accelerate our IDM 2.0 strategy, we are investing in manufacturing capacity around the world. We broke ground on two new leading-edge chip factories in Ohio, initially announcing plans to invest more than $20.0 billion to establish the first advanced semiconductor campus in the “Silicon Heartland”.
1675340971206.png


I was building those Intel plants during their hay-day.... 1996 - 2001....

Craig R. Barrett is an American business executive who served as the chairman of the board of Intel Corporation until May 2009. He became CEO of Intel in 1998, a position he held for seven years.

Barrett was the Elon Musk of that day... It felt good to work for a "leader" who showed his appreciation for jobs well done. When he left Intel started bringing in the green card workers and moved those born in India into the upper management level.... An excellent example of attempting to change the "culture" of a great corporation.. History is repeating itself as foreign workers and management have changed the culture and work ethics here in America. When the smell of curry became obvious in the fab's the change of work ethics became obvious.
Unfortunate for thousands of Intel employees who were banking on retiring and living on the proceeds of the Intel stock they accumulated. Barrett left at the right moment. A visionary.
 
Seems to be quite the disconnect between the market, company layoffs and the fed.

Something I have not seen mentioned is when the fed started all these rate hikes until now is that it’s a completely different fed board makeup. 4 monetary hawks went out being replaced by 4 more dovish members.

Still I ask, exactly what has changed since the October lows? It seems the same “big” issues remain.

I did put some money back into the market in what I consider “safer” companies. “ large cap ‘value’ “. Think apple, Microsoft and other companies that I don’t mind holding long term. I’m starting to think a better opportunity will come later in the summer….or longer.

Energy is still a major holding for me. I got in a bit early and was able to ride the wave upward on it.

I may start shifting more towards a heavier allocation to big dividend plays. T, VZ, KMI, ENB, INTC. Buying those on dips and going the “ paid to wait route.

My home run ball is SILX. Only a matter of time before it’s number is drawn, though it may be a year or years. By home run I mean 3x return from current price though I bought in around the 5x price. ( less than a 5% allocation). Kinda like my lotto ticket but with better odds. Lol
 
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Seems to be quite the disconnect between the market, company layoffs and the fed.

Something I have not seen mentioned is when the fed started all these rate hikes until now is that it’s a completely different fed board makeup. 4 monetary hawks went out being replaced by 4 more dovish members.

Still I ask, exactly what has changed since the October lows? It seems the same “big” issues remain.

I did put some money back into the market in what I consider “safer” companies. “ large cap ‘value’ “. Think apple, Microsoft and other companies that I don’t mind holding long term. I’m starting to think a better opportunity will come later in the summer….or longer.

Energy is still a major holding for me. I got in a bit early and was able to ride the wave upward on it.

I may start shifting more towards a heavier allocation to big dividend plays. T, VZ, KMI, ENB, INTC. Buying those on dips and going the “ paid to wait route.

My home run ball is SILX. Only a matter of time before it’s number is drawn, though it may be a year or years. By home run I mean 3x return from current price though I bought in around the 5x price. ( less than a 5% allocation). Kinda like my lotto ticket but with better odds. Lol
The disconnect that I watch is how America is losing ground as a World Leader. The petrodollar is a thing of the past. Other countries have no need to peg anything to America. Commerce is being traded through many avenues other than America, Wall Street and the Federal Reserve.
The segment you left out when naming the market, company layoff's and the fed was the Political Machine (Career politicians, Billions of $$$ lobbying, foreign spies, etc) in Washington, DC.... We are living in a country that is being sold off.... Something no one has seen in 200 years. Hidden in plain sight.
 
You just named a lot of those “ big issues “ I mentioned.

Somewhere in all that will be one very big loser that emerges.
 
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You don't think companies are realizing where the fat was, due to CV in part, and trimming it. Sure seems like it to me.
Many different perspectives..
Several years ago large corporations began to offer some great incentives to get the long time (well compensated) employees to take an "Early Retirement" so they could be replaced by much younger employees who would work for starting salaries. Few of those young employees 1) stayed with the companies a long as those that retired, 2) had no concept of building seniority, 3) had less sense of loyalty than those that retired. Now, those kids hired in the Y2K era are the managers. How has that worked out ?
 
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Busy January:

Timeline​


February 1FedEx announced it will slash 10% of its officer and director team and “consolidate some teams and functions”—four months after the delivery giant unveiled plans for a hiring freeze and that it would close 90 office FedEx Office locations—in a move CEO Raj Subramaniam said was necessary to make the company a “more efficient” and “agile organization” (FedEx employs roughly 547,000 people, according to PitchBook).



January 31In a statement on Tuesday, online payment company PayPal announced it would cut 7% of its global workforce (2,000 full-time positions) amid a “competitive landscape” and a “challenging macro-economic environment,” CEO Dan Schulman said.



January 31Publishing giant HarperCollins announced it would slash 5% of its staff in the U.S. and Canada as the publisher struggles with declining sales and “unprecedented supply chain and inflationary pressures;” HarperCollins is estimated to have roughly 4,000 employees worldwide, with more than half of them working in the U.S., the Associated Press reported.



January 31HubSpot, a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based software company, said it would cut 7% of its workforce by the end of the first quarter of 2023 in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing, as part of a restructuring plan, with CEO Yamini Rangan telling staff it follows a “downward trend” after the company “bloomed” in the Covid-19 pandemic, with HubSpot facing a “faster deceleration than we expected.”

January 30Philips said it would cut 3,000 jobs worldwide in 2023 and 6,000 total by 2025 after the Dutch electronics and medical equipment maker announced $1.7 billion in losses for 2022, as CEO Roy Jakobs added the company will now focus on “strengthening our patient safety and quality management.”



January 26Hasbro said it would cut 15% of its global workforce this year (affecting roughly 1,000 full-time employees), as the toymaker’s revenue fell 17% over the past year “against the backdrop of a challenging holiday consumer environment,” CEO Chris Cocks said in a statement.

January 26Michigan-based chemical company Dow announced it would cut 2,000 positions globally in a cost-reducing plan aimed at saving $1 billion, as CEO Jim Fitterling said the company navigates “macro uncertainties and challenging energy markets, particularly in Europe.”

January 26Software company IBM announced it would slash 1.5% of its global workforce, estimated to affect roughly 3,900 employees, according to CFO James Kavanaugh, multiple outlets reported, as the company expects $10.5 billion in free cash flow in fiscal year 2023.

January 26SAP, said it will lay off 3,000 workers—around 2.5% of its global workforce—in its earnings call announcing its fourth quarter 2022 results on Thursday, but did not specify where those cuts would be made. The German enterprise software firm—whose U.S. headquarters are in Pennsylvania—said the layoffs were part of an effort to cut costs and strengthen focus on its core cloud computing business.

January 25Vacasa, the Portland, Oregon-based vacation rental management company announced it would slash 1,300 positions (17% of its staff) in a SEC filing as it moves to reduce costs and “focus on being a profitable company,” three months after it announced it would cut another 6% of its staff.

January 243M, the maker of Post-it Notes and Scotch tape, announced it would cut roughly 2,500 global manufacturing positions in a financial report, as chairman and CEO Mike Roman said the company expects “macroeconomic challenges to persist in 2023.”

January 24Cryptocurrency exchange Gemini is planning to cut 10% of its workforce, according to an internal memo seen by CNBC and , with layoffs estimated to affect 100 of its roughly 1,000 employees—its latest round of cuts after it slashed 7% of its staff last July, and another 10% last May.

January 23Spotify will lay off 6% of its workforce (roughly 600 employees, based on the 9,800 full-time workers it had as of a September 30 filing) and shares of the firm rose more than 5% in early trading as investors continue to largely digest tech layoffs as positive news for bottom lines, while the company’s chief content officer Dawn Ostroff will depart the company as part of the reorganization.

January 20Google parent Alphabet plans to cut around 12,000 jobs worldwide, CEO Sundar Pichai said, citing the need for “tough choices” in order to “fully capture” the huge opportunities lying ahead.

January 20Boston-based furniture e-commerce company Wayfair announced it would cut 10% of its global workforce (1,750 employees), including 1,200 corporate positions, in a move to “eliminate management layers and reorganize to be more agile” amid reduced sales—the company’s latest round of job cuts following it’s decision to cut 870 employees last August.

January 19Capital One slashed 1,100 technology positions, a source familiar with the matter told Bloomberg—Capital One did not confirm the number of positions that would be cut, although a spokesperson told Forbes that affected employees were told they could apply for other roles in the company.

January 19Student loan servicer Nelnet announced it will let go of 350 associates hired over past next six months, while another 210 will be cut for “performance reasons,” telling Insider the cuts come as President Joe Biden’s student debt forgiveness program continues to stall after facing legal challenges from conservative groups opposed to the measure.

January 18Microsoft’s cuts, which affect 10,000 employees (less than 5% of its workforce), come three months after the Washington-based company conducted another round of layoffs affecting less than 1% of its roughly 180,000 employees, with CEO Satya Nadella saying in a message to employees that some workers will be notified starting Wednesday, and the layoffs will be conducted by the end of the third fiscal quarter in September.

January 18Amazon, one of the biggest companies in the country, had outlined a plan to eliminate more than 18,000 positions (including jobs that were cut in November) starting January 18 in a message to staff earlier this month from CEO Andy Jassy, who said the company is facing an “uncertain economy” after hiring “rapidly” over the past few years.

January 18Teladoc Health will cut 6% of its staff—not including clinicians—as part of a restructuring plan the company announced in a financial report on Wednesday, as the New York-based telemedicine company attempts to reduce its operating costs amid a “challenged economic environment.”

January 13LendingClub announced it would lay off 225 employees (roughly 14% of its workforce) in a SEC filing, amid a “challenging economic environment,” as the San Francisco-based company attempts to “align its operations to reduced marketplace revenue” following seven rounds of Federal Reserve interest rate hikes last year and as concerns persist of a potential recession.

January 13Crypto.com CEO Kris Marszalek announced the company, which had more than 2,500 employees as of October, according to PitchBook, will cut 20% of its staff in a message to employees, as the company faces “ongoing economic headwinds and unforeseeable industry events—including the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s cryptocurrency exchange FTX late last year, which “significantly damaged trust in the industry.”

January 12DirecTV’s cuts could affect hundreds of employees, primarily managers, who make up nearly half of the company’s 10,000 employees, sources told CNBC, as the company struggles with an increase in the cost to “secure and distribute programming,” and after the company lost nearly 3% of its subscribers (400,000) in the third quarter of 2022, according to the Leichtman Research Group.

January 11BlackRock officials reportedly told employees the New York-based company plans to reduce its headcount by 2.5%—the company did not immediately respond to a Forbes inquiry for further details, but in an internal memo obtained by Bloomberg, CEO Larry Fink and President Rob Kapito said the move comes amid “uncertainty around us” that necessitates staying “ahead of changes in the market.”

January 11In a memo to employees, Flexport CEOs Dave Clark and Ryan Petersen announced plans to slash 20% of the company’s global workforce (estimated to affect 662 of its more than 3,300 employees, according to data from PitchBook), saying the supply chain startup is “not immune” to a worldwide the “macroeconomic downturn.”

January 10Coinbase, one of the biggest crypto exchanges in the U.S. announced plans to lay off 25% of its workforce (950 employees) in a company blog post in order to “weather downturns in the crypto market,” after it laid off another 18% of its staff last June.

January 9Goldman Sachs could lay off as many as 3,200 employees in one of the biggest round of job cuts so far in 2023 as the investment banking giant prepares for a possible recession, multiple outlets reported, citing people familiar with the job cuts.

January 9Artificial intelligence startup Scale AI announced plans to cut one fifth of its staff, CEO Alexandr Wang announced in a blog post, saying the company grew “rapidly” over the past several years, but faces a macro environment that has “changed dramatically in recent quarters.”

January 5Online apparel company Stitch Fix will lay off 20% of its salaried staff and close a Salt Lake City distribution center, founder and interim CEO Katrina Lake announced in an internal memo, after laying off another 15% of its staff last June.

January 5Crypto lender Genesis Trading reportedly laid off 30% of its workforce, according to the Wall Street Journal, which spoke to unnamed sources—the company’s second round of cuts since August, lowering its staff to 145.

January 4San Francisco-based software giant Salesforce will reduce its headcount by 10%, or 7,900 employees, CEO Marc Benioff announced in an internal letter, amid a “challenging” economic climate and as customers take a “more measured approach to their purchasing decisions.”

January 4Online video platform Vimeo announced its second round of cuts in the past six months, which affect 11% of its workforce (roughly 150 of its 1,400 employees, according to data from PitchBook), with CEO Anjali Sud attributing the company’s decision to a “deterioration in economic conditions.”
White Collar jobs - watch for the trends. Remember everyone said go to college?
 
White Collar jobs - watch for the trends. Remember everyone said go to college?
I'm going to "key off of your comment"..... Jumping from the frying pan into the fire will teach many a lesson when a recession is on the horizon.
 
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I'm going to "key off of your comment"..... Jumping from the frying pan into the fire will teach many a lesson when a recession is on the horizon.
"Every kid a winner generation" learning new life skills the hard way. Broken record mode = AI/ML > white collar jobs
 
"Every kid a winner generation" learning new life skills the hard way. Broken record mode = AI/ML > white collar jobs
Time to go to 1) Junior college welding program, 2) IBEW Local and get name on the list for apprenticeship training, 3) If they are a Veteran go to the UA Local (Steamfitter's) and ask about their accelerated welding program... Those with no ambition or work ethic head down to 4) McDonald's or 5) Walmart.
6) Start a Go Fund Me account.... 7) Move into Grandma's basement.
Do something, even if it's wrong..
 
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White Collar jobs - watch for the trends. Remember everyone said go to college?
I have degrees, and went to College. My parents told me I'd be a trash collector if I didn't.

I told my kids, their friends, the kids on my HS trap team...you don't have to go to college. The only reason my oldest went to college, was to play baseball. When he stopped playing, he told me he was ready to Adult. Moved to Tampa, got a job as an insurance agent. 21 and on a path to make more than most of his friends who are still in college, many with debt. Youngest is in College, and wants to be a lawyer, but he is on a full ride too. College only works for some percentage. I want my Doc to have time in school, and do well.